2022 Study Highlights

This study used a mixed-mode approach, involving mailing a national, randomized sample survey to licensed RNs and LPNs/VNs in most jurisdictions, supplemented by a national, randomized sample survey emailed to licensed RNs and LPNs/VNs in four jurisdictions and data from the e-Notify nurse licensure notification system for five jurisdictions. Data from RN and LPN/VN respondents were collected between April 11, 2022, and September 30, 2022. A total of 278,631 RNs and 55,503 LPN/VNs participated in the study. A nonresponse analysis was conducted, and a weighting scheme was used in the analysis process to adjust the distribution across states, age, and gender in order to estimate population-level statistics.

Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the U.S. Nursing Workforce

The 2022 National Nursing Workforce Study represents the largest, most comprehensive and rigorous evaluation of the nursing workforce since the onset of the pandemic in the U.S. The analysis confirms that approximately 100,000 registered nurses and 34,000 licensed practical and vocational nurses left the workforce over the past two years specifically due to the pandemic. Alarmingly, 41% of the RN total is comprised of nurses with a mean age of 36 and fewer than 10 years’ work experience.

Further, high workloads, stress, and burnout have strained the current U.S. nursing workforce, compounding observed attrition over the past two years. Study results indicate 62% of nurses at all levels reported an increase in their workload during the pandemic. In addition, half reported feeling emotionally drained, used up, fatigued, and burned out a few times a week to every day (45%-56%). Over one quarter of the workforce (29%) reported feeling at the end of their rope at similar intervals.

Looking ahead, 800,000 RNs and 184,000 LPNs/VNs indicate they are likely to leave nursing by 2027. That is equivalent to roughly 20% of the total licensed RN and LPN/VN workforces in the U.S., respectively. Younger, early career nurses account for 24% of the RN total due to burnout and stress. However, the report notes these projections are not static, but rather manipulable outcomes depending on the decisions policymakers make today and in the near future. This critical work serves as an urgent call to tailor policy solutions aimed at fostering a more resilient, sustainable, and safer U.S. nursing workforce moving forward.

Licensed Practical Nurse Results

Data should be cited as:
Smiley, R.A., Allgeyer, R.L., Shobo, Y., Lyons, K.C., Letourneau, R., Zhong, E., Kaminski-Ozturk, N., and Alexander, M. (2023). The 2022 National Nursing Workforce Survey. Journal of Nursing Regulation, 14(1), S1-S90.

  • The median age of LPN/VNs was 47 in 2022, falling from a median age of 53 in 2020
  • The median age decline was associated with the loss of over 600,000 experienced LPN/VNs to the workforce
  • The percentage of males in LPN/VN workforce increased from 8.1% in 2020 to 10.2% in 2022
  • LPN/VNs were more racially and ethnically diverse than their RN counterparts with approximately 34% of LPN/VNs identifying as racial minorities, and 11.5% identifying as Hispanic/Latino
  • 82.0% of LPN/VNs indicated a vocational/practical certificate as their entry-level qualification for their first U.S. nursing license
  • 30.6% LPN/VNs indicated that their primary nursing practice position was in a nursing home/extended care setting in 2022, increasing from 27.5% in 2020
  • The median pre-tax annual earnings for LPN/VNs increased from $44,000 in 2020 to $50,000 in 2022
  • Over 60% of LPN/VNs reported an in increase to their workload due to the COVID-19 pandemic