April 5, 2020
While some 91视频 Division of Nursing and Allied Health alumni are actively involved in the battle against the coronavirus, students currently enrolled in those programs are preparing in case they are needed after graduation to enter the fray.
Like most Americans, EMCC Associate Degree Nursing sophomore Bailey Jo Johns has been following media reports of an unprecedented shortage of medical professionals in the nation鈥檚 hotspots at hospitals serving on the frontlines of the war against the novel coronavirus.
鈥淚t is kind of scary knowing what I could face in the future in my profession, but it is what we signed up for,鈥 said Bailey, a Louisville native who resides in Starkville. 鈥淚t makes me proud of the profession I chose and I am lucky enough to know that is what I want to go into. I can鈥檛 wait to get out there, honestly.鈥
EMCC鈥檚 Division of Nursing and Allied Health offers programs in Associate Degree Nursing, Licensed Practical Nursing, Emergency Medical Technician (EMT), Paramedic and Surgical Technology.
鈥淥ur December graduates from the Associate Degree Nursing program are three months into their jobs as RNs and are already encountering something that has never occurred in recent history,鈥 EMCC nursing faculty member Dr. Jenny Caldwell said. 鈥淥ur Licensed Practical Nursing students who graduated last July are working in clinical settings and nursing homes where they are doing a lot of testing for COVID-19.鈥
Michael Fazio, the CEO of Prime Staffing, an agency that recruits nurses for major hospitals across the country, told NBC News that the demand for nurses is currently about 20 times that of this time last year, and continues to grow every day.
鈥淭hey can't get them in fast enough. Especially, in the ICU and the [emergency department]," Fazio told NBC News. "The calls that I'm on starting at 6 in the morning every day 鈥 those are the areas the hospitals are really trying to ramp up to make sure they're ready to go.鈥
Similarly, a surge in demand for EMTs, paramedics and other medical professionals has been widely reported. A shortfall of health care workers was predicted prior to the pandemic as a result of aging baby boomers who increasingly require more medical treatment.
According to figures compiled prior to the pandemic by Projections Central, during the decade that began in 2016 and ends in 2026, the nationwide demand for Surgical Technologists is expected to increase by 11.7 percent, with a 15.1 percent spike in the number of EMT鈥檚 and paramedics needed. During that same time frame, the demand for nurse practitioners is predicted to rise 36.1 percent, and 438,000 more registered nurses will be needed, an increase of 14.8 percent.
Caldwell said the job placement rate for students in her programs is 100 percent and in recent years graduates have had a growing number of positions to choose from throughout the region.
鈥淪tudents in our programs are highly sought after,鈥 EMCC Division of Nursing and Allied Health Director Dr. Tonsha Emerson said. 鈥淥ur faculty and staff are second to none and we work closely with our regional medical providers to ensure our students are getting the best education possible.鈥
While record numbers of people in the U.S. have filed for unemployment as some businesses grind to a halt as a result of the coronavirus, employees in the nation鈥檚 $3.5 trillion health care industry are reporting to work. The federal coronavirus stimulus package includes $100 billion for hospitals where spending is expected to increase as efforts to turn the pandemic tide ramp up.
According to the American Hospital Association, spending by hospitals and health care systems in Mississippi contributes $7 billion annually to the state鈥檚 economy. That money continues to flow into local and regional economies as wages and spending elsewhere contract.
There is a cost, however. Health care workers worldwide are putting themselves at risk of contracting the very disease they are trying to help defeat.
鈥淲e have long known that those who enter the medical field are serving in one of our noblest professions,鈥 EMCC President Dr. Scott Alsobrooks said. 鈥淣ow, more than ever, we owe them a debt of gratitude. We are proud of the contributions being made by graduates of our Division of Nursing and Allied Health programs and thankful for our current and future students who will one day be entrusted with safeguarding our nation鈥檚 health.鈥