The Nurse Licensure Compact (NLC) is legislation that allows nurses to have one license to practice in multiple states, which seems like it would be more than helpful in states and regions experiencing a nursing shortage due to the COVID-19 pandemic and other factors. Yet, not all 50 states belong to the NLC. Let’s explore the benefits and what some perceive as drawbacks to the compact.
Less red tape, more mobility
Registered nurses aren’t the only nursing professionals who can participate in the NLC, said James Puente, MS, MJ, CAE, Director, Nurse Licensure Compact, National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN). The compact is relevant to all nurses regardless of their licensure and, according to Puente, is a “modern licensure model” for health care today.
“Under the compact, a nurse residing in a compact state can apply for a multistate license which is valid in every compact state,” said Puente.
The NLC aims to replace what the NCSBN calls an antiquated model of nurses holding individual single-state licenses for each state in which they practice, which can be costly, burdensome, and inefficient for nurses. That model is no longer practical in a more mobile and technological healthcare system, according to the nursing organization.
“For their patients, the nurse licensure compact increases access to care and allows for the provider to ‘follow’ the patient, ensuring continuity of care,” said Puente.
It makes sense for nurses to become familiar with the NLC, in part because employers recognize the benefits, including having the ability to practice in person and virtually across multiple states. Many employers require a multistate license for employment, according to the NCSBN.
Nursing organizations in some states, however, have concerns.
The challenges and drawbacks
David Keepnews, RN
David Keepnews, PhD, JD, RN, FAAN, executive director, Washington State Nurses Association, said his state has taken no action to become a compact state due to several areas of concern.
“Among the most important, the compact carries no registration requirement for nurses coming into the state, so we would have no way of tracking the nursing workforce,” Keepnews said. “We’re also concerned that nurses coming into our state would not have to meet any of the continuing education requirements for Washington State, which could cause gaps in knowledge of how nursing is practiced here.”
The NLC could help in the nursing shortage, in efforts to strategically deploy nurses to where they’re needed most, according to the NCSBN.
“This is precisely what large multistate hospital systems do in compact states,” Puente said. “Because they employ thousands of nurses, they can shift their nursing workforce to the areas where the need is most dire. In short, the multistate license enables nurses to practice in other compact states, where the nurse’s services are needed, with no delay caused by an additional licensure process.”
Nurses residing in states that do not participate in the compact do not have access to a multistate license, which is a drawback, especially when considering telehealth, according to the NCSBN.
“Not all nursing practice is bedside care. Patients are mobile, traveling, and even …read more
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