Topic: Nursing Education Programs North Texas Region



Similar documents
Regional Workforce Planning Collaborative. Topic: Nursing Education Programs North Texas Region. Healthcare Workforce Reports.

Topic: Nursing Workforce North Texas Region

Topic: Nursing Workforce North Texas Region

N U R S I N G E D U C A T I O N P R O G R A M I N F O R M A T I O N S U R V E Y

This update presents data for the 114 pre-licensure registered nursing (RN) programs that reported data for the

North Carolina Trends in Nursing Education:

Survey of Nursing Education Programs: School Year

SUMMARY REPORT ACADEMIC YEAR STATEWIDE SURVEY OF NURSING PROGRAMS

NEW JERSEY NURSING EDUCATION PROGRAMS: 2012 REPORT

Survey of Nursing Education Programs: School Year

Survey of Nursing Education Programs: School Year

Topic: Nursing Workforce Snapshot A Regional & Statewide Look

Wisconsin Nursing Education and Nurse Faculty: 2012 Survey Results

Enhancing Data Collection for RN Workforce in Kansas. Qiuhua Shen, PhD, RN Jill Peltzer, PhD, APRN, RN School of Nursing University of Kansas

Florida Pre-Licensure Registered Nurse Education: Academic Year

Florida Pre-Licensure Registered Nurse Education: Academic Year

Topic: Allied Health Education Programs Regional Scope

Florida Post-Licensure Registered Nurse Education: Academic Year

This update presents data for the 25 schools offering

Nursing Education in Utah: A Summary of Utah s Nurse Training Program Capacity

How To Understand And Understand The Health Care Needs In North Dakota

Cerritos College Associate Degree Nursing Program

Nursing Education Programs Annual School Report

Nursing Workforce in South Carolina

New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing

National Nursing Workforce Minimum Datasets: Education. Rationale for Selection and Measurement of Minimum Dataset Items

Nursing Supply and Demand Study Acute Care

LICENSED SOCIAL WORKERS IN THE UNITED STATES, Chapter 2 of 4. Demographics

California New Graduate Hiring Survey January 2014

SUMMARY REPORT YEAR 2010 STATEWIDE SURVEY OF NURSING PROGRAMS. Compiled spring 2011

Wisconsin Nursing Education and Nurse Faculty: 2010 Survey Results. Susan Dean-Baar, PhD, RN, FAAN Ann Cook, PhD, RN Christine Laurent, MSN, RNC

A Brief Review of Nursing Workforce Research from The Oregon Center for Nursing Kris Campbell RN, PhD

Survey of Nurses 2012

The State of Arkansas Nursing Education Programs and Their Ability to Address the Nursing Workforce Shortage

New Jersey Collaborating Center for Nursing Health Policy Workforce Development Q li C Linda Flynn, PhD, RN

California Board of Registered Nursing Annual School Report

Florida Licensed Practical Nurse Education: Academic Year

Metroplex Regional Overview

SREB Council on Collegiate Education for Nursing th Street N.W. Atlanta, GA SREB Annual Survey. Return by April 19, 2013

SUMMARY REPORT YEAR 2007 STATEWIDE SURVEY OF NURSING PROGRAMS

This update presents data for the 24 schools with advanced practice nursing education programs that participated

Survey of Publicly Funded, Accredited Nursing Colleges in New Mexico

As of June 30, 2013 TRENDS IN NURSING A SNAPSHOT OF NURSE LICENSEES AND NURSING EDUCATION IN IOWA. Iowa Board of Nursing

Maine s RN Nursing Workforce

COLLIN COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT NURSING PROGRAM NURSING EDUCATION PERFORMANCE INITIATIVE RECOGNIZED BEST PRACTICE DISSEMINATION PLAN

National Student Nurses Association. Proposed Amendment

LICENSED SOCIAL WORKERS IN THE UNITED STATES, 2004 SUPPLEMENT. Chapter 2 of 5. Who Are Licensed Social Workers?

