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Raising the Nursing Bar

Sicker patients prompt increase to the standards aspiring nurses must meet to pass the NCLEX-RN exam.

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People are living longer and sometimes dying harder from extended illness and chronic disease. People are waiting longer to seek medical care and winding up in the emergency department much sicker. Many ignore symptoms until its too late; others, lots of them, just can't afford healthcare.    

All of which means new nurses are seeing sicker patients than ever before, which naturally begs the question: Is the test all nursing program grads must pass to earn a license to work in the U.S. tough enough?

It's a question the National Council of State Boards of Nursing, Inc. (NCSBN) continuously asks and, in response, routinely stiffens the passing standard for the NCLEX-RN exam, which it did again Dec. 10.

"The passing standard was increased in response to changes in U.S. healthcare delivery and nursing practice that have resulted in the greater acuity of clients seen by entry-level RNs," was the official word from NCSBN in a Dec. 15 press release

Ultimately, the NCSBN board of directors "determined safe and effective entry-level RN practice requires a greater level of knowledge, skills, and abilities than was required in 2007, when NCSBN implemented the current standard."

The new passing standard will take effect on April 1, in conjunction with the 2010 NCLEX-RN Test Plan.

Nursing Input

Prior to raising the standard, an expert panel comprised of nine nurses was convened by the NCSBN to perform a criterion-referenced standard setting procedure.

After carefully considering results of national surveys of nursing educators, nursing directors in acute care settings and administrators of long-term care facilities, the nurses announced their support for increasing the passing standards for the NCLEX-RN exam.

It's not a dramatic increase and its something done every 3 years this past decade by NCSBN which coordinates a passing standard analysis with the 3-year cycle of test plan evaluation for entry-level RNs. The 3-year cycle was developed to keep the test plan and passing standard current.

A free PDF download of the 2010 NCLEX-RN Test Plan is accessible by clicking here.

Meanwhile, with the increase in the passing standard, "there is an anticipated decrease in pass rates," the NCBSN states on its Web site. However, "over the course of a year or 2, the pass rates tend to return to the level prior to any passing standard increase," the staement concludes.

In 2007, the last time the NCSBN raised the exam's standard, pass rates dropped by around 3 percent among first time, U.S.-educated test-takers, according to Kaplan University, which projects up to 4,000 more nursing students failing the exam in 2010 than 2009 due to the tougher standards on the NCLEX-RN exam. 

'Administrators of Care'

So how will this stricter grading impact senior nursing students who graduate in May?

The more than 1,100 undergraduate nursing students at Drexel University College of Nursing and Health Professions, Philadelphia, for example, will see a few changes in their leadership and management course as a result of the stricter NCLEX grading.

"Really, the changes in emphasis in subject matter are already reflected in our courses," said Mary Ellen Smith Glasgow, PhD, RN, CS, referring to the increased emphasis on the test on management of care (16-22 percent of questions will be on this area).

Glasgow, associate professor and associate dean for undergraduate programs, MSN programs and continuing nursing education, said Drexel was aware of the change because she has two faculty members assigned to monitor NCLEX and NCSBN activities.

As a result Drexel had planned to put more emphasis on delegation and safe and effective care in their leadership and management course.

"We'll tweak it so if nurses have to delegate tasks, they will know how you verify it has been done," she told ADVANCE. "How do you teach students to do that? Nurses aren't just caregivers; they're administrators of care." 


  Last Post: January 10, 2010 | View Comments(2)

I smell a rat!
"decrease in anticipated pass rates" a back - door decrease in bedside RN staffing for sure. A butt is a butt no matter if you have a 2yr or 4yr degree. you still have to clean it. 'But' if you don't have the anicillary help to clean yes, your patients become sicker. At our hospital we are lucky to have any ancillary help to help us +45yr old nurses nowadays related to the new administrations cut back of medicare reimbursements. Yes, now patients are sicker.
I can bet my next paycheck that any member of the
NCLEX Board of directors has NOT worked at the bedside in a community hospital in over 10 years!
How can they tell us 'now' bedside nurse who actually touch patients that we or the incoming new nurses that more education is needed to clean that 'butt'?.Nursing is nursing, the same today as it was during the Crimien War ; F.Nigtengale.
These so called Nursing Leaders better get back to the front lines of our community hospitals to see what is happening to what nursing has left to offer before the new nurse hears from us 'old' nurses what they are going to face.

Cheryl1 January 10, 2010



I think that it is a wise move that they are increasing the standards needed to pass the NCLEX RN. Patient safety is paramount. I agree that patients are sicker and the novice nurse has to have a knowledge base that is more comprehensive than in the past. Many people think that phasing out Diploma Programs is the answer but I don't necessarily agree. I graduated from a Diploma program at the top of my class with a 3.87 GPA and passed the NCLEX RN on my first try with 75 questions where some of my BSN counterparts didn't. I definately felt prepared to enter the workforce after graduation. I worked at one of the #1 hospitals in the country where I not only survived, but I thrived. I think that increasing the content taught in nursing programs, in addition to raising the standards needed to pass the NCLEX RN, are needed to prepare the novice nurse for entry into the field. Also more scenario based instruction, along with more clinical time, would also help.

Darlita ,  RNJanuary 08, 2010




     

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