Characteristics of Registered Nurses, 1972 and 1977-78 Comparable data on all registered nurses in the United States were collected in 1972 and again in 1977-78. Changes in the supply and distribution of nurses and their demographic and practice characteristics were examined to determine what significant trends occurred between the two inventories. This report summarizes the results of an analysis of some of the data. Data From the National Health Survey Series 14, No. 27 DHHS Publication No. (PHS) 83-1822 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Public Health Service National Center for Health Statistics, Hyattsville, Md. December 1982
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Characteristics of Registered Nurses, 1972 andCharacteristics of Registered Nurses, 1972 and 1977-78 by Joseph Barbano, Dorothy Graham, and Armand Checker,~ Division of Health Care
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Comparable data on all registered nursesin the United States were collected in1972 and again in 1977-78. Changes inthe supply and distribution of nurses andtheir demographic and practicecharacteristics were examined todetermine what significant trends occurredbetween the two inventories. This reportsummarizes the results of an analysis ofsome of the data.
Data From the National HealthSurveySeries 14, No. 27
DHHS Publication No. (PHS) 83-1822
U.S. Department of Health and HumanServices
Public Health Service
National Center for Health Statistics,Hyattsville, Md.December 1982
COPYRIGHT INFORMATION
The National Center for Health Statistics has obtained permission
from the American Nurses Association to adapt the material found
in appendix IV of this report. Further reproduction of this materialis prohibited without specific permission of the copyright holders.All other material contained in the report is in the public domain
and may be used and reprinted without special permission;
citation as to source, however, is appreciated.
SUGGESTED CITATION
National Center for Health Statistics, J. Barbano Characteristics ofRegistered Nurses, 1972 and 1977-78. Vital and Health Statistics.
Series 14, No. 27. DHHS Pub. No. (PHS) 83-1822. Public HealthService. Washington. U.S. Government Printing Office, November,
1982.
Library of Congreaa Cataloging in Publication Data
Barbano, Joseph.
Characteristics of registered nurses, 1972 and 1977-78.(Data from the national health survey. Series 14 ; no. 27)
(DHHS publication ; no (PHS 83-1822)
Supt. of Dots. no.: HE 20.6209:14/27 1. ,Nurses—United
States—Statistics.
1. Graham, Dorothy. Il. Checker, Armand. Ill. Title. IV. Series:
Vital and health statistics. Series 14, Data from the national
health survey; no. 27. V. Series DHHS publication ; no. (PHS)
Ethnicity ........................................................................................................................................ .................................. ..........Site of basic nursing education ........................................................................................................................................ .......Employment status and sex ........................................................................................................................................ ............Employment status and age ........................................................................................................................................ ............
Area of clinical practice and employment setting ..................................................................................................................
Type of nursing position and employment setiing .................................................................................................................
List of detailed tables ...................................................................................................................................................... ............... .
Appendixes
L Definitions of certain terms used in this report ......................................................................................................................
IL Data collection and processing ...............................................................................................................................................Ill. Data collected for the 1977-78 Inventory of Registered Nurses .........................................................................................IV. Limitation of data ......................................................................................................................................................................
1
22223333344
5
6
21222426
iii
Symbols used in tables
. . . Data not available
. . . Category not applicable
Quantity zero
0.0 Quantity more than zero but less than
0.05
z Quantity more than zero but less than
500 where numbers are rounded to
thousands
●
Figure does not meet standards of
reliability or precision (more than
30 percent relative standard error)
# Figure suppressed to comply with
confidentiality requirements
Characteristics ofRegistered Nurses, 1972and 1977-78by Joseph Barbano, Dorothy Graham, and ArmandChecker,~ Division of Health Care Statistics
IntroductionIn September 1976, the National Center for Health
Statistics contracted with the American Nurses Asso-ciation to provide the Center with a data tapecontaining information collected during the 1977–78Inventory of Registered Nurses on all registered nursesin the United States. This report compares data fromthe 1972 inventory] (also conducted by the AmericanNurses Association) with data from the 1977-78inventory. (Descriptive data on registered nurses in1980 are available in a Bureau of Health Professionsreport,z and data on changes in the registered nursepopulation between 1977 and 1980 are available inanother Bureau of Health Professions publications)Duplicate records from the data tape, a result of nursesbeing licensed in more than one State, were deleted;active nurses were placed in their principal State ofemployment, and inactive nurses were placed in theirState of residence.4
The information in the 1977–78 Inventory ofRegistered Nurses was collected using self-adminis-tered questionnaires mailed directly to all licensednurses. The questionnaire mailing was conductedthrough two separate but parallel mechanisms. Thefirst was the Cooperative Health Statistics System.5States with the System’s Manpower Component con-tract collected data on registered nurses and submitteda specified set of data elements (the minimum data set)to the American Nurses Association and the NationalCenter for Health Statistics. The Center had anindividual contract with each State in the CooperativeHealth Statistics System, usually with the State healthdepartment. All contractors in the System developedtheir own questionnaires for distribution in their
●Currently with the Division of Biometry, National Institute of MentalHealth,
States. Questionnaires were required to include allminimum data set items specified by the Center andoften contained the wording and format suggested bythe Center. The second mechanism used a singlesource, the American Nurses Association, to collectthe same minimum data set items in all States that didnot collect data through the Cooperative HealthStatistics System.
Similar methodologies were utilized by both theCooperative Health Statistics System State contractorsand the American Nurses Association to ensureuniformity of the data so that statistics from bothgroups of States could be merged into a national datafile. In every State, either the Cooperative HealthStatistics System State agency or the American NursesAssociation collaborated with the State licensing boardto ensure that questionnaires were sent to all licensednurses. In many States the questionnaires were at-tached to license renewal applications mailed by Statelicensing boards. The questionnaires were returnedeither to the American Nurses Association or theCooperative Health Statistics System State contractorfor editing, coding, and keytaping.
Data collection for the 1977-78 inventory rangedfrom late 1976 to early 1979. Questions in theminimum data set were modeled after those in the1972 inventory; consequently, 1977–78 inventory datawere directly comparable to the 1972 data. Data thatwere not comparable were not included in this report.Because the American Nurses Association was respon-sible either for all data processing such as editing forconsistency among data elements or removing dupli-cate records for both inventories, biases from suchfactors should be minimal.
