A Traveling We Will Go, At Least The Nurses Will
“Maybe there's a shortage in the number of hospitals, hospital beds, or doctors. And it's possible that that's really the root of the problem, not that we have fewer nurses than are needed,” host Able explains. Since the pandemic, there has been a widespread US nurse shortage narrative, despite the rise of traveling nurses. Today, Jaded and Able discuss whether this perceived issue holds weight or is just another example of “follow the money.”
By dissecting data related to hospital staffing, both global and domestic, Jaded and Able determine the accuracy of the nurse shortage narrative made popular by mainstream news. When comparing both for-profit and nonprofit hiring trends, the issue does not appear to lie in nurse staffing itself, but rather in the lack of hospitals, hospital beds, and doctors made available during a pandemic. With the US government subsidizing hospitals to hire more traveling nurses, a role that is usually higher-paid, it appears as though the government is just throwing money at the problem rather than finding long-term solutions.
Tune into this week’s episode of Bigfoot Logic for an honest investigation into the US nursing shortage. Learn more about the issues within the US healthcare system, the reasons behind the traveling nurse trend, and how the government may be trying to solve a problem that doesn’t exist.
Quotes
• “One of the topics we've discussed previously is just what the government is willing to pay in terms of putting band-aids on situations as opposed to actually addressing a situation that exists, that could be solved through workforce development or other avenues that have long term positive effects over time, as opposed to throwing money at a problem.” (02:49-03:16)
• “Throughout US history, there's been this pattern of for-profit industries being left to their own devices, to a point where it gets to impact public health and then the government has to step in.” (06:48-07:05)
• “The news will focus on the nursing shortage, but maybe there's a different issue. And maybe there's a shortage in the number of hospitals, hospital beds, or doctors. And it's possible that that's really the root of the problem, not that we have fewer nurses than are needed.” (17:19-17:37)
• “The hype around traveling nurses is that all of a sudden, these nurses are no longer available locally. But the reality is they are made locally; they've just reclassified themselves as a different type of worker.” (20:05-20:15)
• “The government is funding this; the hospitals are using COVID relief funds to pay these higher premiums for the traveling nurses. So the Bigfoot Logic is you using government money to address a nursing shortage that doesn't exist.” (21:33-21:48)
• “We talked about Bigfoot Logic and how if you follow the money, sometimes things aren't as they seem. Like you were pointing out how the government spends money to bail out private institutions and line the pockets of some, yet it doesn't seem to address any of the long-term issues. So, when the next pandemic hits, when hospitals are maxed out, are we really going to be any better off paying traveling nurses more? I don't think so. I think we'll be in a similar situation.” (30:52-31:22)
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