
President Bush
signing the Nurse Reinvestment Act
A shortage
of nurses in the workforce has prompted action by the Bush Administration to
help promote this critically important healthcare profession. The Nurse
Reinvestment Act, signed on August 1, 2002 by President George W. Bush,
authorizes scholarship and loan repayment opportunities for nursing students.
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Secretary Chao has responded to the crisis by issuing a "call to care"
to inspire young people to pursue nursing as a career, and initiating efforts
between the Departments of Health and Human Services (HHS) and Education (DED)
to identify ways to jointly address the nursing shortage facing the nation.
The numbers say it all. Today employers are already facing
difficulty in filling positions for registered nurses. According to the
American Hospital Association there are currently 126,000 nursing positions
unfilled in hospitals across the country. If this shortage of nurses continues,
the Bureau of Labor Statistics predicts there will be about one million new job
openings for registered nurses by 2010.
This Nurse Reinvestment Act will build upon work that is already
underway by the federal government.
DOL and HHS are creating a nursing career ladder pilot program that will
link Job Corps to nurses aid apprenticeships, community colleges, vocational
and professional nursing education programs.
Earlier this year, the Department of Labor launched
www.CareCareers.net
which is an on-line job bank dedicated to nursing careers in long-term care,
which we created through a cooperative effort with the American Health Care
Association and American Homes and Services for the Aging. You may have seen
American Olympic Gold Medal Winner Jimmy Shea talking about the "call to care"
and promoting
www.CareCareers.net
through Public Service Announcements.
In addition, a $10 million nursing scholarship program has been
established -- the result of a partnership between the Department and the
health care company, HCA.
Secretary Elaine L. Chao
promoted careers in nursing during a visit to the UCLA Medical Center in Los
Angeles last month. She also visited the Guatemalan twins who were surgically
separated in August and the nurses who cared for them.
The Bush Administration is committed to finding ways to address the
nursing shortage. The Women's Bureau has placed a special focus on the nursing
shortage issue as well, as part of its "Strengthening the Family" agenda.
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For More Information About WB, Contact: U.S.
Department of Labor Women's Bureau 200 Constitution Avenue, NW - Room
S-3002 Washington, DC 20210 Telephone 1-800-827-5335 or (202)
693-6710 Fax (202) 693-6725
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