Tag: Nursing

  • Pandemic exacerbated looming nursing shortage, burnout

    Pandemic exacerbated looming nursing shortage, burnout


    By Rose Hoban

    “Family and friends say I look exhausted all of the time.”

    “Some days I absolutely dread going to work.”

    “I started having to take an (antidepressant) in order to function without breaking down every day.”

    These were just some of the dozens of responses to an anonymous survey in which the North Carolina Nurses Association queried registered nurses across the state on how they were doing two years into the pandemic. The survey, conducted last month, found that nurses continue to be affected by the effects of the pandemic. Many of the 229 nurses who responded to the questionnaire described themselves as experiencing burnout.

    Those results really trouble Erin Fraher, a researcher on North Carolina’s health care workforce at the Sheps Center for Health Services Research at UNC Chapel Hill. Fraher has been watching trends in the nursing workforce in the state for the better part of three decades and last month, she told lawmakers that she’s “never been so worried about a workforce in my life based on the data.”

    Fraher went on to tell lawmakers that before the COVID-19 pandemic, her data were telling her that the state faced a probable shortage of about 12,500 nurses in the coming decade. But since the pandemic has stretched nurses to their limit, leading many to consider and take early retirement, the state could have something closer to 21,00 too few nurses by 2033. 

    Even as nurses were willing to cut loose anonymously, many are still reticent about speaking ill of their institutions for fear of retaliation by employers, said nurses reached by NC Health News. But surveys and data show that the health care workforce is likely to lose some of the most experienced staffers. 

    The reasons are many. They include:

    • The stress that comes from working in a pandemic for two years with overextended personnel;
    • Financial woes besetting some health care systems and providers;
    • The ire at disparities in pay; and
    • More recently, animosity from the public. 

    “The level of exhaustion is so real,” said Lisa Harrison, health director for Granville and Vance counties. 

    “No more meditation or pizza parties… We need real concrete help.” – anonymous response

    At the beginning of the pandemic, restaurants provided free meals to nurses and other health care workers, hospitals put up billboards praising their staffers, and members of the public offered applause every night. But as COVID-19 cases rose and fell, and the public became tired of mask mandates and infection-control measures, health care personnel grew wearier while also taking more of the brunt of the public’s frustration.

    Some hospitals have done a better job than others at mitigating the burnout that’s come with the two years of surging workloads. Those hospitals that have taken the time and expense to prevent burnout likely saved money, according to Jane Muir, a nurse researcher from the University of Virginia. For her doctoral research, she did an economic analysis of the costs of burnout to hospitals.

    Hospitals looking to prevent such fatigue among their staff nurses spend on average $11,592 per nurse per year to prevent the exhaustion, Muir found. Those costs include measures such as spending more on full-time staff to share the load, creating programs to improve patient safety and the quality so nurses feel like they’re providing better care, providing opportunities for professional development for nurses and increased vacation time. 

    But doing nothing actually costs hospitals more, Muir’s analysis found. She calculated that when hospitals simply stayed with the status quo, they ended up spending about $16,736 per nurse per year on their nurses. That’s because they had higher turnover rates and incurred costs to recruit new nurses, get them up to speed and hire expensive fill-in nurses to pick up the slack.

    “A lot of pretty raw feelings” 

    People in all professions have left their jobs as the pandemic has spooled out, and nurses have been a part of the so-called “great resignation.”

    Frustrated RNs may not have quit the profession completely, Fraher told lawmakers, but many have left their staff jobs for travel assignments that became more lucrative as the pandemic extended from weeks to months to years. “Travelers” have long provided temporary fill-in for busy hospital units. They work for temporary staffing agencies who recruit and place them. Often travelers make a lot more than the staff nurses they work alongside, something that was a frustration even before the pandemic.

    “It used to be when someone decided they wanted to do travel nursing, it was to take a job across the country somewhere, not across the street to the competitor,” said Dennis Taylor, the immediate past president of the North Carolina Nurses Association.

    As a traveling nurse, Taylor explained, “you could go make sometimes triple or quadruple your hourly rate, and then turn around and either come back to your original organization because they need people, or decide to stay on at that new organization.”

    During the pandemic, those frustrations have at times boiled over, Taylor said. 

    “I think that has led to a lot of pretty raw feelings among folks who had been working at institutions for 10, 12, 15, 20 years,” he said. 

