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Nurse Aide Job OutlookEmployment of nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides is expected to grow faster than the average for all occupations through the year 2014, although individual occupational growth rates will vary. High replacement needs in this large occupation reflect the modest entry requirements, low pay, high physical and emotional demands and lack of opportunities for advancement. For these same reasons, many people are unwilling to perform the kind of work required by the occupation and persons who are interested in this work should have excellent job opportunities. Numerous job openings for nursing, psychiatric, and home health aides will arise from a combination of fast employment growth and high replacement needs. Nursing aide employment will not grow as fast as home health aide employment, largely because nursing aides are concentrated in slower growing nursing care facilities but employment of nursing aides is expected to grow faster than the average for all occupations in response to an increasing emphasis on rehabilitation and the long-term care needs of an increasing elderly population. Modern medical technology will also increase the employment of nursing aides, because, as the technology saves and extends more lives, it increases the need for long-term care provided by aides. Financial pressures on hospitals to discharge patients as soon as possible should produce more admissions to nursing care facilities. Employment of home health aides is expected to grow the fastest as a result of both growing demand for home healthcare services from an aging population and efforts to contain healthcare costs by moving patients out of hospitals and nursing care facilities as quickly as possible. Consumer preference for care in the home and improvements in medical technologies for in-home treatment will contribute to faster-than-average employment growth for home health aides. The number of jobs for psychiatric aides in hospitals (where half of the psychiatric aides occupation work) will grow slower than the average due to attempts to contain costs by limiting inpatient psychiatric treatment. Employment of psychiatric aides, the smallest of the three occupations, is expected to grow about as fast as the average for all occupations. Employment in other sectors will rise in response to growth in the number of older persons, many of whom will require mental health services, increasing public acceptance of formal treatment for substance abuse, and a lessening of the stigma attached to those receiving mental health care. |
Assembly Committee Approves Bill to Protect NursesAn important workplace safety bill to protect registered nurses and other caregivers from disabling injuries and safeguard patients from preventable falls won approval today from the Assembly Labor Committee. SB 1204, sponsored by the California Nurses Association and authored by Senate President Pro Tem Don Perata, has already been passed by the Senate and next will be heard by the Assembly Appropriations Committee. Read more about this safety bill. |