School of Nursing Fact Book IV

Education Learning Collaborative Patricia A. Polansky, RN, MS Co-Director, Center to Champion Nursing in America Mary Sue Gorski, RN, PhD Nursing

The State of Nursing in Illinois. Michele Bromberg Nursing Coordinator for State of Illinois Chairperson of the Illinois Center for Nursing

Florida Licensed Practical Nurse Education: Academic Year

Metroplex Regional Overview

Nursing Supply and Demand Study Acute Care

California Board of Registered Nursing Annual School Survey

New Jersey Practical Nursing Education Programs 2008

2012/2013 Pulse of Pennsylvania s Registered Nurse Workforce. Bureau of Health Planning Division of Plan Development

Enrollment Data Undergraduate Programs by Race/ethnicity and Gender (Fall 2008) Summary Data Undergraduate Programs by Race/ethnicity

* Academic Progression in Nursing

Nursing Supply and Demand Study 2008

Nursing Education Capacity and Nursing Supply in Louisiana 2014

SUMMARY REPORT YEAR 2008 STATEWIDE SURVEY OF NURSING PROGRAMS

2010 NLN NURSE EDUCATOR SHORTAGE FACT SHEET

Undergraduate Degree Completion by Age 25 to 29 for Those Who Enter College 1947 to 2002

Report on the SREB Council on Collegiate Education for Nursing South Carolina School of Nursing Data

Michigan Department of Community Health

Survey of Nurses 2013

Wisconsin Nursing Education and Nurse Faculty: 2013 Survey Results

Workforce at Austin Community College COMMUNITY ACTION NETWORK APRIL 18, 2011

Issues and Scope of the Problem Several major issues confront the nursing profession with respect to academic progression:

Registered Nurse Survey 2012 Executive Summary

Report on the Status of Nursing Education Programs in Pennsylvania

A New Measure of Educational Success in Texas. Tracking the Success of 8th Graders into and through College

RN to BSN Interest Survey

North Dakota Nursing Needs Study

Demographics and Trends Report

Florida Board of Governors Health Initiatives Committee

A Transformative Change in Higher Education

Reauthorization Act of 2015, to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce,

Workgroup on NC Nursing Educational Program Capacity. Task Force on the NC Nursing Workforce Friday, June 20, 2003 Eastern AHEC, Greenville

Pathways to BSN: A look at Virginia s Registered Nurse Workforce

Community College Presidents National Meeting on Academic Progression in Nursing

Annual. School of Nursing. Bachelor of. Regional and. Program Demand. Science in Nursing. Percent % Table Fall 2008

Report on Demographic Profile of Registered Nurses in Pennsylvania per Regional Action Coalition

Academic Consulting Group. Get the Grant: Writing a Powerful and Persuasive Grant Proposal EXAMPLES OF GRANT COMPONENTS

Members Absent Elizabeth Poster, PhD, RN, FAAN, Excused Patti Hamilton, RN, PhD, Excused Rachel Hammon, BSN, RN, Excused Robin Hayes, RN, Excused

Michigan Department of Community Health

Minnesota s Registered Nurse Workforce,

2015 TRENDS IN THE SUPPLY OF ACCOUNTING GRADUATES AND THE DEMAND FOR PUBLIC ACCOUNTING RECRUITS

FINAL REPORT. Of Online and On Campus RN- to- BSN Students

NURSING N NURSE LICENSEES AND NURSING EDUCATION IN

Texas Board of Nursing Fiscal Year Workforce Plan

How To Know The Nursing Workforce

A Primer on Using NursingCAS as Part of the Holistic Admissions Process

Rationale: Increasing the supply of RNs in Texas is of paramount importance. Although both enrollment and completion rates have been

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY. Findings from the Annual Survey of Schools of Nursing Academic Year

ACADEMIC YEAR Prepared for the New Jersey State Board of Nursing

How To Become A Certified Nursing Assistant

Virginia Nursing Education Programs: Academic Year

Nursing Workforce Shortage Causes - Disease, Demand and Productivity

Analysis of Advanced Practice Registered Nurses

Transcription:

