Boston Herald

Congress can fix America’s nursing shortage

- By Kenneth Moritsugu Kenneth Moritsugu was the deputy surgeon general of the United States and served as acting surgeon general/InsideSour­ces

As the demand for quality care surges, our healthcare industry finds itself on the precipice of disaster — at a critical juncture where the supply of skilled nurses cannot keep pace with overwhelmi­ng patient needs and demands. Now, more than ever, it is imperative that legislator­s enact thoughtful policies to support an industry in triage mode.

A proposed bill offers an immediate solution to this potentiall­y fatal issue.

The Healthcare Workforce Resilience Act, or HWRA, is a bipartisan effort to rehabilita­te the nursing industry by leveraging the vast pool of trained and qualified internatio­nal healthcare profession­als seeking employment in the United States to fill critical gaps in care.

Since the onset of COVID-19, healthcare profession­als have fled the field in droves. Spurred by waning resources, understaff­ed facilities and widespread burnout, we are losing caretakers at a rapid rate. Healthcare consultant McKinsey & Co. estimates that by 2025, the United States will experience a shortage of up to 450,000 nurses, which is 20% of the nursing workforce. Nurses are the first to acknowledg­e the effect of this shortage on their ability to care for patients adequately. A study by ConnectRN found that 90% of nurses think the quality of patient care has suffered due to understaff­ed facilities.

In the face of this unpreceden­ted crisis — one that has rendered 97.6 million Americans as living in a “health profession­al shortage area” — the government has failed to institute policies offering our medical facilities immediate reprieve.

Currently, thousands of internatio­nal healthcare profession­als seek employment in the United States. Foreign-educated nurses are highly trained profession­als who are qualified to provide care at medical facilities throughout the nation. Their employment offers a reliable, effective means to fill the gaps in care that could soon become chasms. However, they have been blocked from taking up viable employment opportunit­ies for no other reason than unnecessar­y regulatory red tape.

Last year, the State Department issued a freeze on visa applicatio­ns to account for the unpreceden­ted demand for U.S.-based employment after COVID-19. As a result, thousands of qualified medical profession­als have been forced to wait until at least 2025 to take up positions that the United States is fundamenta­lly in need of now.

If passed, the Healthcare Workforce Resilience Act immediatel­y removes this pitfall in our immigratio­n process.

The bill would recapture unused immigrant visas from years past and redistribu­te them to qualified healthcare profession­als seeking employment in the US, currently in an unnecessar­y backlog of applicants. The bill does not call for the creation of new visas.

The demand for healthcare services is increasing. Without sufficient nurses to meet this demand, patient care is at risk. Legislator­s must pass the Healthcare Workforce Resilience Act.

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