Readers should note that rates (including percents)used in this report were calculated based on original,unrounded figures and may not agree with ratescalculated from rounded data. In addition, missingdata were excluded from the calculation of percents.
1
Findings
Activity statusBetween the 1972 and 1977–78 inventories, the
estimated number of nurses employed in the professionincreased about 29 percent (table 1).During this period233,000 nurses entered the profession and becameactively engaged in nursing activities. This percentincrease is approximately the same as the increase forthe previous 6 years, which was 25 percent.
Except for Alaska, which showed no increase inthe supply of nurses, Wyoming, South Dakota, andNew Jersey showed the smallest percent changes (4,11, and 11 percent, respectively) in the ratio of activenurses per 100,000 population. Arkansas, New Mexi-co, Indiana, Missouri, and Tennessee had the largestpercent increases, all between 41 and 48 percent (table2). Summarizing the data by region showed that thesmallest percent increases occurred in the New Eng-land and Middle Atlantic States, where increases of 11and 16 percent were recorded. The largestincreases—between 31 and 34 percent-occurred inthe North Central and East South Central States (table3).
In both survey years, the ratio of nurses topopulation varied considerably among the States andregions. In 1972 the range (the difference between thelowest and highest value) among States was 459compared with 514 for 1977–78; the standard devia-tions were 107 and 132b(table 4). The higher values ofthe range and standard deviation in 1977-78 indicatemore variability among States in the 1977–78 nursepopulation ratios than in the 1972 ratios. However, ifthe standard deviations are adjusted for mean values,the coefficient of variations are equal.
In both survey years the majority (about 7 out of10) of licensed nurses were employed in the profession,A significant proportion, 30 of every 100 nurses, wereinactive in nursing in 1972 compared with about 25per 100 in 1977–78 (table 1). The median age of
hhe District of Columbia was excluded from these calculations because itmay be atypical due to the large number of nurses working for the FederalGovernment in a nonclinical capacity,
inactive nurses increased significantly during the inter-val—from 42 years of age in 1972 to 45 in 1977-78,Although the number of active nurses increasedgreatly between the surveys, a small increase (4percent) also was registered for nurses not employed innursing. Unfortunately, no information exists in the1972 survey that indicates the availability “of theinactive nurses for future employment in the profes-sion. However, the 1977-78 survey identified a smallnumber of nurses (slightly more than 20,000, or about1 percent of all licensed nurses) who were notemployed but were seeking work as registered nurses,
AgeThe median age of nurses employed in the profes-
sion decreased from 39 to 37 years between 1972 and1977–78 (table 5). Nationwide, the group of youngernurses (under 35 years of age) increased 43 percentbetween 1972 and 1977-78.”
Educational preparationDistribution of the highest educational level of
registered nurses shifted substantially between the twoinventories. In the 6 years between the two surveys, theproportion of nurses who graduated from 3-yeardiploma programs decreased from 76 to 61 percent. Tocomplement this decrease, the proportion of nursesgraduating from associate and baccalaureate degreeprograms increased. The shift to nurses graduatingfrom associate degree programs has been large—from5 percent of the active nurses in 1972 to 15 percent in1977–78. The proportion of baccalaureate degreeholders also increased, from 15 percent in 1972 to 20percent in 1977-78 (table 6).
The shift in emphasis to the 2- and 4-yeareducational programs from the 3-year diploma pro-
cUsing adjusted counts based on distributions with known data.
2
gram has been progressing for many years. Thenumber of State-approved diploma programs de-creased from 497 in 1971-72 to 293 on January 1,1981, Similarly, the number of accredited baccalaure-ate programs increased from 213 in 1971–72 to 311 onJanuary 1, 1981. The number of students also has beenshifting. In 1979–80 only 17,000 students were admit-ted to diploma programs, compared with 30,000 in1972-73. The number of students admitted to associatedegree programs increased from 44,000 to 54,000. Asmaller but significant increase in the number ofstudents in baccalaureate programs also occurred—in1972-73, there were 30,000 compared with 36,000 in1979-80 (table 7).6
The pattern of proportionately more degree hold-ers in 1977 was apparent in all of the 5-year agegroups, However, the difference between the 1972 and1977-78 results was widest among younger nurses, Forexample, in 1977-78, baccalaureate or postbaccalau-reate degrees were held by 27 percent of the nursesunder 25 years of age and by 12 percent of the nurses65 years of age or older. In 1972, baccalaureate orpostbaccalaureate degrees were held by 17 percent ofthe nurses under 25 years of age and by 11 percent ofthose 65 years of age and over (tables 8 and 9).
SexBetween 1972 and 1977-78 the number of em-
ployed male nurses increased from about 11,000 to23,j00,c Despite this large increase, male nurses stillrepresented only 3 percent of all employed registerednurses in 1977-78 (table 10). The distribution of malenurses by type of positions reveals some changesbetween the two surveys. The number of male nursesworking as staff or general duty nurses increasedgreatly, rising from 3,500 in 1972 to about 10,200 in1977-78,c Although the number of males having aposition of supervisor or assistant supervisor increasedbetween the two surveys, supervisors accounted foronly 11 percent of the men employed in nursing,compared with 17 percent in 1972. A similar decreasetook place among the administrators; 6 percent of themale nurses in 1977-78 were administrators, comparedwith 9 percent in 1972 (table 11).
In 1972, the distribution of male nurses by type ofposition differed substantially from that of females.For example, 58 of every 100 female nurses wereemployed as general duty nurses compared with only33 of every 100 male nurses. Eleven percent of femalenurses were supervisors compared with 17 percent ofthe males, By 1977-78 (with the exception of thecategory “other’’),, these differences decrease~ the onlysignificant differences appeared in the percent of maleand female nurses working in a staff capacity and asadministrators (table 12).
‘Using adjusted counts based on distributions with known data.
Ethnicity
Conclusions about the racial or ethnic backgroundof registered nurses in the 1977-78 inventory must bedrawn with extreme caution because of the largeamount of missing data for this item. Racial or ethnicbackground was missing for 41 percent of the nurses(table 13). Many States did not collect these data; inother States, the data could not be used because theircoding categories did not conform to American NursesAssociation categories.