Number of Programs Healthcare Workforce Reports Topic: Nursing Education Programs North Texas Region Background This report was compiled with information from the Texas Center for Nursing Workforce Studies (TCNWS for 2009, 200, and 20) in collaboration with the Texas Board of Nursing. The data was collected in the 2009, 200 and 20 Board of Nursing s (BON) Nursing Education Program Information Surveys (NEPIS) for the reporting periods Academic Years 2008-20 (or September, 2008 August 3, 20), unless otherwise noted. TCNWS collaborated with the BON in the design and implementation of the surveys. Scope of the North Texas Region Nursing Program Characteristics Chart. 20 Program Distribution - Quantity and Length 6 5 4 3 2 In 2009, TCNWS did not report length of curriculum because that information was unavailable. Also, between the 3 years, some of the response options in the demographic questions changed. Finally, for 20, the terminology changed in how information on faculty positions was gathered (employed rather than budgeted). Chart shows the 20 0 program/curriculum distribution regarding number of programs being offered and the 6 8 9 20 2 24 27 28 relevant duration. Similar distribution pattern Length in Months was seen through 2009 and 200. A total of 7 programs were offered in 20, ADN-, BSN-6. The length of these programs does not include nursing prerequisites but does show how varied the length of a program may be, anywhere from 6 months to 28 month. All four of the 6-months programs are found to be ADN programs. Additionally, seven of the ten 20-27 months programs were also ADN programs.

8 6 4 2 0 Chart 2 shows that 20 has the highest number of schools, 7, participating, to date. Number of schools Chart 2. North Texas Nursing Program Distribution 7 participating in 2009 was 4. For 200, one additional school, a private proprietary school, participated from Dallas County. 5 County distribution of participating 4 schools for 20 were; Johnson-, Tarrant-3, Collin-, Dallas-6, Kaufman-, Cooke-, 6 9 ADN Grayson-, Parker-, Erath-, Denton-. All 8 BSN participating counties remained the same for 6 6 2009 and 200 exception for the additional total school in Dallas County (see Appendix.) Program types are ADN and BSN 20 200 2009 (ADN-, BSN-6) for 20 with the ADN programs changing gradually in 2009 and 200 with the addition of the private proprietary programs being added in Dallas County. Chart 3 shows a total of six programs were offered in Dallas County (ADN-5, BSN-) in 20 and three in Tarrant County (ADN-, BSN-2). Chart 3. Dallas and Tarrant County Of all the BSN and ADN programs, two of the six BSN programs are Programs - 20 offer in Tarrant County and five of the eleven ADN programs are offered in Dallas. ADN BSN According to data published June 202, from the DFWHC Foundation, Healthcare Workforce Reports, Nursing Education Programs, 38% of active RNs have BSN and 47% have ADN degrees. Also, with a nursing 5 workforce of over 84,000 RNs, Texas has more RNs than any other 2 health profession. 8 6 4 2 0 See GPS Map (Appendix) with nursing school locations for Region. Dallas Tarrant Interesting distribution between ADN and BSN programs in 20 show that as students enroll in ADN and BSN programs approximately 8% of that amount are graduating from similar programs (see Chart 4.). The number of graduates from both ADN and BSN programs was a lot less in 2009 and has shown steady growth through 20 (see Chart 5). Page 2

