CNA shortage hitting senior care facilities

Pictured, Oak Hill resident Leona Knobloch speaks with CNA Angie Staub. (Andrea Degenhart photo)

A shortage of certified nursing assistants is causing area care facilities to get creative with staffing and looking for ways to inject interest back into this important field.

โ€œOur CNAs are the backbone of our home and without them we could not function,โ€ Oak Hill administrator Kim Keckritz said.

Over the past few months, Oak Hill and its sister facilities in Waterloo have been down as many as 13 nurses. And itโ€™s a problem being repeated across the metro-east.

โ€œWeโ€™re not really getting any applications (for CNAs),โ€ Keckritz said.

This prompted her to look deeper into the problem. She discovered that the Career Center of Southern Illinois hadnโ€™t held a CNA class in a year for a variety of reasons.

โ€œThat really affected us, because when they have a class, they do their clinicals here,โ€ she said.โ€จSo the two organizations put their heads together, so to speak, and are making a renewed effort to spread information about the CNA field and opportunities for education and employment locally.

โ€œIf somebodyโ€™s interested in becoming a CNA, they can come here and work some part-time hours as a support person for the nursing staff, so they can get a feel for health care in general,โ€ Keckritz said. โ€œWe will help them, along with a scholarship program that is available that pays for their CNA class.โ€

The CNA program at CCSI is six weeks long. Students enrolled in it can work part time at Oak Hill to earn a little income, and when they finish they have employment lined up.

โ€œAnd if they decide they want to take the next step, which would be (becoming a) license practical nurse, we have a weekend option program where they can work the weekend and one evening a week and theyโ€™ll get paid full time, have full-time benefits, and that frees up all their weekdays so they can go to school,โ€ Keckritz said.

CNAs are on the front lines of daily care in facilities like Oak Hill. They are responsible for assisting residents when they eat, dress and bathe. They check vital signs and help residents be mobile. By having plenty of interaction with residents and developing strong relationships with them, CNAs are able to monitor physical, mental and emotional concerns of residents and report changes.

โ€œThe CNA truly makes a difference in the residentsโ€™ lives,โ€ Keckritz said.

The time is right to begin a career in the medical field. As baby boomers age and life expectancies increase, the need for people to work in all aspects of health care is expected to outgrow most other fields over the next 10 to 20 years.

โ€œIt takes the right person to do this job, but I think there are a lot of people out there that want to be in nursing but just donโ€™t know how to get there,โ€ she said.

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Andrea F.D. Saathoff

Andrea is a graduate of Gibault High School and the University of Missouri School of Journalism, the University of Missouri Harry S Truman School of Public Affairs and Southern Illinois University Edwardsville College of Education. She lives in Columbia with her husband and their twin toddler sons. When she isn't cheering on St. Louis Cardinals baseball or riding the emotional roller coaster of Mizzou Tigers football, she enjoys attending and participating in the many family events the county has to offer. email: andrea@republictimes.net
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