    Those kinds of rewards, Taylor said, pushed some nurses who were close to retirement to jump ship. 

    “I think that, unfortunately, the signal that it sent to them was that we don’t value your tenure, your experience or your loyalty to the organization,” he said.

    “I gladly left my job due to dissatisfaction and frustration with a broken healthcare system” – anonymous response

    Those are the kinds of retirees that really have Fraher worried, she told lawmakers. They are the more experienced nurses bailing out of bedside care.

    Four years ago, Fraher’s center published data showing that the average age of nurses in the state was 45 for metro-area nurses and 46 in rural parts of the state. Now, that average has crept upward as the entire workforce has aged. Many of those older nurses can find different jobs with less stress. 

    Before the pandemic, Fraher projected the state would need about 125,726 nurses by 2033, but would only have 113,277 available, leaving a deficit of 12,500. If nurses within five years of retirement age decide to jump ship early, that would almost double the deficit to 21,032.

    Fraher told lawmakers that pre-COVID, NC was forecasted to face an estimated shortage of 12,500 RNs by 2033. If burnout or other factors cause nurses to exit the workforce five years earlier, that shortage nearly doubles, she said. Image courtesy: Erin Fraher/ Sheps Center for Health Services Research, NurseCast

    Taylor was one of those people. After years of critical care nursing and leading the state nursing association during the pandemic, he also decided to leave his position, for now. 

    This week, Hugh Tilson, head of the North Carolina Area Health Education Centers, told lawmakers that his organization had surveyed employers to find that they were already having trouble recruiting and retaining staff to fill vacancies, especially for nurses. 

    In November, AHEC found that many facilities reported “exceptionally long” vacancies for open positions. When it came to RN positions, responses from 19 types of facilities – from nursing homes to hospitals – reported long periods where they couldn’t fill vacant jobs, including 31 of 35 hospitals surveyed. RN retention was also an issue. 

    “The important thing about our study is that it confirmed that these problems existed in the past, and COVID made it worse,” Tilson said. He said there needs to be coordination at the state level to consistently monitor, track and report to the legislature where the needs are in the health care workforce, otherwise, “we’ll be in the same place 10 years from now as we are now.”

    Tilson also noted that health care institutions can’t “solve the nursing problem in isolation, but only if they work with the larger health care ecosystem and with other professions within health care. 

    Public health workforce also stressed

    In the public eye, the image of nurses in the pandemic has been that of someone covered head to toe in protective gear, hovering at the bedside of an ICU patient. But Lisa Harrison, the public health director in Vance and Granville counties, pointed out that her public health nurses have been just as much on the front lines, maybe more so, as they’ve been outside the bubble of a hospital and confronting an often angry public.

    “Communicable disease nurses in local health departments, so many people forget the roles and responsibilities they bear in the case investigation and the contact tracing,” Harrison said last week. “The abuse they’ve received in these last two years doing their jobs has been profound and their exhaustion is also profound.”

    Many public health nurses across the state have been “holding the line because they feel this just overwhelming dedication to community and public,” Harrison added. “The public heart thing is ‘I’m not going to leave here in the middle of a crisis, but as soon as the crisis abates, phew, I need a vacation badly and it needs to be a two-year vacation.” 

    Those public health nurses often are confronted with anger from people who were pro-mask, anti-mask, pro-vaccine, anti-social distancing, Harrison added, saying you name the position, they’ve heard criticism about it. 

    “Seeing the abuse they’ve received in these last two years doing their jobs has been profound and their exhaustion is also profound,” she said.

    Harrison predicted that many public health nurses might look for an exit ramp soon, some temporarily, some permanently. 

    “We’re gonna lose a lot.”

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  • Nursing graduate shares her journey to a healthy lifestyle – UofSC News & Events

    Nursing graduate shares her journey to a healthy lifestyle – UofSC News & Events



    Gabs Amster grew up in a property where healthy food items and training have been not component of
    her every day existence. By the time she was 15, she weighed 210 lbs, was bullied by her
    friends and struggled with self-confidence

    She understood she had to enhance her actual physical and psychological health and create a new regime.
    She commenced taking in clear foods and going to the gym, the place she walked — and sooner or later
    ran — 5 miles three to five occasions a week. Inspired by her hard get the job done, her loved ones began
    incorporating healthier foods into their diet plans and started accompanying her to the
    gymnasium.

