Hoag points to need for new nurses
A predicted nursing shortage in California, described by speakers at
a Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian luncheon Tuesday, can be
illustrated with numbers.
It’s estimated that the state will need 125,000 new nurses over
the next five years. About 40,000 students are projected to graduate
from California nursing schools, according to Rick Martin, Hoag’s
vice president of patient care services and chief nursing officer.
“California is likely to experience one of the greatest shortages
in the nation,” said Martin, a registered nurse. “There aren’t enough
nursing schools or nursing professors in the state to accommodate
students.”
In addressing the same issue, country music singer Naomi Judd, the
event’s keynote speaker, took the anecdotal route. She launched into
tales about her brief nursing career and expressed gratitude for the
medical care she received while overcoming hepatitis C.
“You are my people,” Judd said to the audience of medical
professionals, Hoag board members and hospital donors at the Balboa
Bay Club. “I’ve heard a lot of good things are going on at Hoag. If I
was going to go back, [into the nursing profession] I’d be in your
midst.”
Community members and Hoag Hospital benefactors were honored at
the annual event, sponsored by Choose Nursing, Choose Hoag, a Hoag
Hospital Foundation task force charged with raising money to support
the hospital’s efforts to train new nurses and educate the public
about the nursing shortfall.
In the past year, task force members have raised $900,000 toward
funding nine professorships. In the program, each nursing instructor
is asked to train 12 students who would otherwise be on a nursing
school waiting list, Martin said.
Two professorships each are being held at Saddleback College and
Golden West College.
Martin said the average nursing school in the state has a waiting
list of 150 to 200 students.
“These young people won’t wait forever,” Martin said. “We need to
keep the door open for them.”
If all goes as planned, nurse training will take place at Hoag’s
campus beginning next year, when the Marion Knott Nursing Education
Center is scheduled to open.
Knott, a longtime Newport Beach resident and former partner of
Knott’s Berry Farm, gave the hospital the lead donation of more than
$700,000 earlier this year.
When she learned how long it took some students to get into their
medical training programs, Knott said she was determined to make a
difference.
“Kids are having to wait for two years, and that’s troubling,”
Knott said. “It’s absolutely necessary to train more nurses in this
country.”
The education center will be in the hospital’s old maternity ward
and will provide training space for nursing students performing
rotations, as well as current nurses and new hires at the hospital.
Ken Beall, chairman of Choose Nursing, Choose Hoag, said raising
money for the projected $2-million center is one of the focuses this
year.
“There are lots of opportunities for nurses to continue their
education and get more credentials,” Beall said.
Hoag Hospital has about 1,200 nurses and was recently awarded
magnet certification for its work in promoting nursing training and
education.
Beall said his task force is making visits to area schools to
promote the nursing profession. Martin said he is waging a statewide
campaign to make nursing education a priority.
The general public isn’t feeling the pain of a nursing shortage
yet, he said, but that could change if current trends continue.
“Hospitals will have to close down nursing units and cancel
surgeries,” Martin said.
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
o7elia.powers@latimes.comf7.
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