| Literature DB >> 22905739 |
Mohamad Alameddine1, Andrea Baumann, Audrey Laporte, Raisa Deber.
Abstract
Economic downturns and recession lead to budget cuts and service reductions in the healthcare sector which often precipitate layoffs and hiring freezes. Nurses, being the largest professional group in healthcare, are strongly affected by cost reductions. Economic downturns destabilize the nursing labour market with potential negative outcomes, including serious shortages, extending beyond the recessionary period. The objectives of this manuscript are to provide an overview of the potential short- and long-run impact of economic downturns on the supply and demand of nurses, and present healthcare decision makers with a framework to enhance their ability to strategically manage their human resources through economic cycles.A narrative review of the literature on the effects of economic downturns on the nursing labour market in developed countries was carried out with a special focus on studies offering a longitudinal examination of labour force trends. Analysis indicates that economic downturns limit the ability of public payers and institutions to finance their existing health workforce. As salaried healthcare workers, nurses are especially susceptible to institutional budget cuts. In the short run, economic downturns may temporarily reduce the demand for and increase the supply of nurses, thereby influencing nursing wages and turnover rates. These effects may destabilise the nursing labour market in the long run. After economic downturns, the market would quickly display the pre-recessionary trends and there may be serious demand-supply imbalances resulting in severe shortages. Potential long-term effects of recession on the nursing labour market may include a downsized active workforce, difficulty in retaining younger nurses, a decreased supply of nurses and workforce casualisation.Lack of understanding of labour market dynamics and trends might mislead policy makers into making misinformed workforce downsizing decisions that are often difficult and expensive to reverse. In the aftermath of an economic downturn, the costs of attracting nurses back often outweigh the short term cost savings. Effective management should support the nursing workforce by creating attractive and stable work environments to retain nurses at a manageable cost.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22905739 PMCID: PMC3472285 DOI: 10.1186/1478-4491-10-23
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Figure 1A Stock and Flow Model for the supply of nurses into the labour market.
Analytical framework on the short-term and strategic impact of economic downturns on the nursing labour market
| - Downsizing of institutional operations | - Need to recoup lost nursing jobs | |||
| | | - Budgetary constraints | (Slowly if jobless recovery & fast under full recovery) | - Services restored or expanded |
| | | - Service reductions | | - Need to replace retiring baby boomers |
| - Nurses increase number of hours worked | - Decreased enrollment in & graduation from nursing programs at time of recession | |||
| | | - Inactive nurses return to the labor market | | - Decreased labor force participation |
| | | - Multiple job holdings for some | | - Increased nursing dropouts from nursing labor market |
| | | | | - Difficulty in attracting nurses working in other industries or those that sought early retirement |
| Frozen or decreased | - Increased supply coupled with decreased demand | - Decreased supply & increased demand | ||
| | | | | - Need to attract inactive nurses back |
| Decreased | - Need for work with decreased family earnings | - More jobs available in the market | ||
| | | - lack of job vacancies | | - decreased need for work withincreased family earning |
| | | - Reduced likelihood that nurses leave their job | | - Stress and burnout |
| Temporary perception of surpluses rather than shortages | - Disturbed labor market dynamic | - Supply–demand imbalances | ||
| | | - More supply less demand | | - Increased population needs |
| | | | | - Decreased proportion of active nurses |
| - Retiring baby boomers | ||||