Of those answering the question on ethnicity, thelargest minority group was black persons, who com-posed 4 percent of all registered nurses in the UnitedStates, a considerably smaller proportion than thepercent of black persons in the U.S. population.According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census, on theother hand, Asian Americans constituted 1.5 percentof the U.S. population in 1978. Nurses of Asianethnicity, however, composed 3 percent of the licensednurses.
Site of basic nursing educationInformation concerning nurses who earned their
nursing credentials outside the United States was notavailable in the 1972 inventory. However, the datawere deemed of sufficient interest to be included in the1977-78 inventory.
U.S. nursing schools provided basic education to96 percent of the nurses in the 1977-78 inventory.Among nurses not trained in the United States, 30percent emigrated from the Philippines and 15 percentfrom the United Kingdom. Most of the others werefrom Asia (tables 14 and 15).
Slightly fewer than 3 out of 4 nurses trained in theUnited States were employed in nursing at the time ofthe 1977-78 inventory, compared with 94 and 97percent for those nurses trained in the Philippines andIndia, respectively (table 16).
Employment status and sexThe shift between 1972 and 1977–78 toward a
larger proportion of licensed nurses employed full timein nursing was characteristic of both male and femalenurses in the inventory. During the 1977–78 inventory,80 percent of the licensed male nurses indicated thatthey were employed full time in nursing, up from 76percent in the 1972 inventory. About 52 percent of thefemales in the 1977-78 inventory were employed fulltime, compared with the 47 percent reported in the1972 inventory (tables 17-20).
Employment status and age
Examination of activity rates for nurses among the5-year age intervals disclosed that in each of the age
3
intervals under 50 years, a larger proportion of nurseswere employed in nursing full time in 1977-78 than in1972. The reverse pattern was observed in the 5-yearage intervals for nurses 50 years of age and over. Theincrease of nurses under 35 years of age that occurredbetween 1972 and 1977-78 was cited previously.Activity rates obviously were affected by the age shift;however, whether the increase in labor force ratescould be attributed to the increase in young personsbecoming nurses, to immigration, or to some otherfactor cannot be determined from the 1977-78 inven-tory data.
For nurses employed part time on a regular basis, apattern different from that for nurses employed fulltime was observed, For each group under 50-54 yearsof age there were proportionately slightly fewer part-time nurses in 1977–78 than there were in 1972. Forthe remaining age groups, virtually the same propor-tion in the two inventories were employed part timeon a regular basis (tables21 and 22).
Area of clinical practice andemployment setting
A small but noticeable change in employment inhospitals and nursing homes was found for nurses whospecified geriatrics as their primary area of clinicalpractice. In 1972, 18 percent worked in hospitals,compared with 12 percent in 1977–78. A complemen-tary increase took place in the percent of the geriatricnurses working in nursing homes. In 1972, 71 percentworked in nursing homes compared with 77 percent in1977-78 (tables 23 and 24).
Settings for nurses working in the area of pediat-rics, including maternal and child health, changedconsiderably between the inventories. The proportionof pediatric nurses working in public health declinedfrom 11 percent to 4 percent between the 1972inventory and the 1977–78 inventory. Another settingwhere relatively large changes occurred among pediat-ric nurses was the hospital. The proportion of pediatricnurses employed in hospitals increased from 61 per-cent in 1972 to 70 percent in 1977-78. An oppositeshift occurred among pediatric nurses employed inschools: in 1972, employment as school nurses ac-counted for 11 percent of pediatric nurses; in 1977–78the comparable figure was 8 percent.
The 1977-78 inventory data revealed somechanges since the 1972 inventory for employment ofnurses in the clinical practicearea of psychiatry and
mental health. The proportion of nurses working inhospitals who indicated psychiatry or mental health astheir area of clinical practice decreased from about 82percent in the 1972 inventory to about 71 percent inthe 1977-78 inventory. A change in the oppositedirection was reported for such nurses employed innursing homes; representation in nursing homes in-creased from 1 percent of all employed nurses in 1972to 3 percent in 1977-78. Another employment settingin which a proportional change in employment oc-curred was public health. The nurses designatingpsychiatry or mental health as their clinical practicearea and who worked in public health settings in-creased by six percentage points. In the 1972 invento-ry, 5 percent of those nurses indicated public health astheir setting; in the 1977-78 inventory, 11 percent did.
Type of nursing position andemployment setting
The distributions of nurses by employment settingin the 1972 and 1977-78 inventories were almost thesame except for those nurses indicating private dutyand “other specified field” as their setting. The numberof private-duty nurses decreased by about one-thirdbetween the two inventories, from about 39,000 to26,500; the proportion of nurses in private dutydecreased, from 5 percent in 1972 to 3 percent in1977-78.
Among nurses in supervisory or assistant supervi-sory positions, hospitals were reported proportionate-ly less and nursing homes proportionately more as theemployment setting in 1977–78 compared with 1972.Hospitals were the most frequent employment settingamong nurses who were supervisors or assistantsupervisors—68 percent in 1972 compared with 62percent in 1977-78.
As expected, schools of nursing were listed mostoften as the employment setting by instructors. In1972, 7 of 10 instructors listed this setting comparedwith 6 of 10 in 1977–78. A small, but perhapssignificant, change occurred in the frequency withwhich nursing homes were listed as the employmentsetting for instructors. In 1972 only 2 percent of theinstructors listed nursing homes as their employmentsetting compared with 4 percent in 1977–78. However,the number of these instructors increased from 652 in1972 to 1,648 in 1977-78C (tables 25 and 26),
“Using adjusted counts based on distributions with known data.
References
lAmerican Nur~e~A~~o~iation,A, V, Roth and A. R. Walden: The
Nation’s Nurses, 1972 Inventory of Registered Nurses. Kansas City,Mo. American Nurses Association Statistics Department, ANA,1974.ZBureau of Health professions, Division of Health prOf(3SiOIM
Analysis: The Registered Nurse Population, An Overview jiomNational Sample Survey of Registered Nurses, November 1980.Report No, 82-5, Hyattsville, Md. 1982.~Bureau of Health professions, Division of Health professions
Analysis, Eugene Levine and Evelyn B. Moses: A Statistical Projileof Registered Nurses in the United States 1977-1980. Report No.82–3. Hyattsville, Md. 1982.
4American Nurses Association, Duane C. Schulte: Inventory ofRegistered Nurses, 1977-78. Kansas City, Mo. American NursesAssociation, 1981.