    “My psychological condition improved significantly when I became more healthy,” says Amster, who is
    from Charlotte. “I started off loving who I was and turned a new, confident particular person.”

    At the University of South Carolina Faculty of Nursing, Amster has made use of her individual
    transformation journey to join and empathize with lots of of her people. Immediately after graduation
    in December, she will start off her career as a registered nurse at Lake Norman Regional
    Healthcare Heart in Charlotte on the important treatment device.

    “I want to share my story and be the inspiration for anyone to obtain their self confidence
    to execute a target,” claims Amster.

    Amster remained steadfast in her determination to individuals health and fitness goals in higher school and
    into college or university. When the pandemic hit, new issues arose — fitness centers closed, routines
    were being disrupted — and then Amster contracted COVID-19.

    “I keep in mind remaining so out of breath and not able to even wander to my toilet 6 toes away
    with no feeling like I would move out,” claims Amster. After COVID, Amster found it
    hard to locate a new health and fitness plan. “It’s been tough with all of the outdoors
    road blocks, but I want to established a excellent instance for my individuals. So, I am nevertheless again on
    a new journey.  This time, much less for bodyweight decline, and additional for balanced dwelling.”

    I want to share my tale and be the inspiration for another person to locate their self-confidence
    to achieve a aim.

    Gabs Amster, University of Nursing graduate

    Amster has located methods to hook up with her patients by being open with her wellness transformation. During
    her junior yr, whilst doing work as an ultrasound tech, she courageously shared her
    story with an emotional affected person.

    “My client came in with peripheral vascular condition and was around 300 kilos. As I
    was scanning, he noticed I was owning challenges because of to his excess weight, and he began to
    cry,” Amster claims. “I confirmed him photographs of myself in significant faculty and talked to him
    about my journey. I shared that he could make optimistic modifications, much too.”

    As Amster enters the upcoming chapter of her nursing occupation as an ICU nurse, she is familiar with
    she will be confronted with new issues, but also new possibilities to link and aid
    sufferers.

    “I experience a feeling of electricity and dignity in my profession selection as a nurse and the hundreds
    of persons I will assistance,” she states.


    Share this Tale! Enable close friends in your social community know what you are looking at about


  • Vets Nursing Home managers get new contract despite COVID deaths

    Vets Nursing Home managers get new contract despite COVID deaths


    By Thomas Goldsmith

    North Carolina taxpayers will shell out $5.3 million additional through the future five years to have a Ga-based mostly company, instead of a lower bidder, take care of the state’s veterans nursing residences, in accordance to condition files.

    PruittHealth, which has held the agreement from the state Department of Army and Veterans Affairs since 1998, submitted a bid based on a 10 {fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} share of $290 million in revenues for the 4 facilities throughout the point out. 

    Here’s how it worked out for the organization:

    • Pruitt succeeded in getting its share for taking care of the point out veterans nursing homes up to 10 per cent from the preceding 9.25 p.c, for an 8 per cent amount increase.
    • Pruitt’s fee below the 5-year contract will boost to $29 million from the $18.5 million it contracted for in the course of the past full term. Which is a 56.5 p.c general payment boost.
    • The larger price came in part for the reason that of the larger administration share. In addition, the point out contract detailed that in general paying out for the residences would improve from $200 million to $290 million, or 45 per cent.

    Pruitt justified its larger running cost this time close to by stating it would be opening an added nursing dwelling facility for veterans in 2024. 

    Pruitt had the exact same oversight obligations when a critique by NC Well being News observed that amongst April 21, 2020, when the first veteran in a point out nursing home died of COVID, and July 2020, 36 veterans died of the condition, even as no veterans in neighboring states had died in equivalent amenities. All advised, 39 veterans died of COVID-19 in the North Carolina households they now regulate.

    An analysis of Facilities for Medicare and Medicaid Solutions information showed that no veterans had died of COVID-19 through that period of time in point out-operate nursing houses in Virginia, Tennessee and South Carolina.

    Neither Pruitt nor the state has built community any investigation into the fatalities, but legislators have provided in the condition spending plan a proposal that could improve oversight of the way that veterans well being troubles are managed. Included in the budget provision are plans to establish no matter whether the point out should contemplate solutions other than point out-owned, privately run nursing residences for frail and older veterans.

