January 31, 2023

Registration still rising: New reports

More nurses are working in Ontario’s health care system, and where they are working continues to shift, say two new reports from CNO.

More nurses are working in Ontario’s health care system, and where they are working continues to shift, say two new reports from CNO. The reports focus on the number of nurses entering and leaving the health care system, and the employment patterns of new nurses. Collecting and analyzing data about nursing registration is one way CNO achieves its purpose to protect the public by promoting safe nursing practice.

"As the authoritative source of province-wide data about nursing employment in Ontario, CNO tracks trends in how and where nurses practice over time," says Brent Knowles, Director, Analytics and Planning. "This provides valuable information for health human resource planning to our partners in health care including government, to inform their decision-making."

CNO continues to increase the number of nurses in the health care system modernizing the way we assess and register applicants. This includes reducing barriers for internationally educated applicants, initiating new programs such as Supervised Practice Experience Partnership, and making changes to our Language Proficiency policy, Temporary Class registration and reinstatement.

Upward trend in registrations

The new Gains and Losses Report 2022 shows that over the past five years, the number of nurses in Ontario has continued to grow. This year saw a net gain of 4,041 (+2.4%) Registered Nurses (RNs), Registered Practical Nurses (RPNs) and Nurse Practitioners (NPs), compared to 2,944 (a 1.8% increase) in 2021. Total registrations also grew in 2022, with RNs increasing by 1,934; NPs by 317; and RPNs by 1,762 registrations.

New registrations (nurses who are joining CNO for the first time in a specific category and class), are responsible for the vast majority of registration gains of nurses now available to the health care system (93.6% for RNs and 96% for RPNs). The main reason for losses of nurses to the system is because nurses have resigned. Since 2020, CNO has noticed a shift in the proportion of gains working in full-time employment for RNs (from 42.5% to 63.3%). This trend is similar for RPNs over the same time period (27.6% to 44.1%). 

Total Registrants in General and Extended Class

More nurses entering public health

When it comes to where nursing gains (new registrations, reinstatements or nurses who changed class) are employed, public health experienced the biggest jump. The proportion of RN gains entering public health settings increased from 0.9% in 2020 to 5.3% in 2022, while RPN gains in public health settings grew four-fold from 0.5% in 2021 to 2.1% in 2022.

RN gains entering Public Health System

RPN gains entering Public Health System

Interestingly, we saw some shifts in gains and losses across age groups. The health care system lost more RNs aged 25 to 34, compared to previous years. Of all RN losses, the proportion in the 25 to 34 age group grew from 13.6% in 2021 to 22.2% in 2022. While some of the RN losses represent gains to NPs, and stay in the system, the proportion of NP gains aged 24 to 35 remained stable in the same time frame. In contrast, the proportion of RNs aged 65 and over who gave up their registration fell from 31.0% of all RN losses in 2021, to 23.2% in 2022.

Data show that fewer RNs are going into long-term care facilities (14.6% of all RN gains in 2019 and 10.0% in 2022). The proportion of RPN gains entering the workforce in acute care hospitals increased from 18.2% of all RPN gains in 2019 to 28.8% in 2022.

New nurses working full-time

A second report, First-Time Renewals Report 2022, contains statistics about nurses who renewed their registration as RNs, RPNs and NPs for the first time between 2015 and 2022. Since 2015, at least 95% of nurses have renewed their registration in the first year after their initial registration, across all categories and classes.

Like the Gains and Losses Report 2022, this report shows that more new nurses are entering the profession right away as full-time nurses. This year saw the highest number: 55.8% of across all categories and classes, compared to 44.9% in 2021 and 38.8% in 2015. The proportion of new nurses reporting overall part-time and casual employment decreased.

Trends in employment

Other trends in this report echo those in Gains and Losses, too. Overall, since 2019, the proportion of employment positions of nurses renewing for the first time in acute care hospitals has increased, most noticeably for RPNs. While the proportion of reported public health positions has increased in first-time renewals, long-term care positions have steadily decreased since 2015. In 2021 and 2022, new registrations identifying as visiting nurses also decreased.

For the first time since at least 2015, the proportion of all positions new NPs reported working in fell below 40% for acute care hospitals. New NPs are increasingly finding work in the NP role, as opposed to another role such as RN. The proportion of positions NPs reported working in reached 61.8%, which is the highest level in the last eight years.

See our Gains and Losses Report 2022 and the First-Time Renewals Report 2022, as well as others, on the Latest Reports page. Visit Applicant Statistics for numbers of applicants seeking CNO registration, and Registrant Statistics for current registration totals.

About CNO

The College of Nurses of Ontario (CNO) is the regulator of the nursing profession in Ontario. It is not a school or a nursing association. CNO acts in the public interest by:

  • assessing qualifications and registering individuals who want to practice nursing in Ontario.
  • setting the practice standards of the profession that nurses in Ontario are expected to meet.
  • promoting nurses' continuing competence through a quality assurance program.
  • holding nurses accountable to those standards by addressing complaints or reports about nursing care.

The College was founded in 1963. By establishing the College, the Ontario government was acknowledging that the nursing profession had the ability to govern itself and put the public's well-being ahead of professional interests.

For the latest information, please see our Nursing Statistics page.

Anyone who wants to use a nursing-related title — Registered Nurse (RN), Registered Practical Nurse (RPN) or Nurse Practitioner (NP) must become a member of CNO.

Frequently Asked Questions

Go to the public Register, Find a Nurse, to conduct a search for the nurse. Contact us if you can't find the person you are looking for.

All public information available about nurses is posted in the public Register, Find a Nurse, which contains profiles of every nurse in Ontario. Publicly available information about nurses include their registration history, business address, and information related to pending disciplinary hearings or past findings.

Unregistered practitioners are people who are seeking employment in nursing or holding themselves out as being able to practice nursing in Ontario, but who are not qualified to do so. They are not registered members of CNO. Only people registered with CNO can use nursing-related titles or perform certain procedures that could cause harm if carried out by a non-registered health professional. CNO takes the issue of unregistered practitioners seriously. See Unregistered Practitioners for more information.

To ensure procedural fairness for both the patient (or client) and the nurse, the Regulated Health Professions Act requires that information gathered during an investigation remain confidential until the matter is referred to the Discipline Committee or Fitness to Practise Committee. CNO will not disclose any information that could identify patients (or clients) or compromise an investigation. See Investigations: A Process Guide for more information.

Information obtained during an investigation will become public if the matter is referred to a disciplinary hearing. If a complaint is not referred to a hearing, no information will be available publicly.

See CNO's hearings schedule, which is updated as hearing dates are confirmed. Hearings at CNO are open to the public and the media. For details on how to attend a hearing, contact the Hearings Administration Team.

A summary of allegations and the disciplinary panel outcomes can be found on the public Register, Find a Nurse. Full decisions and reasons are also available.

Where a disciplinary panel makes a finding of professional misconduct, they have the authority to reprimand a nurse, and suspend or revoke a nurse's registration. Terms, conditions and limitations can also be imposed on a nurse's registration, which restricts their practice for a set period. Nurses can also be required to complete remedial activities, such as reviewing CNO documents and meeting with an expert, before returning to practice.

For detailed information see the Sexual Abuse Prevention section.

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