摘要

Roughly 40% of the nearly 3 million registered nurses (RNs) in the United States have an associate's degree (ADN) as their highest level of nursing education.
Yet even before the recent Institute of Medicine report on The Future of Nursing, employers of RNs have increasingly preferred baccalaureate-prepared RNs (BSNs), at least anecdotally.
Data from the American Community Survey (20032013) were analyzed with respect to employment setting, earnings, and employment outcomes of ADN and BSN-prepared RNs.
The data reveal a divergence in employment setting: the percentage of ADN-prepared RNs employed in hospitals dropped from 65% to 60% while the percentage of BSN-prepared RNs employed in hospitals grew from 67% to 72% over this period.
Many ADNs who would have otherwise been employed in hospitals seem to have shifted to long-term care settings.