‘National Center for Health Statistics: The Cooperative HealthStatistics System, its mission and program. Vital and HealthStatistics. Series 4, No. 19. DHEW Pub. No. (HRA) 77-1456.Health Resources Administration, Washington. U.S. GovernmentPrinting Office, Apr. 1977.
GNational League for Nursing: State Approved Schools ofNursing—R.N. Pub. No. J9-1853, 1981 and previous years.
List of detailed tables
1. Number of registered nurses, by employment status and yearof inventory, and percent increase between 1972 and1977-78, by employment status United States, 1972 and1977.78 ...........................................................................................
2. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing per 100,000population, by State and year of inventoty, and percentincrease beween 1972 and 1977-78, by State United States,1972 and 1977-78 ..........................................................................
3. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing per 100,000population, by region and year of invento~, and percentincrease between 1972 and 1977-78, by region: United States,1972 and 1977-78 ..........................................................................
4. Variability of ratios of State-employed registered nurses to thepopulation, by year of inventory United States, 1972 and1977.78 ...........................................................................................
5. Number and percent distribution of registered nurses em-ployed in nursing by age, according to year of inventory, andmedian age by year of inventory? United States, 1972 and1977-78 ...........................................................................................
6. Number and percent distribution of registered nurses em-ployed in nursing by highest educational preparation, accord-ing to year of inventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78 .........
7. Number and percent distribution of nursing student admissionsby type of program, according to academic yeac United States,1972-73 and 1979+0 ....................................................................
8. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing, by age,highest educational preparation, and year of inventory UnitedStates, 1972 and 1977-78 .............................................................
9. Percent distribution of registered nurses employed in nursingby highest educational preparation, according to age and yearof inventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78 ...........................
10. Number and percent distribution of registered nurses em-doved in nursing by sex according to year of inventow United
7
7
8
8
8
8
8
9
9
States, 1972 an; 1977-78 ............~.....~........................................ 1011. Number and percent distribution of male registered nurses
employed in nursing by type of position, according to year ofinventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78 ................................ 10
12. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing and percentdistribution by type of position, according to year of inventoryand sex United States, 1972 and 1977-78 .................................. 10
13. Number and percent distribution of registered nurses by raceor Hispanic origin: United States, 1977-78 .................................. 10
14. Number of registered nurses, by site of basic nursing educa-tion and employment status United States, 1977-78 ................. 11
15. Percent distribution of all registered nurses and those em-ployed in nursing by site of basic nursing education: UnitedStates, 1977-78 .............................................................................. 12
16. Percent distribution of registered nurses by employmentstatus, according to site of basic nursing education: UnitedStates, 1977-78 .............................................................................. 12
17. Number of male registered nurses, by age, employment statu%and year of inventory United States, 1972 and 1977-76 ........... 13
18. Percent distribution of male registered nurses by employmentstatus, according to age and year of inventory United States,1972 and 1977-78 .......................................................................... 13
19. Number of female registered nurses, by age, employmentstatus, and year of inventow United States, 1972 and 1977-78 14
20. Percent distribution of female registered nurses by employ-ment status, according to age and year of inventory UnitedStates, 1972 and 1977-78 ............................................................. 14
21. Number of registered nurses, by age, employment status, andyear of inventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78 ................... 15
22. Percent distribution of registered nurses by employmentstatus, according to age and year of inventory United States,1972 and 1977-78 .....................................................................C..C.15
23. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing, by area ofclinical practice, employment setting, and year of inventoryUnited States, 1972 and 1977-78 ................................................. 16
24. Percent distribution of registered nurses employed in nursingby employment setting, according to area of clinical practiceand year of inventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78 ........... 17
25. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing, by type ofposition, employment setting, and year of inventory UnitedStates, 1972 and 1977-78 ............................................................. 18
26. Percent distribution of registered nurses employed in nursingby employment setting, according to type of position and yearof inventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78 ........................... 19
6
Table 1. Number of registered nurses, by employment status and yearof inventory, and percent increase behveen 1972 and 1977-78, byemployment status United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Original counkEmployed in nursing ........... 778,470 958,308 23.1
Not employed in nursing,.. 316,611 323,483 2.2
Not reported ......................... 32,576 93,417 186.8
Estimated countEmployed in nursing ........... 1794,979 11,028,003 29.3
Not employed in nursing ... 1332,678 1347,205 4.4
Nursas employed per100,000 population ................ 1380 1472 24.2
1Adjusted for nonresponse to questions on employment status and county ofemployment.
Table 2. Number of registered nurses empioyed in nursing per 100,000population, by State and year of inventory, and percent increasebetween 1972 and 1977-78, by State United States, 1972 and1977-78
1Adjusted for nonresponse to questions on employment status and county ofemployment.
Table 3. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing per 100,000population, by region and year of inventory, and percent increasebetween 1972 and 1977-78, by region: United States, 1972 and1977-78
Year of
Region inventory Percent
1972increase
1977-78
Number per100,000
popuiationl
United States ......................... 380 472 24.2New England .......................... 596 664 11.4Middle Atlantic ....................... 485 561 15.7Pacific ...................................... 352 438 23.9Mountain .................................. 393 492 25.2West South Central .............. 237 302 27.4South Atlantic ......................... 340 438 28.8East North Central ................ 370 483 30.5West North Central ............... 406 536 32.0East South Central ............... 235 315 34.0
IAdjusted for nonresponse to questions on employment status and county ofemployment.
Table 4. Variability of ratios of State-employed registered nurses to thePopulation, by year of inventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Year of inventoryMeasure of variability
1972 1977-78
Range ....................................................... 459 514Standard deviation ................................. 107 132Coefficient of variation .......................... .28 ,28
I Excludes the Oistrict of Columbia.
Table 6. Number and percent distribution of registered nurses em-ployed in nursing by highest educational preparation, according toyear of inventory: United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Highest educational Year of inventory
preparation 1972 1977-78 1972 1977-78
PercentNumber distribution
Total ....................................... 778,470 958,308 100.0 100.0Less than baccalaureate .... 1626,857 722,861 182.0 75.8
Source National League for Nursing State Approved Schoo/s of Nursing - R.N.
