The importance of employment status in determining exit rates from nursing
Auteurs: Frieda Daniels, Audrey Laporte, Louise Lemieux-Charles, Andrea Baumann, Kanecy Onate, et Raisa Deber
Aperçu
Résumé (français)
Veuillez noter que les résumés n'apparaissent que dans la langue de la publication et peuvent ne pas avoir de traduction.
Résumé (anglais)
To mitigate nurse shortages, health care decision makers tend to employ retention strategies that assume nurses employed in full-time, part-time, or casual positions and working in different sectors have similar preferences for work. However, this assumption has not been validated in the literature. The relationship between a nurse’s propensity to exit the nurse profession in Ontario and employment status was explored by building an extended Cox Proportional Hazards Regression Model using a counting process technique. The differential exit patterns between part-time and casual nurses suggest that the common practice of treating part-time and casual nurses as equivalent is misleading. Health care decision makers should consider nurse retention strategies specifically targeting casual nurses because this segment of the profession is at the greatest risk of leaving. Nurse executives and nurse managers should investigate the different work preferences of part-time and casual nurses to devise tailored rather than “one-size fits all” nurse retention strategies to retain casual nurses.
Détails
Type | Article de journal |
---|---|
Auteur | Frieda Daniels, Audrey Laporte, Louise Lemieux-Charles, Andrea Baumann, Kanecy Onate, et Raisa Deber |
Année de pulication | 2012 |
Titre | The importance of employment status in determining exit rates from nursing |
Volume | 30 |
Nom du Journal | Nursing Economics |
Numéro | 4 |
Pages | 201-206 |
Langue de publication | Anglais |
- Frieda Daniels
- Frieda Daniels, Audrey Laporte, Louise Lemieux-Charles, Andrea Baumann, Kanecy Onate, et Raisa Deber
- The importance of employment status in determining exit rates from nursing
- Nursing Economics
- 30
- 2012
- 4
- 201-206