---
title: "Nurses worry shortage will worsen if measures aren&#8217;t taken"
url: "https://arizonacollege.edu/blog/nursing-burnout/"
type: post
date_published: 2022-12-28
date_modified: 2026-04-01
schema:
  @type: Article
language: en-US
word_count: 1110
reading_time: 6 min
canonical: "https://arizonacollege.edu/blog/nursing-burnout/"
featured_image: "https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-Burnout.jpg"
categories:
  - Newsroom
---

# Nurses worry shortage will worsen if measures aren’t taken

### 󠀁_34% of nurses admitted they were very likely to quit by the end of 2022, a recent survey showed_󠁿

The nursing shortage has been a concern for decades. Hear from experienced
professionals, including Vice Provost of
[Arizona College of Nursing](https://www.arizonacollege.edu/) Amber Kool, on how
we keep up on the demand for qualified nurses.

Click the link below to view the original article:
[https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/nursing-burnout-nurses-worry-shortage-worsen-measures-arent-taken](https://www.foxbusiness.com/lifestyle/nursing-burnout-nurses-worry-shortage-worsen-measures-arent-taken)

---

By [Daniella Genovese](https://www.foxbusiness.com/person/g/daniella-genovese) 
[FOXBusiness](http://www.foxbusiness.com/)
_Originally published on December 6, 2022_

Nurses are pleading for more support amid the 
[ongoing nursing shortage crisis](https://www.foxbusiness.com/category/healthcare)
, which had been building prior to the pandemic and continues to take a mental
and physical toll on workers.

It’s gotten to the point where many are walking away from the job in tears,
according to Karen Fountain, an ER Level 1 trauma nurse. Fountain also manages
240 nurses deployed in NYC hospitals as the director of clinical services and
nursing for Ingenovis Health/Fastaff Travel Nurses.

“Nursing is walking out of the building several times a week crying or crying
while they’re [nurses] in the building trying to take care of more patients
than they’re able to,” Fountain told FOX Business. “We don’t want to offer poor
care, and we do our best not to. But when you have the ratios nurses [are]
facing now, there is no way to deliver the best health care that you want.”

According to a March survey from Incredible Health, 34% of nurses surveyed said
it’s very likely they will quit their jobs by the end of the year. About 44% of
nurses said burnout and the high stress environment is the driving force behind
their decision to quit by the end of 2022, according to the data.

![Nursing Burnout](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/Nursing-Burnout.jpg)

Fountain said another issue is that nurses are calling off more than ever
before, even travel nurses who do 
[not get compensated](https://www.foxbusiness.com/money) for sick days.

“They’re exhausted, and they’re not afraid to say, ‘I need an emotional day. I
am emotionally overwrought’,” she added.

At one New York City-based facility, Fountain recalled getting anywhere between
15 and 20 plus call-outs a day.

“Nursing is burnout. We were burned out from COVID, and now we’re entering
another season where this flu season is going to be awful,” Fountain said.

She argued that the industry needs more “health care providers or more auxiliary
support, so we can do the job to the best of our ability, not just put a
Band-Aid on a bleeding artery. And that’s what health care feels like right
now.”

Andrea Law, a registered nurse working in home health in the Las Vegas valley,
said one of the greatest concerns in the industry used to be how to safely
manage a patient within the parameters of what 
[insurance would cover](https://www.foxbusiness.com/category/insurance).

Now, the greatest concern is how to care for a patient with limited nursing
resources, according to Law, who has worked jobs ranging from a field clinician
to a clinical manager supervising a staff of over 100.

“Patients are being sent home from the hospital with higher acuity and less
community resources such as home health,” Law said. “This has resulted in higher
hospital readmission rates, poor patient outcomes and lower job satisfaction for
all in the health care industry.”

Law warned that if things don’t change soon, the industry will “likely continue
to see a decline in quality of care and patient outcome.”

Solving the nursing shortage crisis isn’t going to be easy, but Fountain
projected that the crisis will get worse if the medical industry doesn’t bring
more nurses into the field “as quickly as we can.”

The 
[labor department](https://www.foxbusiness.com/category/government-and-institutions)
 reported that the “unprecedented demands that the pandemic placed on the
nation’s nurses – combined with retirements and an aging workforce – have
greatly increased the need for nursing workers in the U.S.”

The department projected that more than 275,000 additional nurses will be needed
from 2020 to 2030.

However, Dr. Amber Kool, a registered nurse and associate provost at
[_**Arizona College of Nursing**_](https://www.arizonacollege.edu/), told FOX
Business the shortage has been a problem for decades. The pandemic only
exacerbated it.

“During the height of the pandemic, there was an increase in patient workload,
and nurses saw a significant number of deaths and 
[comorbidities related to COVID-19](https://www.foxnews.com/category/health/infectious-disease/coronavirus)
,” she said, adding that it pushed some to quit.

![BSN Program Nursing Degree Students](https://arizonacollege.edu/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/BSN-Program-Nursing-Degree-Students.jpg)

On top of that, providing student nurses during the pandemic with clinical
opportunities was not only difficult but sometimes nearly impossible.

“Patient care was the priority, and rightly so. But that meant some students
didn’t progress as quickly in their nursing program,” she added.

Making problems worse is the fact that nursing school enrollment isn’t “keeping
pace with the demand for new nurses, even with the high interest in the
profession.”

Many qualified applicants are not admitted, and there are not enough open slots
in programs to educate the next generation, she added.

[The American Association of Colleges of Nursing](https://www.foxnews.com/category/us/education/college)
 (AACN) has previously issued similar concerns, saying that “nursing schools
across the country are struggling to expand capacity to meet the rising demand
for care.”

Kool believes we need to provide more education opportunities for those who want
to enter nursing.

However, Fountain said getting into a shool is only one obstacle. She argued
that the education system needs to support nursing students while they are in
school with better resources to allow them to learn and grow, like mentor
programs on campus, learning workshops and 1-to-1 education.

She also argued that there need to be programs and incentives that “compel
people to go into health care.”

This could be anything from 
[better loan forgiveness for students](https://www.foxbusiness.com/personal-finance/federal-student-loans-biden-forgiveness-payment-pause)
 going into the health care field or hospitals increasing their “grow your own
nursing” programs with free tuition for a commitment to that facility, she said.

Just last month, the labor department announced an $80 million funding
opportunity through its Nursing Expansion Grant Program to help train, expand
and diversify the nursing workforce.

---

**Categories:** Newsroom