The Center for Nursing Advocacy
Free RN patches or a pen when you join or renew news campaigns media reviews nurse-driven media research-sources Join now and receive three free RN patches Free RN patches or a pen when you join or renew Join our Grey's Anatomy campaign! Join our Grey's Anatomy campaign! Join our House campaign! Join our ER campaign! press room FAQs Email Print about us contact us our donors please donate become a member chapters discussion forums archives search

"Rural doctors lament nurse shortage"

December 13, 2006 -- Today the Newcastle (New South Wales) section of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) site reported that a rural physician group says the "lack of new nursing recruits is jeopardising the health of patients at Scone Hospital." The Rural Doctors Association (RDA) notes that new nursing recruits are not going to rural areas, a problem it links to a lack of government resources for rural health. We commend the ABC for the report, and the RDA physicians for advocating for better nurse staffing on their patients' behalf.

The short, unsigned ABC item notes that the New South Wales state government says the public health sector has gained 5,000 nurses in the last four years. But a recent auditor-general's report "singled out" Scones Hospital for failing to attract "new graduate nurses." RDA state president Les Woolard says the recruits are not going to rural areas:

The further you live from Sydney the less dollars per head is spent on your health care. Why should the people of Scone pay the same taxes and receive less dollars back on their care? That is a crying tragedy.

Woolard and the RDA have identified a global problem. As a recent International Council of Nurses report made clear, many nurses are migrating from rural to more populous areas, or avoiding rural areas entirely, because of a relative lack of good opportunities. The resulting shortage of rural nurses has just the effect the RDA says: it puts patients' health in jeopardy.

We commend the Rural Doctors Association for recognizing the role nurses play in patient outcomes, and for taking a stand on nurse staffing.

See the article "Rural doctors lament nurse shortage" posted on the ABC Newcastle site on December 13, 2006. The article also appeared on Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) News Online.

You can also translate this Center for Nursing Advocacy page from English into your own language by clicking on the appropriate flag on the right.