Table 5. Number and percent distribution of registered nursesPub. No. 19-1853, 1981 and previous years.
employed in nursing by age, according to year of inventory, andmedian age by year of inventory: United State8, 1972 and 1977-78
Year of inventoryAge
1972 1977-78 1972 1977-78
PercentNumber distribution
All ages ......................... 778,470 958,308 100.0 100.0Under 35 years............ 288,103 412,079 38.7 44.035-44 years.................. 167,454 220,456 22.5 23.645-54 years.................. 165,139 182,798 22.2 19.555-64 years .................. 98,313 100,254 13.2 10.765 years and over ...... 25,248 20,365 3.4 2.2Not reported ................. 34,213 22,346 . . . . . .
Median age., ................. 39.4 36.9 S.S ..s
Table 8, Number of registered nurses employed in nursing, by age, highest educational preparation, and year of inventory: United States,1972and 1977-78
Table 9. Percent distribution of registered nurses employed in nursing by highest educational preparation, according to age and year ofinventory United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Table 10. Number and percent distribution of registered nursesemployed in nursing by sex, according to year of inventory UnitedStates, 1972 and 1977-78
Table 12. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing andpercent distribution by type of position, according to year ofinventory and sex: United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Table 11. Number and percent distribution of male registered nursesemployed in nursing by type of position, according to year ofinventory United States, 1972 and 1977-76
! Includeenursepractitionersand clinicalspecialistsfor 1977-78 and additionalcategoriesfor both 1972 and 1977-78. Clinicalspecialistsin 1972 were codadas consultants.
Year of inventory.
Type of position 1972 1977-78
Male Female Male Female
All nursing positional ..............
Total ...........................................Administrator or assistant ......Consultant .................................Supervisor or assistant ...........Instructor ...................................Head nurse or aasistant ........Staff or general duty ..............Otherz ........................................
1Excludesnursesfor whom sex is unknownor type of positionis not reported.ZIncludesnurse practitionersand clinicalspecialistsfor 1977-78 and additionalcategories for both 1972 and 1977-78. Clinical specialists in 1972 were codedas consultants.
Table 13. Number and percent distribution of registered nurses byrace or Hispanic origin: United States, 1977-78
Race or Hispanic origin NumberPercent
distribution
All races and ethnic origins ........... 1,375,208 100.0White ................................................... 741,863 91.0Black ................................................... 32,712 4.0Asian or Pacific Islander ................. 25,567 3.1Hispanic origin .................................. 8,702 1.1American Indian or Alaskan
Table 14. Number of registered nurses, by site of basic nursing education and employment status United States, 1977-78
Employment status
Site of Allbasic nursing education Employed Not
registered employed Not
nursesin nursing
in nursing reported
All sites ................................................................................................................
North America .....................................................................................................United Statesl .................................................................................................Canada .............................................................................................................Jamaica ............................................................................................................Other ................................................................................................................North America, country not indicated ........................................................
Australia and East Indies .................................................................................Philippines ........................................................................................................Other ,,,,,,,,,s......................................................................................................Australia and East Indies, country not indicated .....................................
Europe ..................................................................................................................United Kingdom ......................,..,..,,0,...,..........................................................Other ................................................................................................................Europe, country not indicated .....................................................................
Asia and Pacific Islands ,,,,,,,,!0,,,,.,!.,!.,.,,,,,,!.,,,,,...!...........................................Korea ................................................................................................................lndia ..................................................................................................................Thailand ...........................................................................................................Other ................................................................................................................Asia and Pacific Islands, country not indicated .......................................
Africa .....................................................................................................................All known countries .......................................................................................Country not indicated ....................................................................................
South America and Antarctica .........................................................................Guyana .............................................................................................................Other ................................................................................................................South America, country not indicated ........................................................
Other foreign country not indicated ................................................................Not repoded ........................................................................................................
Table 15. Percent distribution of all registered nurses and thoseemployed in nursing by site of basic nursing education: UnitedStates, 1977-78
Table 16. Percent distribution of registered nurses by employmentstatus, according to site of basic nursing education: United States,1977-78
Site of basicnursing education
AllEmployed
registerednurses
in nursing
AH sites ..............................................North America ...................................
United Statesl ...............................Canada ...........................................Jamaica ..........................................Other ..............................................North America, country notindicated .......................................
Australia and East Indies ...............Philippines......................................Other ..............................................Australia and East Indies,
country not indicated ................Europe ................................................
United Kingdom ............................Other ..............................................Europe, country not indicated ...
Asia and Pacific islands .................Korea ..............................................India ................................................Thailand .........................................Other ..............................................Asia and Pacific Islands,
country not indicated ................Africa ...................................................
All known countries .....................Country not indicated ..................
South America and Antarctica .......Guyana...........................................Other ..............................................South America, country not
indicated...,...................................
Other foreign country notindicated ...........................................
100.096.895.60.90.10.2
0.01.41.30.0
0.01.00.70.30.00.60.20.10.10.2
0.00.00.00.00.10.10.1
0.0
0.1
100.096.295.0
0.90.20.2
0.01.71.70.0
0.01.10.80.30.00.70.20.20.10.2
0.00.10.00.00.10.10.1
0.0
0.1t Includesoutlyingareasof the UnitedStates.
Employment status
Site of basic All Notnursing education registered
Employedin nursing employed
nurses in nursing
All sites ..................................North America .......................
United Statesl ...................Canada ...............................Jamaica ..............................Other ..................................North America, counttynot indicated ...................
Australia and East Indies ...Philippines ..........................Other ..................................Australia and East
Indies, country notindicated ...........................
Europe ....................................United Kingdom ................Other ..................................Europe, country notindicated ...........................
Asia and Pacific Islands .....Korea ..................................India ....................................Thailand .............................Other ..................................Asia and Pacific Islands,
country not indicated ....Africa .......................................
All known countries .........Country not indicated ......
South America andAntarctica .............................
Guyana ...............................Other ..................................South America, country
not indicated ...................Other foreign country
not indicated .......................
100.0100.0100.0100.0100.0100.0
100.0100.0100.0100.0
100.0100.0100.0100.0
100.0100.0100.0100.0100.0100.0
100.0100.0100.0100.0
100.0100.0100.0
100.0
74.874.774.771.394.593.6
96.693.694.082.6
81.864.687.178.9
76.288.988.296.592.679.6
100.089.589.192.6
92.495.389.1
91.9
79.1
25.225.325.328.7
5.56.4
3.46.46.0
17.4
18.215.412.921.1
23.811.111.83.57.4
20.4
10,510.97.4
7.64.7
10.9
8.1
20.9100.0
I Includesoutlyingareasof the UnitedStates.
