Buerhaus P I, Staiger D O
Harvard Nursing Research Institute, Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
JAMA. 1996 Nov 13;276(18):1487-93.
To identify recent national trends in the employment and earnings of nursing personnel and determine whether managed care is associated with changes in the employment and wage growth of nursing personnel.
Retrospective analysis of trends in data on employment and earnings of nursing personnel based on monthly US Bureau of the Census Current Population Surveys between 1983 and 1994, and comparison of trends between states with high and low rates of enrollment in health maintenance organizations (HMOs).
Registered nurses (RNs), licensed practical nurses (LPNs), and nurse aides/assistants, orderlies, and attendants (referred to collectively as aides) between the ages of 21 and 64 years.
Full- and part-time employment, unemployment, percentage of nursing personnel employed in key sectors of the nurse labor market, and inflation-adjusted hourly wages.
From 1983 through 1994, there was strong overall growth in both RN employment (37%) and inflation-adjusted wages (22%). Beginning in the early 1990s, however, RNs experienced stagnant wages and a small but steady shift toward employment in lower-paying nonhospital settings, particularly in home health care. In states with high HMO enrollment, RN and LPN employment has grown more slowly since 1990, and the shift of RN employment out of the hospital was strongest. For aides and LPNs, the shift out of hospital employment occurred years before that of RNs and at a much greater rate. Since 1990 the employment of aides has grown rapidly in nursing homes and in home health care settings, whereas employment of LPNs has shifted primarily into physician offices and nursing homes. Overall, the movement toward nonhospital employment has had a modest negative impact on wages for all nursing personnel.
Managed care is associated with slower employment growth for RNs in hospitals and a shift toward employment in nonhospital settings, but its effect on earnings has been overshadowed by other forces impacting nurse wages.
确定近期护理人员就业和收入的全国趋势,并确定管理式医疗是否与护理人员就业和工资增长的变化相关。
基于1983年至1994年美国人口普查局每月的当前人口调查,对护理人员就业和收入数据趋势进行回顾性分析,并比较健康维护组织(HMO)参保率高和低的州之间的趋势。
年龄在21岁至64岁之间的注册护士(RN)、执业护士(LPN)以及护士助理/助手、护理员和勤杂工(统称为助手)。
全职和兼职就业、失业情况、在护士劳动力市场关键部门就业的护理人员百分比以及经通胀调整的小时工资。
从1983年到1994年,注册护士的就业(增长37%)和经通胀调整的工资(增长22%)总体上均有强劲增长。然而,从20世纪90年代初开始,注册护士的工资停滞不前,且有一个虽小但稳定的趋势,即转向薪酬较低的非医院环境就业,尤其是家庭医疗保健领域。在健康维护组织参保率高的州,自1990年以来注册护士和执业护士的就业增长较为缓慢,注册护士从医院转出的就业趋势最为明显。对于助手和执业护士来说,从医院就业转出的情况比注册护士早数年,且转出率更高。自1990年以来,助手在疗养院和家庭医疗保健机构的就业迅速增长,而执业护士的就业主要转向了医生办公室和疗养院。总体而言,向非医院就业的转变对所有护理人员工资产生了适度的负面影响。
管理式医疗与医院中注册护士就业增长放缓以及向非医院环境就业的转变相关,但其对收入的影响已被影响护士工资的其他因素所掩盖。