2 of the programs are in Metro areas and two are in non-metro areas Chart 4. BSN ADN Enrollment and Graduate Distribution by Program Type 20 023 245 70 464 0 000 2000 graduate enrolled Chart 5. 200 00 000 900 800 Governing Institutions: Private/non-profit, Private/Proprietary and Public. Chart 6 shows 70% of the 20 governing institutions is public universities and colleges, while 8% is private. The remainder, 2% is proprietary institutions. This 2% is significant as we consider the workforce pipeline. All ADN programs, except for two, are offered in public institutions; BSN programs: 50% in private, 50% in public institutions. All counties have some sort of program track (See Chart 7.) which may include LVN to ADN, paramedic to ADN, LVN to BSN, RN to BSN, Bachelors degree to BSN, Accelerated/compressed, others. Program Tracks: LVN to ADN-6, Paramedic to ADN-2, LVN to BSN-2, RN to BSN-4, Bachelor s to BSN-2 880 Graduates from ADN and BSN Programs by Year 852 989 954 2009 200 20 70 023 ADN BSN Chart 6. Proportional Distribution of Governing Institutions - 20 70% 8% programs have articulation agreement. 2% Private/Non-profit Private/Proprietary Public Articulation Agreements: All ADN programs have some sort of articulation agreement. As defined by Dallas County Community College District, an articulation agreement is a contract that sets forth the terms and conditions of students transfer from Dallas County Community College District to the partner institution. Articulation between institutions of higher education means transferring credit for courses and/or programs from one institution to another without misinterpretation. [Students] are responsible for making sure they are taking the appropriate courses for transfer to another institution. Students should check the current catalog for the latest course information and course prerequisite requirements. 2 of the 7 nursing Students with various educational backgrounds are granted advanced placements: Prior VN and RN; nursing education; paramedics; Allied health; LVN; Baccalaureate/Masters in discipline other than nursing Page 3

Chart 7. Program Track 20 Accelerated 4% None 3% Bachelors degree to BSN 7% RN to BSN 3% LVN to ADN 33% Paramedic to ADN 2% Student Demographics Race and Ethnicity LVN to BSN 8% Table and Table 2 below show the enrollment and graduate distribution by race/ethnicity for 2009, 200 and 20 Table. Race/Ethnicity of ALL pre-rn licensure students enrolled as of September 30, 2009, 200 and 20 White/ Caucasian African American Hispanic/ Latin Asian/Pacific Islander American Indian/Alaskan Other/ Undefined Year Enrolled 2009 2625 522 502 360 29 235 200 750 445 376 30 7 06 20 668 303 270 20 24 57 academic school years. White/Caucasian continues to dominate students enrolled by more than a 4: margin to its closes rival, African American, all three years. Hispanic/Latin and Asian/Pacific Islander have even wider disparities. The same is true for those who graduate during those same periods. The margin is over 4: between White/Caucasian and African American and the gap gets even wider for the other ethnic groups and is not reflective of the population it serves. Table 2. Race/Ethnicity of ALL pre-rn licensure graduates during AYs 2008-20 Academic Year White/ Caucasian African American Hispanic/ Latin Asian/Pacific Islander American Indian/Alaskan Other/ Undefined 2008-2009 33 246 46 32 0 65 2009-200 83 226 204 83 22 25 200-20 39 303 270 20 24 76 Page 4

Gender Disparity Generally, there tends to be more females enrolled in RN programs than males, who account for only 5% of all students in 2009 to 35% in 20 (see Chart 8.) The same is true of Chart 8. Male Gender Disparity pre-licensed RN graduates where 3.6% were male in 2009 and 27% in 20. In Tarrant and Dallas counties the percentage of male graduates tends to be higher that other 27% 20 counties, at over 22%. 200 2009 4% 5% 20% 26% 35% 0% 0% 20% 30% 40% by 5% and graduates by 42%. graduate enrolled It appears that the male population of ADN prepared nurses is significantly higher than the male population in the BSN program at 3% and 8%, respectively. This follows the fact that 2% of ADN nursing students are males while only 4% of BSN students are males. One significant observation for 20 is that both male enrolled and graduates students exceeded their female counterpart in Dallas County in the ADN program enrolled Age Cohort For each reporting year majority of the graduates are between 20-39 years of age. This would indicate that for those committed to the profession these cohorts could be in the nursing workforce between 20 and 40 years before retiring, which is generally typical. It is also worth noting that the 9.7% of those RNs with less than 20 years of service before retiring will become part of the aged population needing more and more medical care themselves. Chart 9. 50.0% 40.0% 30.0% 20.0% 0.0% 0.0%.7% 39.5% 30.3% 20 Age Distribution 2.6% 9.6% 25.3% 24.3% 0.5%.4% 2.2% 0.7% 0.% 2.5% 7-20 2-25 26-30 3-40 4-50 5-60 6 and older Enrolled graduated Page 5

