WHO Sounds the Alarm: Europe Needs One Million Nurses by 2030

WHO Sounds the Alarm: Europe Faces a Shortage of One Million Nurses

In February 2026, the World Health Organization (WHO/Europe) published the Region’s first-ever policy brief addressing the critical state of nursing in Europe. The message is clear: without immediate action, Europe’s healthcare system is heading toward a breaking point.

The Numbers Tell a Stark Story

Back in 2022, WHO/Europe warned that healthcare workforce shortages were a “ticking time bomb.” The latest estimates confirm those fears: by 2030, the European Region will face a shortage of nearly one million healthcare workers. Across the EU, the estimated shortfall already stands at approximately 1.6 million professionals in health and social care.

Nurses form the backbone of healthcare — accounting for over 56 percent of the entire health workforce. The EU currently counts around 3.7 million practising nurses and 172,000 midwives. Yet these numbers fall far short of what is needed.

Germany Under Particular Pressure

In Germany, the situation is especially acute. According to the Federal Statistical Office, between 280,000 and 690,000 additional care workers will be needed by 2049. At the end of 2023, 5.7 million people in Germany required care — a number projected to rise to approximately 6.8 million by 2055.

Making matters worse, over 25 percent of elderly care workers are already over 55 and will leave the workforce in the coming years. Meanwhile, there are just 1.4 unemployed nurses for every open position — a ratio that makes recruitment increasingly difficult.

Central and Eastern Europe Also Affected

The shortage extends across the entire region. In the Czech Republic, approximately 1,500 nurses of Ukrainian origin are already working in hospitals and clinics. Poland, hosting nearly one million Ukrainians under temporary protection, faces the dual challenge of integrating these professionals while maintaining adequate staffing in its own care system.

WHO’s 8 Key Recommendations

The new policy brief, developed as part of the three-year Nursing Action project (funded by the European Commission under the EU4Health programme, working with 21 EU Member States), outlines eight priority policy actions:

  1. Recognize nursing as safety-critical — safe staffing is inseparable from staff well-being and patient safety.
  2. Manage system complexity — staffing is influenced by funding, digital systems, teamwork, and increasingly complex patient needs.
  3. Secure broad support for sustainability — structured engagement with nurses, employers, regulators and unions.
  4. Build purpose-driven data systems — reliable, interoperable staffing and workload data for informed decision-making.
  5. Monitor for accountability — clear standards, proportionate regulation, and transparent reporting.
  6. Secure sustained investment — financing mechanisms that embed safe staffing as standard practice.
  7. Strengthen education and training — high-quality education and continuous professional development.
  8. Strengthen nurse leadership — empowered nurse leaders supported in professional autonomy and judgement.

International Recruitment as Part of the Solution

With Europe’s population ageing and fewer young people choosing nursing careers, international recruitment of qualified care professionals is becoming increasingly vital. This is exactly where OPK.CARE steps in: we connect qualified care workers from Eastern Europe with care facilities across Germany and other European countries — professionally, ethically, and with a deep understanding of everyone’s needs.

Conclusion: Time to Act

The WHO recommendations make it clear: Europe must act now. Investments in safe nurse staffing have demonstrated measurable benefits — from reduced patient mortality to improved care quality and better workforce well-being. The question is not whether we need to act, but how fast.

Sources: WHO/Europe (February 2026), Destatis, Euronews

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