School of Nursing, California State University, Sacramento, CA, United States.
Betty Irene Moore School of Nursing, University of California, Davis, CA, United States.
Int J Nurs Stud. 2018 Oct;86:11-19. doi: 10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2018.05.012. Epub 2018 May 26.
Recruitment and retention of nurses is an ongoing challenge for employers in rural areas worldwide. There is limited information available regarding influences on nurses' job choice in the U.S. and little understanding of how nurses make trade-offs between desired and less desirable job characteristics when choosing between jobs.
The purpose of this research was to examine the hospital job preferences of registered nurses in the U.S. The specific objectives of the study were: 1) To identify the relative importance of key job attributes on registered nurse job choice, and 2) To predict the impact of changes in the levels of attributes on the probability of registered nurses choosing one job over another.
A discrete choice experiment was developed and applied in the U.S. using California as a study site.
190 registered nurses currently working in nursing or intending to return to work in nursing from urban, large-, small- and isolated-rural communities.
The survey instrument was developed through a literature review and semi-structured interviews with nurse experts, utilizing a hypothetical job in a hospital medical / surgical unit. Experimental design principles were applied to create a discrete choice experiment which was pilot tested with urban and rural nurses. The survey was mailed to a random sample of 1000 licensed registered nurses in California. A mixed logit model was used to estimate nurses' preferences for different levels of the job attributes. Willingness to pay estimates and simulations of job uptake rates were calculated.
Eight factors were identified as important to job choice: earnings, nursing voice in management, tuition reimbursement, scheduling, patient care team, leadership, location and nursing sensitive patient care outcomes. Respondents valued a cohesive patient care team (coefficient 1.95, [SE 0.23]) and a strong nursing voice in management (coefficient 1.56, [SE 0.22]) highest. A job in a large urban inland location was negatively valued (coefficient -0.69, [SE 0.25]). Around 72% of respondents chose to stay in their current job when this choice was offered. While earnings were important, nurses were willing to sacrifice earnings to secure other valued job characteristics when choosing between jobs.
Study findings provide information on how job characteristics are valued by nurses in California. Findings suggest job seekers may be 65-75 percent more likely to choose a job when valued job characteristics are present. Our findings are particularly relevant to rural hospitals with limited financial resources.
在全球范围内,农村地区的雇主一直在面临招聘和留住护士的挑战。有关美国护士工作选择影响因素的信息有限,对于护士在选择工作时如何权衡理想和不理想工作特征之间的关系,人们的了解也很少。
本研究旨在考察美国注册护士对医院工作的偏好。研究的具体目的是:1)确定关键工作属性对注册护士工作选择的相对重要性,2)预测属性水平变化对注册护士选择一份工作而不是另一份工作的概率的影响。
在美国,使用加利福尼亚州作为研究地点,开发并应用了离散选择实验。
190 名目前在护理领域工作或打算从城市、大、小和偏远农村社区返回护理行业工作的注册护士。
调查工具是通过文献回顾和与护士专家的半结构化访谈开发的,使用医院医疗/外科病房的假设工作。实验设计原则被应用于创建离散选择实验,该实验在城市和农村护士中进行了试点测试。该调查以邮寄方式发送给加利福尼亚州的 1000 名注册护士的随机样本。使用混合对数模型估计护士对不同水平工作属性的偏好。还计算了支付意愿估计值和工作接受率的模拟值。
确定了 8 个对工作选择重要的因素:收入、护士在管理中的发言权、学费报销、排班、患者护理团队、领导力、位置和护士敏感的患者护理结果。受访者最看重有凝聚力的患者护理团队(系数 1.95,[SE 0.23])和强大的护士在管理中的发言权(系数 1.56,[SE 0.22])。位于内陆大城市的工作地点被认为是负面的(系数 -0.69,[SE 0.25])。大约 72%的受访者在提供当前工作选择时选择留在当前工作岗位。虽然收入很重要,但护士在选择工作时愿意牺牲收入来获得其他有价值的工作特征。
研究结果提供了加利福尼亚州护士对工作特征的重视程度的信息。研究结果表明,当有有价值的工作特征时,工作选择者可能更有可能选择工作,可能性为 65-75%。我们的研究结果对于资源有限的农村医院尤其重要。