12
Table 17. Number of male registered nurses, by age, employment status, and year of inventory United States, 1972 and 1977=78
All ages ...................................Under 25 years.,....................25-29 years ............................30-34 years ............................35-39 years ............................40-44 years............................45-49 years..,.,..,....................50-54 years ............................55-59 years............................60-64 years...........................065 years and over ................Not reported ...........................
1Excludes 1,826 respondents who did not report their sex in 1972 and 74,873 who did not reporl their sex in 1977-78.
ZIncludes 33,91 S female nurses employed in nursing for whom full-or part-time employment was not specified.
aIncludes 3,S65 female nurses employed in nursing for whom full-or part-time employment was not specified.
Table 20. Percent distribution of female registered nurses by employment status, according to age and year of inventory: United States,1972 and 1977-78
All ages .............................................
Under 25 yak .. ..............................25-29 years ......................................30-34 years..., ..................................35-39 years ......................................40-44 years ......................................45-49 years ......................................50-54 years ......................................55-59 years ......................................60-64 years ......................................65 years and over...,,,..., ................
Not reported .....................................
t Excludes 1,S26 respondents who did not report their sex in 1972 and 74,S73 who did not report their sex in 1977–7S.ZIncludes 34,931 nurses employed in nursing for whom full-or part-time employment was not specified.sIncludes 3,94S nurses employed in nursing for whom full-or part-time employment was not specified.
Table 22. Percent distribution of registered nurses by employment status, according to age and year of inventory United States, 1972 and1977-7fr.-
Employment status and year of inventory
AllEmployed
Employed Employed Not
Age registeredfull time
part time, part time, employednurses regular irregular in nursing
Table 23. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing, by area of clinical practice, employment setting, and year of inventory:United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Employment setting and year of inventory
Area of clinical practice All settings Hospital Nursing homeSchool of
Table 24. Percent distribution of registered nurses employed in nursing by employment setting, according to area of clinical practice and year of inventotyUnited States, 1972 and 1977-78
Employment setting and year of inventow
NursingPublic health Industrial
Area of clinical practiceSchool of
OtherAll settings Hospital
home nursingPrivate duty or commu- School nurse or Office nurse specitied
Geriatric ......... ..................................Gynecologic or obstetric ..............Medical or surgical ........................Pediatric or maternai-child
health.............................................Psychiatric or mental health .......General practice ............................Other sr3ecified area .....................
Table 25. Number of registered nurses employed in nursing, by type of position, employment setting, and year of inventory:United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Employment setting and year of inventory
Type of position All settings Hospital Nursing homeSchool of
.-.~Includes nurse practitioners and clinical specialists for 1977-7S and additional categories for both 1972 and 1977-7S. Clinical specialists in 1972 were coded asconsultants.
18
Table 26. Percent distribution of registered nurses employed in nursing by employment setting, according to type of position and year of inventory: United States, 1972 and 1977-78
Employment se~”ng and yew of inventory
Public healthTyP of position Nursing School of
IndustrialAll settings
OtherHospital
home nursingPrivate duty or commu- School nurse or 0t7ice nurse specified
1Includes nurse practitioners and clinical specialists for 1977–78 and additional categories for both 1972 and 1977–78. Clinical specialists in 1972 were coded as consultants.
Appendixes
Contents
1.
Il.
Ill.Iv.
Definitions of certain terms used in this report ......................................................................................................................Geographic area ...............................................................................................................................................................Age ....................................................................................................................................... .............................. ................Part-time work and racial and ethnic categories ............................................................................................................
Data collection and processing ...............................................................................................................................................Cooperative Health Statistics System ............................................................................................................................Minimum data set ....................................................................................................................................... .......................
Removing duplicate records ....................................................................................................................................... .....Data collected for the 1977-78 Inventory of Registered Nurses .........................................................................................
Limitation of data ....................................................................................................................................... ............... ...............,Race or ethnic background ....................................................................................................................................... .,,.,.,
Basic and highest educational background ....................................................................................................................Type of position ...................................................................................................................................................... ...........Population coverage .........................................................................................................................................................Nonresponse ........................................................................................................................................ .............................
appendix tables
1. Cooperative Health Statistics System (CHSS) States supplying data to the American Nurses Association for1977-78 Registered Nurse Inventory and year of data ........................................................................................................
Il. Percent of missing data for some major inventory variables, 1977-78 ...............................................................................
21212121222222
2324262626262727
2227
Appendix 1. Definitions ofcertain terms used in thisreport I
Geographic area.—The following are based on U.S. Age.—Age of nurse was obtained by subtractingBureau of the Census classifications: the nurse’s year of birth from 1977.
Region States included Part-time work and racial and ethnic categories.—These variables are not defined and are self-reported.
East North Central ......... Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, WisconsinEast South Central ........ Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, TennesseeMiddle Atlantic ................ New Jersey, New York, PennsylvaniaMountain ........................... Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada,
New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming
New England ................... Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, NewHampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont
South Atlantic .................. Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Geor-gia, Maryland, North Carolina, South Caroli-na, Virginia, West Virginia
West North Central ........ Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebras-ka, North Dakota, South Dakota
West South Central ....... Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, Texas
21
Appendix IL Data collectionand processing
Cooperative Health Statistics System
In response to a need for demographic andpractice data on health professions personnel, theNational Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) estab-lished the manpower component of the CooperativeHealth Statistics System (CHSS), which was designedto decentralize the collection of data from the Federalto the State level. The data were transferred from eachState in the system to NCHS. The CHSS was neverfully developed to provide health manpower data in allStates, and eventually this component of the systemwas terminated. While it was in operation, 19 Statesprovided data on registered nurses to the AmericanNurses Association (ANA) for use in the 1977-78Inventory of Registered Nurses (table I of this appen-dix). Data collected by the CHSS States were sent ontapes to the ANA and NCHS. In those States not partof the CHSS, the ANA conducted a survey of alllicensed nurses in conjunction with each State’s licens-ing board.
