School of Nursing, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
School of Nursing, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
PLoS One. 2020 Sep 8;15(9):e0237028. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0237028. eCollection 2020.
Nurse turnover is a significant issue and complex challenge for all healthcare sectors and is exacerbated by a global nursing shortage. Nurse-Family Partnership is a community health program for first-time pregnant and parenting girls and young women living in situations of social and economic disadvantage. In Canada, this program is delivered exclusively by public health nurses and only within a research context. The aim of this article is to explore and describe factors that contribute to recruitment, retention, and turnover of public health nurses delivering Nurse-Family Partnership in British Columbia, Canada between 2013 and 2018.
Interpretive description was used to guide sampling, data collection and analytic decisions in this qualitative component drawn from the British Columbia Healthy Connections Project mixed methods process evaluation. Semi-structured, individual interviews were conducted with 28 public health nurses who practiced in and then exited Nurse-Family Partnership.
Nurses were motivated to join this program because they wanted to deliver an evidence-based program for vulnerable young mothers that fit with their personal and professional philosophies and offered nurse autonomy. Access to program resources attracted nursing staff, while delivering a program that prioritizes maintaining relationships and emphasizes client successes was a positive work experience. Opportunities for ongoing professional development/ education, strong team connections, and working at full-scope of nursing practice were significant reasons for nurses to remain in Nurse-Family Partnership. Personal circumstances (retirement, family/health needs, relocation, career advancement) were the most frequently cited reasons leading to turnover. Other factors included: involuntary reasons, organizational and program factors, and geographical factors.
Public health organizations that deliver Nurse-Family Partnership may find aspects of job embeddedness theory useful for developing strategies for supporting recruitment and retention and reducing nurse turnover. Hiring nurses who are the right fit for this type of program may be a useful approach to increasing nurse retention. Fostering a culture of connectivity through team development along with supportive and communicative supervision are important factors associated with retention and may decrease turnover. Many involuntary/external factors were specific to being in a study environment. Program, organizational, and geographical factors affecting nurse turnover are modifiable.
护士离职是所有医疗保健部门面临的重大问题和复杂挑战,而全球护士短缺则加剧了这一问题。护士家庭合作是一项针对首次怀孕和育儿的女孩和年轻妇女的社区卫生计划,这些妇女生活在社会和经济劣势的环境中。在加拿大,该计划仅由公共卫生护士在研究环境中提供。本文的目的是探讨和描述 2013 年至 2018 年期间不列颠哥伦比亚省提供护士家庭合作的公共卫生护士招聘、留用和离职的因素。
本研究采用解释性描述方法,指导样本选择、数据收集和分析决策,这是不列颠哥伦比亚省健康连接项目混合方法过程评估中的定性部分。对 28 名曾从事过护士家庭合作项目、现已离职的公共卫生护士进行了半结构化的个人访谈。
护士加入该项目的动机是为弱势年轻母亲提供一种基于证据的项目,这符合他们的个人和专业理念,并提供护士自主权。对项目资源的获取吸引了护理人员,而提供一个优先维护关系、强调客户成功的项目则是一种积极的工作体验。持续的专业发展/教育机会、强大的团队联系以及在护理实践的全部范围内工作是护士继续从事护士家庭合作的重要原因。个人情况(退休、家庭/健康需求、搬迁、职业发展)是离职的最常见原因。其他因素包括:非自愿原因、组织和项目因素以及地理因素。
提供护士家庭合作的公共卫生组织可能会发现工作嵌入理论的某些方面有助于制定支持招聘和留用以及减少护士离职的策略。招聘适合该类型项目的护士可能是增加护士留用率的一种有效方法。通过团队发展培养联系文化,以及提供支持和沟通的监督,是与留用相关的重要因素,可能会降低离职率。许多非自愿/外部因素是在研究环境中特有的。影响护士离职的项目、组织和地理因素是可以改变的。