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<classification authority="sudocs">GA 1.13:GAO-07-492R</classification>
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 <subject>Health care facilities</subject>
 <subject>Health care personnel</subject>
 <subject>Health care planning</subject>
 <subject>Labor shortages</subject>
 <subject>Nurses</subject>
 <subject>Program evaluation</subject>
 <subject>Scholarship programs</subject>
 <subject>Statistical data</subject>
 <subject>HHS Nursing Education Loan Repayment</subject>
 <subject>Program</subject>
 <type>Correspondence</type>
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<titleInfo>
 <title>Nursing Workforce: HHS Needs Methodology to Identify Facilities with a Critical Shortage of Nurses</title>
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<abstract>Registered nurses (RN) are the single largest group of health
care providers in the United States, with more than 2.4 million  
people employed as RNs in 2004. Basic RN training may be	 
completed through a 2-year associate&apos;s degree, a 3-year diploma, 
or a 4-year bachelor&apos;s degree. RNs work in a wide variety of	 
settings, including hospitals, nursing homes, physicians&apos;	 
offices, and public health clinics. Reports by government	 
agencies and others have raised concerns about nurse shortages.  
In 2001, we reported on an emerging shortage of RNs to fill	 
vacant positions across a range of health care settings. The	 
Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA), an agency in
the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), estimated that
the supply of RNs nationally fell approximately 111,000 short of 
demand in 2000 (5.5 percent) and projected the gap would widen in
the ensuing years. A shortage of RNs, like general workforce	 
shortages, occurs when the demand for RNs exceeds supply. The	 
supply of RNs, or the number of RNs employed, is influenced by	 
multiple factors, including the size of the overall labor force, 
the number of licensed RNs choosing to work in nursing, the	 
number of new RNs graduating from nursing school, the capacity of
nursing schools, and funding available for higher education.	 
Demand, or the number of RNs that employers would like to hire,  
is also affected by multiple factors, including demographic	 
characteristics and health status of the population, economic	 
factors such as personal income and health insurance coverage,	 
and characteristics of the health care system such as nurse wages
and health care reimbursement rates. Having an adequate supply of
RNs is important because reports have established a positive	 
relationship between the quality of care and RN staffing levels  
in settings such as hospitals and nursing homes. To support the  
recruitment and retention of RNs in health care facilities with a
critical shortage of nurses, Congress passed the Nurse		 
Reinvestment Act of 2002 (NRA). The NRA established the Nursing  
Scholarship Program (NSP) to provide scholarships for individuals
to attend schools of nursing. The NRA also modified an existing  
program, the Nursing Education Loan Repayment Program (NELRP),	 
which was established by Congress in 1992 to help repay education
loans for RNs. Under both programs, awardees must agree to work  
for at least 2 years in a health care facility with a critical	 
shortage of nurses, with preference given to qualified applicants
with the greatest financial need. To implement this, HRSA, which 
administers both programs, designates several types of facilities
as having a critical shortage of nurses for the purposes of the  
NSP and NELRP. The Secretary of HHS is required to report	 
annually to Congress on various aspects of the programs including
the locations where award recipients are fulfilling their service
obligation. The NRA directed us to conduct several studies	 
related to the nationwide shortage of nurses. As discussed with  
the committees of jurisdiction, in this report we are: (1)	 
providing information on how the number of employed RNs and the  
shortage of RNs has changed since 2000, both nationally and	 
across states; and (2) describing characteristics of NELRP and	 
NSP awardees and examining whether these programs have improved  
the supply of RNs in facilities with critical shortages of	 
nurses.</abstract>
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<identifier type="preferred citation">GAO-07-492R</identifier>
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<note>Correspondence</note>
<extension>
 <searchTitle>GAO-07-492R; Nursing Workforce: HHS Needs Methodology to Identify Facilities with a Critical Shortage of Nurses;
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<subject>
 <topic>Health care facilities</topic>
 <topic>Health care personnel</topic>
 <topic>Health care planning</topic>
 <topic>Labor shortages</topic>
 <topic>Nurses</topic>
 <topic>Program evaluation</topic>
 <topic>Scholarship programs</topic>
 <topic>Statistical data</topic>
 <topic>HHS Nursing Education Loan Repayment</topic>
 <topic>Program</topic>
</subject>
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 <titleInfo>
  <title>United States Statutes at Large</title>
  <partNumber>Volume 116 Page 811</partNumber>
  <partNumber>Volume 116 Page 813</partNumber>
</titleInfo>
 <identifier type="Statute citation">116 Stat. 811</identifier>
 <identifier type="Statute citation">116 Stat. 813</identifier>
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