    “Ensuring the large excellent of wellness treatment and extensive-phrase living amenities for our veterans is crucial and the administration carries on to evaluation these provisions,” a spokesman for Gov. Roy Cooper mentioned final week.

    A consultant of Pruitt’s communications staff responded on Oct. 13, expressing: 

    “It is an honor and a privilege to provide these who have given so substantially of themselves for our liberty and our state, and we are grateful to the North Carolina Division of Armed forces and Veterans Affairs for entrusting the PruittHealth household of suppliers with caring for these heroes for a different 5 decades.”

    State: Other bids slide quick

    Wilmington-based mostly Liberty Healthcare offered to run the amenities for a bid of 8.15 per cent of profits funds for functioning the four state veterans nursing households. Individuals analyzing the bids gave a mixed assessment to Liberty as opportunity managers of the four existing veterans residences, with yet another in Raleigh projected to occur on-line in 2024. An additional household has been prepared for Kernersville but is not outlined in letters detailing the contract with Pruitt.

    “Liberty’s overall past efficiency shows the Vendor has the potential to manage the [North Carolina State Veterans Homes] and full the changeover to take around the management,” the crew said. “There are concerns with the top quality of treatment with the previous ratings of this Vendor’s amenities.”

    Liberty’s payment would have amounted to $23.6 million, with Pruitt now in line to earn $29 million. Principle Health care, the business that was ruled out of consideration, would have taken $21.75 million with a bid primarily based on 7.5 per cent of revenue. Administrators are not essential to get the small bid. 

    “Award of a Deal to 1 Seller does not mean that the other proposals lacked merit, but that, all factors regarded, the picked proposal was considered most beneficial and represented the most effective worth to the State,” in accordance to a request for proposals despatched in May. 

    In explaining its final decision, the evaluation crew gave a statement, which reads in part:

    “Pruitt created observe that enhance to percentage from recent contract at 9.25{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} is to accommodate for opening of 2 added households. Pruitt delivers the strongest Technical Evaluation and has proved underneath the latest contract that they proved an exceptional program.

    The 1.85{fe463f59fb70c5c01486843be1d66c13e664ed3ae921464fa884afebcc0ffe6c} differential in cost is the difference amongst encounter, excellence in plan structure, administration approach, and important personnel that Pruitt proposes.” 

    Meanwhile, regulators in Japanese numerous states are geared up to check closely the amounts that nursing home operators devote on immediate treatment, to the position of limiting profit gleaned from income, in accordance to new protection in Kaiser Well being News. New guidelines in New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts are currently having pushback from the extended-expression care sector, but lawmakers continue to make the case for the changes.

    “If they opt for to count on community bucks to supply care, they just take on a increased obligation,” New York Assembly member Ron Kim advised Kaiser Wellness Information. “It’s not like working a lodge.”

    Pruitt achieves boost in rate

    Pruitt fared greater in this year’s bidding than in 2014, when the Office of Administration whittled down the company’s requested proportion of the nursing homes’ earnings from 9.75 percent to the 9.25 p.c awarded. A different business had its bid declared inactive so that only Pruitt remained in the bidding.

    Kinston-based mostly Theory Healthcare, the company that submitted an original fee that was 25 per cent a lot less than Pruitt’s, was taken out of the running on other considerations.

    “Principle only offered 2 yrs of economical data,” the analysis team who described to the Department of Armed forces and Veteran Affairs claimed in a letter. “This coupled with the Suppliers request to only overview 3.5 several years of documentation eradicated this Vendor from the ultimate thought right after the comprehensive specialized evaluation.”

    Basic principle operates much more than 50 lengthy-term facilities in North Carolina, Virginia and Kentucky, according to its web-site.

    The evaluation staff is comprised of users of the North Carolina Veterans Affairs Fee and used two months appraising the bids. As a group, they have served 88 years in the army. At the time of appraisal, the fee members integrated Jane Campbell, mayor of Davidson John Scherer, typical counsel of UNC-Wilmington Lovay Wallace-Singleton, founder of the Veterans Employment Base Camp and Natural and organic Backyard garden and Larry Pendry, Nationwide Guard president in North Wilkesboro.