*
Minimum data setAs part of the CHSS, NCHS developed a uniform
minimum data set (MDS) in consultation with otherproducers and users of health manpower data. TheMDS consisted of a core of basic data on 13 healthoccupations plus occupation-specific data elements.For each occupation there was to have been developedan occupation-specific set of data elements which,combined with the core set, became the MDS. How-ever, at the time of this publication data elementsgermane to only six occupations were developed,These were dentistry, dental hygiene, nursing (regis-tered and practical), optometry, and pharmacy. Aside
dThehealthoccupations were chiropractic, dental hygiene, dentistry,medicine (allopathic and osteopathic), nursing (registered and practical),nursing home administration, optometry, pharmacy, physical therapy,podiatry, and veterinary medicine.
22
Table 1. Cooperative Health Statistics System (CHSS) Statessupplying data to the American Nurses Association for1977-78 Registered Nurse Inventory and year of data
from identifying numbers, the core data were asfollows:
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
Current name.
Mailing address.
State of residence.
Principal place of work.
Birth date,
Sex.
Race,
Hispanic origin.
Year of graduation for initial licensure.
State in which school or program was located.
Weeks worked in past 12 months,
Hours worked.
The occupation-specific data items were the following:
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
●
County of residence.
Marital status.
Basic nursing educational preparation.
Highest degree held.
Number of States in which licensed.
Employment status.
Activity status.
Principal field of employment.
Type of nursing position.
Major clinical, teaching, or practice area in nurs-ing.
List of States in which currently licensed.
For the 1977-78 Survey of Licensed Nurses, thisMDS was the basis for the development of the datacollection instrument. Data items on the individualquestionnaires developed by each State participating inthe CHSS were to be identical. However, becauselegislative and administrative requirements variedamong the States, the order of the questions and thewording or the format of the questionnaires departedfrom the NCHS model. In a few cases, State legislationprevented the collection of certain data items consid-ered sensitive, such as race. In addition, States werepermitted to exclude from the questionnaire any itemsfor which data were available from their State licensingboard records. They were also allowed to include ontheir questionnaires other questions that were not partof the MDS but that States needed for their owninformation. The use of the MDS as the basis for allquestionnaires resulted in data that could be merged toproduce a national file of registered nurses.Appendix III documents the items collected during the1977-78 Inventory of Registered Nurses.
Removing duplicate recordsThe 51 State tapes (including that from the
District of Columbia) were obtained by the ANAeither through the CHSS or from the ANA surveys ofthe individual States. When the individual State tapeswere merged into a national data file, the file containedthe total number of nursing licenses held in thecountry. Although this number is interesting anduseful, from a national perspective it is far moreimportant to focus on the number of individual healthpractitioners as :he unit of analysis. Shortage areadesignation, adequacy of supply, and minority assimi-lation, to name some functions, depend on individualsand their work locations, and multiple counting of thesame individual would not be acceptable in evaluatingthese factors. Thus it was necessary to remove dupli-cate records of nurses licensed in more than one State
and derive a national data file in which each nurse wascounted only once.
The total number of licenses held by nurses beforeunduplication was 1,601,532. After 226,324 licenseswere eliminated from the file by the deletion process,1,375,208 individually licensed nurses remained.
Reason for removal of licenses Numberon national data file
Total number of licenses ......................................... 1,601,532
Total removed from file ........................................... 226,324Geographically located outside UnitedStates .................................................................... 10,916
No unique identifiers (social security number,name, address) .................................................... 765
Matching social security number........................ 129,000Matching process .................................................. 64,743Other ....................................................................... 900
Total number of registered nurses ........................ 1;375,208
Before passage of the Privacy Act of 1974 (PublicLaw 93-579), the primary tool for removing duplicaterecords of individuals licensed in more than one Statewas the social security number. But as the publicbecame concerned about the potential invasion ofprivacy made possible by the development of high-speed computers and the linking of various datasystems, the Privacy Act was passed to ensure theconfidentiality of records. The Act, among otherthings, established stringent conditions on the use ofthe social security number. Section 7(b) states thefollowing:
Any Federal, State, or local government agen-cy which requests an individual to disclose hissocial security number shall inform that itidi-vidual whether that disclosure is mandatory orvoluntary, by what statutory or other authori-ty such number is solicited, and what uses willbe made of it.
The effect of this provision was twofold. First, allmanpower questionnaires had to comply withSection 7(b) above. Second, many State CHSS contrac-tors were prohibited from asking social securitynumber by executive decree or through State legisla-tive action. Because the effect of the Privacy Act wasto make it difficult to collect or use the social securitynumber as a means for purging the file of duplicaterecords, an alternative method to remove duplicaterecords was devised.
All records that did not contain social securitynumbers and the unduplicated file that containedsocial security numbers were compared, using alpha-betized name and invariant statistical information,such as year and month of birJ.h, location of basicnursing education, and year of graduation.
23
Appendix Ill. Data collectedfor the 1977-78 Inventoryof Registered Nurses
Identifying number1 Social security number2 License number3 Other
Name: Last, first, middle initial
Mailing address
Location of basic nursing programStateForeign country
Year of graduation from basic nursing program
Basic nursing educational preparation1 Diploma2 Associate degree3 Baccalaureate or higher4 Other
Highest degree held1 Diploma2 Associate degree3 Baccalaureate in nursing4 Baccalaureate in other field5 Master’s in nursing6 Master’s in other field7 Doctorate
Birthdate: Month, day, year
Sex1 Male2 Female
Marital status1 Never married2 Married3 Separated4 Widowed5 Divorced
Race12345
24
Caucasian or whiteNegro or blackAmerican Indian or native AmericanOriental or AsianOther
Hispanic origin or descent1 Mexican or Chicano2 Puerto Rican or Boricua3 Cuban4 Central or South American5 Other Hispanic
Number of States, territories, and Commonwealths inwhich currently licensed
List of States, territories, and Commonwealths inwhich currently licensed
Average hours per week worked in past 12
Number of weeks worked in past 12 months
Emtdovment status
months
i23456
7
8
F;ll time in nursingPart time in nursingFull time in field other than nursingPart time in field other than nursingUnemployedEmployed in nursing but full- or part-time notindicatedEmployed in field other than nursing but full- orpart-time not indicatedRetired
If unemployed, are you actively seeking employmentas a registered nurse?
