Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Latest global nursing report a call to action to invest in nurses

The Australian College of Nursing 2 mins read

The latest snapshot of nursing globally highlights persistent nursing shortages and deep inequities in access to nursing worldwide, underscoring the urgent need for Australia to increase support for its current and future nurses.

The World Health Organization’s State of the World’s Nursing 2025 report provides information on nurses from more than 190 countries and has been released to mark International Nurses Day today.

The landmark report estimates a global nursing workforce shortage of 5.8 million. It says to narrow this to a projected 4.1 million by 2030 will require a strong, unified commitment from regions around the world. It also shows high-income countries, like Australia, host 46% of the world’s nurses, despite only representing 17% of the world’s population.

“This is a call to action for governments to invest in nursing, to not only meet Australia’s future healthcare needs but to address disparities in access to nurses worldwide,” said the Australian College of Nursing’s chief executive, Adjunct Professor, Kathryn Zeitz FACN. “Australia is amongst the high-income countries supplementing its nursing workforce by sourcing nurses from low-income countries. This report highlights the moral imperative for us to increase our efforts to reduce our reliance on international recruitment.”

The report shows that low-income countries are doing the heavy lifting when it comes to training nurses with high-income countries producing fewer graduates per active nurses than low-income countries. The report asks for it to be a policy priority to increase enrolments in nursing degrees, which is in line with ACN’s call for a campaign to make nursing a more attractive career option.

“The failure to address workforce shortages place extreme strain on nurses, as there are fewer of them to care for the growing number of patients who are older, sicker and amidst more climate-related health emergencies. This makes it increasingly challenging to retain nurses who are leaving the profession, and it makes it difficult to portray nursing as an attractive career option,” said Adjunct Professor Zeitz.

In the five years since the last State of the World’s Nursing report, there has been progress on some fronts, such as growth in advanced practice nursing roles, more Chief Nursing Officer leadership roles, increased graduate preparation of nurses, and the attraction of more men to the profession.

“It is pleasing to see some progress is being made because of sustained attention from policy makers. We must continue to apply the same attention to enable nurses as leaders working to their full scope of practice and influence,” said Adjunct Professor Zeitz.

“ACN urges policy makers to use the information in the report to ensure that Australia is making the necessary investments in nursing education, jobs, leadership and service delivery to meet the growing healthcare challenges of our population.”

The WHO State of the World’s Nursing 2025 report may be found here: https://www.who.int/news/item/11-05-2025-nursing-workforce-grows--but-inequities-threaten-global-health-goal

A webinar to launch the report will be held at 9pm AEST tonight:  https://www.who.int/news-room/events/detail/2025/05/12/default-calendar/2025-sown-launch


Contact details:

Lexi Metherell

0449 803 524

Email: [email protected]

Media

More from this category

  • Government VIC, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 08/12/2025
  • 07:53
Public Health Association of Australia

Five VicHealth former chairs urge government retain the health promotion foundation

Open letter to the Victorian Premier, Treasurer, and Health Minister (Issued by the Public Health Association of Australia on the authors' behalf). 8 December 2025 As five former Chairs ofVicHealth, representing a broad political spectrum and different eras of VicHealth’s work, we write to ask you to reconsider your Government’s decision to abolish VicHealth and place its important preventative health functions in the Health Department.We believe the decision is misguided and will fail to deliver the hoped-for savings. Abolishing VicHealth will severely reduce the effectiveness of important and innovative public health work in this State. Even with the best intentions,…

  • Medical Health Aged Care
  • 08/12/2025
  • 07:34
Monash University

Fish oil supplement halves serious cardiovascular events in patients on dialysis

A daily fish oil supplement has been shown to significantly reduce serious cardiovascular events in people receiving dialysis for kidney failure. The findings come from a major international clinical trial co-led in Australia by Monash Health and the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash University. The PISCES trial involved 1,228 participants across 26 dialysis sites in Australia and Canada. Results were presented at the American Society of Nephrology Kidney Week 2025 and published simultaneously in The New England Journal of Medicine. Participants who received four grams per day of fish oil, containing the natural active ingredients EPA and DHA, experienced…

  • Community, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 08/12/2025
  • 04:15
Save Our Sons Duchenne Foundation

Global Clinical Experts Gather in Sydney to Advance Adult Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy Care

Key Facts: Life expectancy for Australians living with DMD have increased from 18 for those borne before 1970, to around 30 today. As adult care remains fragmented and inconsistent between hospitals and States, the Symposium will develop global multi-disciplinary care recommendations.MEDIA RELEASE A world-first International Symposium dedicated toimproving multi-disciplinary clinical care for adults living with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) will take place in Sydney over the next three days. Hosted by the Save Our Sons Duchenne Foundation, the invitation-only event will bring together more than 35 of the world’s leading clinicians and researchers to develop the first multidisciplinary, global best-practice…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.