McCloughen Andrea, O'Brien Louise
School of Nursing, Family and Community Health, University of Western Sydney, Parramatta Campus, Penrith South DC, New South Wales, Australia.
Int J Ment Health Nurs. 2005 Dec;14(4):276-84. doi: 10.1111/j.1440-0979.2005.00394.x.
A university and three area mental health services collaborated in developing a mentorship programme for new graduate nurses in mental health. The programme evolved from initiatives identified by the New South Wales Government to address recruitment and retention problems impacting on the mental health nursing workforce. This mentorship programme was identified as a strategy to potentially contribute to retention of novice nurses within the local mental health nursing workforce. New graduate nurses entering the mental health field were provided the opportunity to engage in a temporary supportive professional mentoring relationship. The present paper describes the background of the programme and provides an overview of how it was developed. It serves as a starting point for others contemplating developing similar programmes. Evaluation of the programme is incomplete, therefore, formal results will be presented in a subsequent paper.
一所大学与三个地区心理健康服务机构合作,为新毕业的精神科护士制定了一项指导计划。该计划源自新南威尔士州政府确定的旨在解决影响精神科护理人员队伍的招聘和留用问题的举措。该指导计划被视为一种有可能有助于当地精神科护理人员队伍留住新手护士的策略。进入精神科领域的新毕业护士有机会参与一种临时的支持性专业指导关系。本文描述了该计划的背景,并概述了其制定过程。它为其他考虑制定类似计划的人提供了一个起点。该计划的评估尚未完成,因此,正式结果将在后续论文中呈现。