Scientific Institute for Quality of Healthcare, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2013 Feb;50(2):174-84. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2012.09.019. Epub 2012 Oct 27.
As the European population ages, the demand for nursing care increases. Yet, a shortage of nurses at the labour market exists or is predicted for most European countries. There are no adequate solutions for this shortage yet, and recruitment of future nurses is difficult. Therefore, retaining nurses for the profession is urgent.
To determine factors associated with nurses' intention to leave the profession across European countries.
A multi-country, multi-centre, cross-sectional analysis of survey data.
2025 surgical and medical units from 385 hospitals in ten European countries that participated in the RN4Cast study. Hospital selection was based on a stratified randomised selection procedure.
All nurses from the participating medical and surgical hospital wards received a survey. 23,159 nurses (64%) returned the survey.
The nurse survey included questions about intention to leave the profession, nurse characteristics, factors related to work environment, patient-to-nurse staffing ratio, burnout and perceived quality and safety of care. Multilevel regression analyses with 'intention to leave the profession' as dependent variable were conducted for all 10 countries combined as well as per country.
Overall, 9% of the nurses intended to leave their profession. This varied from 5 to 17% between countries. Seven factors were associated with intention to leave the profession at European level: nurse-physician relationship (OR 0.86; 95%CI 0.79-0.93), leadership (OR 0.78; 95% CI 0.70-0.86), participation in hospital affairs (0.68; 95%CI 0.61-0.76), older age (OR 1.13; 95%CI 1.07-1.20), female gender (OR 0.67; 95%CI 0.55-0.80), working fulltime (OR 0.76; 95%CI 0.66-0.86) and burnout (OR 2.02; 95%CI 1.91-2.14). The relevance of these factors differed for the individual countries. Nurse perceived staffing adequacy, patient-to-nurse staffing ratio, perceived quality and safety of care and hospital size were not associated with intention to leave at a European level.
Burnout is consistently associated with nurses' intention to leave their profession across the 10 European countries. Elements of work environment are associated with intention to leave the nursing profession but differ between countries, indicating the importance of national contexts in explaining and preventing nurses' intention to leave their profession.
随着欧洲人口老龄化,对护理的需求增加。然而,大多数欧洲国家的劳动力市场都存在或预计会出现护士短缺的情况。目前还没有足够的解决方案来解决这个短缺问题,而且招聘未来的护士也很困难。因此,留住护士对该职业来说迫在眉睫。
确定与欧洲各国护士离职意愿相关的因素。
对来自十个欧洲国家的 385 家医院的 2025 个外科和内科病房的调查数据进行的多国家、多中心、横断面分析。医院的选择是基于分层随机选择程序。
参与的医疗和外科病房的所有护士都收到了一份调查。23159 名护士(64%)返回了调查。
护士调查包括关于离职意愿、护士特征、与工作环境相关的因素、患者与护士的配置比例、倦怠以及感知的护理质量和安全性的问题。对十个国家进行了综合分析,并对每个国家进行了多水平回归分析,以“离职意愿”为因变量。
总体而言,有 9%的护士有意离职。这一比例在各国之间从 5%到 17%不等。七个因素与欧洲层面的离职意愿相关:护士与医生的关系(OR 0.86;95%CI 0.79-0.93)、领导力(OR 0.78;95%CI 0.70-0.86)、参与医院事务(OR 0.68;95%CI 0.61-0.76)、年龄较大(OR 1.13;95%CI 1.07-1.20)、女性(OR 0.67;95%CI 0.55-0.80)、全职工作(OR 0.76;95%CI 0.66-0.86)和倦怠(OR 2.02;95%CI 1.91-2.14)。这些因素在各国的相关性有所不同。护士感知到的人员配备充足程度、患者与护士的配置比例、感知到的护理质量和安全性以及医院规模与离职意愿在欧洲层面上没有关联。
倦怠与欧洲十个国家的护士离职意愿始终相关。工作环境的要素与离职意愿相关,但在各国之间存在差异,这表明国家背景在解释和防止护士离职意愿方面的重要性。