Overall, the 20 age distribution (Chart 9) shows majority of enrolled students and graduates fall into the 2-25 cohort. Scope of Faculty Positions Vacancy Rate Chart 0 shows the 20 faculty vacancy rates for ADN and BSN programs are 7.8% and 5.0%, respectively with the overall North Texas region for all programs is 6.2%. Vacancy rate has increased each successive year since 2009 from 4.9% to 5.6% in 200. 20 rate of 6.2% is slightly lower than the national nursing faculty vacancy rate of 7.7%, according to the April 2, 202, Nursing Faculty Report by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN). Chart 0. Faculty Vacancy and Turnover Turnover Rate 20 200 2009 6.8 6.2 2.7 5.6 2 4.9 0 5 0 5 20 Rate turnover vacancy 20 faculty turnover rates for the ADN program was 4.2% and for the BSN program, 8.8%. Overall North Texas programs have a faculty turnover rate of 6.8% (see Chart.) 60 faculty members resigned in 200 and 86 in 20 but 8% more faculty were employed in 20 than was in 200. Four percent more turnover occurred in 20 than 200. Both vacancy and turnover rates continue to increase year over year. This trend is not expected to change for the foreseeable future. Demographics Profile Gender Disparity Chart. Faculty Vacancy & Turnover Rates by Program 94% of the faculty has been female and a significant percent (80%) are White/Caucasian with the next closest ethnic group being Blacks at nine percent. 20 Vacancy Rate 20 Turnover Rate 4.2 8.8 6.8 7.8 5.0 6.2 Page 6 ADN BSN All North Texas Programs

Age Cohort Chart 2 shows 38% of faculty is in the 55-64 age group with another 0% at or above 65 years of age. This would suggest that close to half or 48% of faculty is at or approaching retirement age in 0 years or less. The next largest group is those Chart 2. Percent of Faculty by Age Cohort between 45-54 years of age at about 39%. Education Level 55-64 38% 34 and 65 and younger older 7% 0% 35-44 7% 45-54 28% The majority of faculty has a Master of Science in Nursing at 436 and another 7 with a Doctorate in Nursing Science/Practice and 7 with a PhD in Nursing (see Chart 3.) These professional academic accolades are attained over several years of study, practicum and experience. As is the sentiment in other part of the country, the outlook for faculty is not very positive for the nursing profession in North Texas. Some of the factors impacting nursing faculty outlook, according to AACN are, age limiting productive instruction year, retirement, low professionally prepared, and attractive compensation in clinical and private-sector settings. Chart 3. 20 Degree Distribution for Nursing Faculty Other Doctorate in Other Field Nursing Doctorate Doctorate in Nursing Science Doctorate in Nursing Practice PhD Nursing Master's Other Field MSN Baccalaureate in Nursing Associate Degree 3 45 7 0 7 32 48 436 Page 7

Appendix Page 8

References: Texas Center for Nursing Workforce Studies (TCNWS), Board of Nursing s (BON) Nursing Education Program Information Surveys (NEPIS), 2009-20 Dallas County Community College District, Articulation Agreements, 202, from website: http://www.dcccd.edu/ss/academics/ts/transferfromdcccd/agreements/pages/default.aspx American Association of Colleges of Nursing, Nursing Faculty Shortage, April 2, 202 from website: http://www.aacn.nche.edu/media-relations/fact-sheets/nursing-faculty-shortage Map, North Texas Schools Offering Nursing Education by County, by Jaylene Jones, DFWHC Foundation, October 202 DFWHC Foundation Workforce Center. All rights reserved. For questions about this information or our collaborative work contact Neguiel Francis at the DFWHC Foundation Workforce Center nfrancis@dfwhcfoundation.orgor 972-77-4279. Page 9