An RN is an associate’s degree, but that’s just the beginning of the real training. You can’t cram all of it into even a four year program, so it ends up where new nurses pick up the various specialties on the job.
It’s clunky as hell, and it needs fixing, but it isn’t something easy to fix without extending the time in school with the equivalent of residency. Which makes it harder for people to actually finish schooling, and delays getting new people into the field where they’re needed.
As it is, BSN degrees end up being more administrative, with further degrees going into nurse practitioners.
And, again, that’s not the only field with difficulty in producing qualified and capable professionals. It’s just one where your barely passing students can end up killing somebody.
Doesn’t matter what the salary is if you can’t get capable people through the program in enough numbers to staff services. The bottleneck is capability and desire, not money. Money might draw more enrollment for training, but it can’t do spit to get graduates that have the requisite ability. If anything, trying to lure more students in with the possibility of higher salary just pushes out some of the dedicated people that now have to compete with folks that are just looking for more pay, but just aren’t cut out for the work.
Then you’ve got an even bigger problem trying to keep the graduates while still trying to make more.
Not having enough workers for a position doesn’t negate the four day work week anyway. There are plenty of people working more than 5 days or 40 hours currently, even though those are the standard work week. They just get paid overtime if they do exceed the standard limit.
It’s a training issue.
An RN is an associate’s degree, but that’s just the beginning of the real training. You can’t cram all of it into even a four year program, so it ends up where new nurses pick up the various specialties on the job.
It’s clunky as hell, and it needs fixing, but it isn’t something easy to fix without extending the time in school with the equivalent of residency. Which makes it harder for people to actually finish schooling, and delays getting new people into the field where they’re needed.
As it is, BSN degrees end up being more administrative, with further degrees going into nurse practitioners.
And, again, that’s not the only field with difficulty in producing qualified and capable professionals. It’s just one where your barely passing students can end up killing somebody.
Doesn’t matter what the salary is if you can’t get capable people through the program in enough numbers to staff services. The bottleneck is capability and desire, not money. Money might draw more enrollment for training, but it can’t do spit to get graduates that have the requisite ability. If anything, trying to lure more students in with the possibility of higher salary just pushes out some of the dedicated people that now have to compete with folks that are just looking for more pay, but just aren’t cut out for the work.
Then you’ve got an even bigger problem trying to keep the graduates while still trying to make more.
Not having enough workers for a position doesn’t negate the four day work week anyway. There are plenty of people working more than 5 days or 40 hours currently, even though those are the standard work week. They just get paid overtime if they do exceed the standard limit.