IOM Report Impact on Nursing
Sarah Smith
Grand Canyon University
IOM Report Impact on Nursing In 2010, the Institute of medicine released a report that focuses on the Future of Nursing. In this report the IOM focuses on nursing issues that impact the way health care is delivered and also discusses advances in practice. “Nursing has more than 3 million members, making the profession of nursing the largest segment of the nation’s health care workforce” (Institute of Medicine, 2015). This statistic reinforces the need for nurses to receive support in the way of education, primary care, and nursing leadership roles.
Nursing education has been reevaluated over and over since the days of Florence …show more content…
As nursing reaches for higher education goals and greater responsibilities, standards for nursing practice must evolve as well. With this greater education, nursing should be supported in practicing with less limitation. They should also achieve greater trust of their advanced knowledge so that nurses can practice to their full potential. The advanced knowledge of physicians is needed in many areas of health care, and there is a need for physicians to delegate primary care practices to nurse practitioners who are fully capable of carrying out these …show more content…
This means growth both in numbers and in strength, which means more nurses taking on leadership rolls in institutions and new nurses must receive better support as they enter the profession. Nurses in history where the physician’s aids that followed orders, now nursing has become an entity that is more autonomous, with education and strength in science (Creasia & Friberg, 2011). As mentioned before, the IOM report suggests increasing the nurse’s education level with a bachelor’s degree to eighty percent, but also suggests doubling the percentage of nurses with a doctorate (Institute of Medicine, 2015). This alone will create more leadership rolls in nursing. With the added recommendations for nurses to receive better residency programs; stronger nurses with more confidence in nursing practice will be produced. With the push for APRNs to take on more autonomy in a primary care setting, nursing rolls as leaders will increase due to the APRNs ability to practice within full scope with less restrictions and more support within each