The country’s declining pool of health care workers is a threat to the functionality of the U.S. health care system
HEALTH CARE
Americans
are understandably frustrated with the state of health care in the
United States. Stressors, bottlenecks and upside-down finances have
further weakened a system already under strain.
The
public doesn’t know whom to blame for soaring costs, lack of access to
high-quality care, and other challenges. Public policy has offered
little by way of solutions, and health care insurers, hospitals and
politicians have begun to wage competing campaigns to shape the
narrative with the hopes of keeping the fingers pointed at someone else.
I
am not here to wade into that debate, but rather to note that, as all
this unfolds, we need to keep an eye on the ever-shortening fuse that
threatens our system at its very foundations: our critical shortage of
nurses.
This country’s
declining pool of health care workers, particularly nurses, is a clear
and present threat to the continued functionality of the U.S. health
care system.
America’s
nursing workforce has been challenged for years, driven by retirements,
burnout and the rising needs of an aging population. Labor shortages
across all health care workers, not just nurses, is the new normal. The
U.S. forecasts a shortage of nearly 700,000 physicians, registered
nurses and licensed practical nurses by 2037, according to the Health
Resources and Services Administration.
Nurses make up the majority of health care workers at most hospitals and health
care institutions. Their dwindling numbers have already had measurable
effects, from acute and post-acute care delivery logjams to worse health
care outcomes for many patients. All these problems were accelerated by
the pandemic and are exacerbated in rural areas.
The
existing nursing shortage has cascading effects. As more health care
workers are being asked to shoulder more work with less support, more
providers and nurses are predictably leaving the health care industry
altogether. As astounding as it sounds, an October 2025 Harris Poll
reported that 55% of all health care workers in the country plan to seek
new jobs or switch roles over the next year.
My
company, FedPoint, administers the Federal Longterm Care Insurance
Program, and the rising demand for skilled caregivers is something we
are confronted with every day as we help family members create care
plans for aging parents. Nurses are the backbone of long-term care
planning and delivery, ensuring older adults receive safe,
compassionate, professional support. Without enough of them, the system
cannot meet the needs of families nationwide.
While
more structural solutions will likely be needed to save and fortify our
health care system over the long term, the most immediate step we can
take is to support existing nurses and bolster a pipeline of future
nurses.
As a way of
encouraging students and career-changers to pursue nursing, FedPoint
annually awards multiple $5,000 scholarships to help cover education
expenses for first-year nursing students pursuing their RN license. It
is our small way of planting seeds across New England for a community of
nurses who will strengthen the caregiver pipeline on which our health
care system will depend for generations to come.
It’s
also worth reminding young people and others evaluating potential
career paths that the nursing profession offers the rare combination of
job security, mobility and the freedom to explore countless
subspecialties. Nurses are needed everywhere: hospitals, schools,
research labs, long-term and short-term care facilities and home care, to
name a few. They can shift specialties, move across regions and adapt
their careers to fit their lives. For students weighing their futures,
nursing provides stability and opportunity in equal measure.
Moreover,
nursing is a rewarding occupation that offers its practitioners the
opportunity to create hope for all of us, and for themselves the deep
satisfaction that arises from making a difference. Few professions allow
individuals to make such a direct, positive impact. Nurses comfort
families, guide patients through difficult moments and deliver care that
restores health and dignity. Their work is meaningful in ways that
statistics can’t capture.
As
a nation, we should facilitate the expansion of nursing, and identify
ways to support enhanced education, knowing that we will all benefit
from the outcome. Hospitals, insurers and employers can lead the way by
offering internships, tuition assistance, flexible clinical placements
and careertransition programs that welcome new nurses into the
profession.
Marilyn
Staff, RN, of North Hampton, is director of care coordination at
FedPoint, a Portsmouth-based federal benefits administrator.
For information about FedPoint’s Nursing Scholarships, visit www.fedpointusa.com/scholarships.