1 Yes2 No
Location of residenceState, territory, CommonwealthCountyCity
Location of EmploymentState, territory, CommonwealthCountyCityZIP Code
Principal field or setting of employment01 Hospital02 Nursing home
03 School of nursing04 Private duty05 School nurse06 Occupational health nurse07 Office nurse08 Community health09 Self-employed other than private duty10 Other
Type of nursing position1 Administrator or assistant administrator2 Consultant3 Supervisor or assistant4 Instructor5 Head nurse or assistant
6 Staff or general duty7 Nurse associate or practitioner8 Clinical specialist (master’s degree)9 Other
Major clinical, teaching, or practice area in nursing1 Generalized community health2 General practice3 Geriatric4 Obstetric or gynecologic5 Medical or surgical6 Pediatric7 Psychiatric or mental health8 Other
25
Appendix IV. Limitation ofdata
a
This portion of the report is taken from materialfound in D.C. Schulte: Inventory of Registered Nurses,1977-78. Kansas City, Mo. American Nurses Associa-tion, 1981. This material is being reprinted with thepermission of the American Nurses Association andthe authors appreciate and thank the ANA forpermission to use the material.
Race or ethnic background
Many States did not collect data on race or ethnicbackground. Some States were prohibited from includ-ing such questions by either executive decree or bylegislative action. The race questions of many otherStates were slightly different from that of the majorityin that the category for Hispanic origin or descent wasnot included, or a separate question on Hispanic originwas not included in the questionnaire for these States.For these States, nurses of Hispanic origin could havebeen coded as having missing data or could have beenscattered throughout the other categories, dependingupon their responses to the incomplete race question.
To remove the bias of such data against Hispanicorigin, all States that supplied race data using anincomplete race question had all of these data convert-ed to missing values. Although this removes the biasagainst Hispanic origin, it creates a bias against thoseStates that supplied incomplete race data. The Statessupplying complete race data may not be representa-tive of those States that prohibited race questions orsupplied incomplete race data, The national distribu-tions of nurses in the race categories are limited tothose States supplying complete data and may there-fore be biased. The following States supplied no racedata: Maryland, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, NorthCarolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Utah.
For the following States, the race data collectedwere not complete: Arkansas, Georgia, Michigan,Missouri, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, RhodeIsland, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia.Finally, for approximately 175 Alaska nurses and3,000 New Mexico nurses, no race data were collected.
Basic and highest educationalbackground
The question on highest educational preparationhas been modified slightly. The present inventory hasdiploma and associate degree as new categories for thisitem. In previous inventories, if the highest degree wasless than a baccalaureate, it had to be inferred from thebasic educational preparation. The small group ofnurses with a diploma as their basic and an associatedegree as their highest was categorized as having adiploma as the highest degree in the previous invento-ry.
Nurses who failed to supply their highest degreewere given one by having it recoded to equal theirbasic. Nurses who failed to supply their basic degreewere given one equal to their highest if their highestdegree was one of the three basic nursing preparationdegrees (diploma, associate degree, or baccalaureate innursing). All nurses indicating “other” for their basicdegree had this response recoded. If the nurse reportedthe highest degree as being one of the basic nursingpreparation degrees and listed “other” for basic, thatbasic degree was recoded by computer from “other” toequal the nurse’s highest degree. If the nurse reportedthe highest degree as being something other than oneof the basic nursing preparations, the basic degree if“other” was recoded to diploma.
Type of position
It is uncertain how the nurses responded to theclinical specialist category because of the master’sdegree caveat attached to the category. The categorywas listed as “clinical specialist (master’s degree)” forall but the following States: Delaware, Maryland, andNorth Carolina (1978-1979 renewal period only).These three States had the category “clinical special-ist.” A large percent of those responding as clinicalspecialists did not indicate that they had a master’sdegree in nursing for their highest degree-or even abaccalaureate in nursing. It is uncertain how many
26
nurses who were functioning as specialists failed toindicate such because of the master’s degree restric-tion,
Population coverageMuch correspondence was exchanged between the
ANA and the respective State boards and others toensure as complete a coverage of the nurse populationas possible for each State (at least of renewals). Thesurveys were sent out primarily at license renewaltime. The renewal forms themselves served as invento-ry questionnaires for most States. Questionnaires sentwith the renewal notice were used for three otherStates, For the remaining four States for which ANAwas responsible for data collection, a census file wasreceived and served as a file for mailing questionnaires.Mailing followups by ANA to nonrespondents wereconducted to ensure high response rates for severalStates, Matching of all survey respondents to completecensus files was carried out to obtain responses fromnonrespondents in 12 of the 32 States (including theDistrict of Columbia) for which ANA had totalresponsibility for data collection. The 19 State contrac-tors of the Cooperative Health Statistics Systemhandled the data in the same general manner.
NonresponseTable II is a list of the percents of missing data for
some of the major variables in the inventory. These
percents are quite low; but given the large number ofsurvey respondents, the numbers affected are large.Wherever counts were utilized, adjustments for non-response were addressed.
It was not possible to calculate an overall nonres-ponse figure because the CHSS States very oftenincluded information on their tapes that was availablefrom licensing board records. Thus identifying nonres-pondents was not always possible. In a personalcommunication, Duane Schulte4 suggested that thepercent nonresponse to the question on employmentstatus (6.8 percent) would be representative of nonres-ponse to the questionnaire because this item would notlikely be available in the records of licensing boards.
TABLE Il. Percent of missing data for some major inventoryvariables, 1977-78
Variable Percentrwre.wonse
All Nurses
Employment status ...............................................Basic education ....................................................Location of basic nursing education ................Highest education .................................................Race .......................................................................
Nurses employed in nursing
Field of employ merit ...........................................Type of position ...................................................Major clinical area ................................................
5.48.16.86.0
14.95.8
40.7
1.31.77.1
till , S , GOWWNT PRINTING OFFICE: 1982-381-16 I :522 27
Vital and Health Statistics series descriptions
SERIES1.
SERIES 2.
SERIES 3.
SERIES 4.
SERIES 10.
SE131ES II.
SERIES 12.
SERIES 13.
Programs and Collection Procedures. -Reports describing
the general programs of the National Center for Health
Statistics and its offices and divisions and the data col-
Iccticrn methods used. They also include definitions and
other material necessary forunderstanding the data.
Data Evaluation and Methods Research. –Studies of new
statistical methodology including experimental tests of
now survey methods, studies of vital statistics collection