Profiles of the Newly Licensed Nurse

Profiles of the Newly Licensed Nurse
Author: Delroy Louden
Publisher: Jones & Bartlett Learning
Total Pages: 138
Release: 1996
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9780887376603

The definitive analysis of the current supply of new nurses. The data includes demographic patterns, educational characteristics, employment statistics, and policy implications. This information will assist you in preparing staffing plans, recruiting employess and students, and s tructing incentive and compenssation plans. An indispensable reference for nurse excutives, recruiters, deans and directors, health care pol icy makers, and journalists.

The Attributes of Nurse Residency Programs Influencing the Newly Licensed Registered Nurse

The Attributes of Nurse Residency Programs Influencing the Newly Licensed Registered Nurse
Author: Christina Louise Kiger
Publisher:
Total Pages: 260
Release: 2020
Genre:
ISBN:

New nurses report feeling unprepared, incompetent, and highly stressed, contributing to first-year turnover rates of 25% in some healthcare organizations. Turnover, combined with a preparation-practice gap, has alerted advocacy organizations and researchers to recommend the development of nurse residency programs. Nurse residency programs are a post-graduate training period where new nurses receive enhanced clinical education in the healthcare setting. While highly variable in structure and attributes, programs usually include educational sessions, clinical immersion, and role socialization opportunities. Evidence supports that new nurses participating in nurse residency programs experience positive outcomes, including increased confidence, competence, and decreased turnover rates. Despite this, only half of the hospitals nationwide have implemented a program with most designed around a single health system mission. This dissertation study aimed to identify the attributes of nurse residency programs influencing the newly licensed registered nurse. An integrative review of the literature and evolutionary concept analysis was completed to examine the state of the science of nurse residency programs. Findings revealed a lack of conceptual and theoretical design and variability among program structures, creating a gap in the literature about the attributes of programs that are most influencing new nurses. Based on the literature's noted gaps, a qualitative description study was conducted. Purposive sampling strategies were used to recruit nurses who recently completed varied program models across the United States. New nurses reported the attributes of programs and described how those positively and negatively influenced the transition to practice experience. The overarching themes revealed that new nurses need a cadre of highly supportive individuals across the clinical and educational continuum who espouse astute interpersonal and communication skills. New nurses desire engaging activities with intra and interprofessional team members for clinical skill application, knowledge advancement, and role socialization. New nurses need the structure of meetings at times and in a sequence conducive to learning; and for preceptorship experiences to be facilitated by trained preceptors, on a unit, and of a length that supports confidence for autonomous practice. Future research will include the development and testing of an evaluation tool based on the findings from this study.

Conceptualization of Factors that Have Meaning for Newly Licensed Registered Nurses Completing Nurse Residency Programs in Acute Care Settings

Conceptualization of Factors that Have Meaning for Newly Licensed Registered Nurses Completing Nurse Residency Programs in Acute Care Settings
Author: Beverly Dianne Rowland
Publisher:
Total Pages: 382
Release: 2016
Genre:
ISBN:

Nurse residency programs (NRPs) have been identified as a means to promote transitioning of new nurses into the professional nursing role. Questions have arisen related to which elements within those programs are most meaningful to the development of new nurses. As the nursing shortage drives the need for quick transition and development of nurses to meet workforce needs, nursing must identify what is meaningful to nurses in their transition to practice. The purpose of this multi-site study was to explicate meaning from the experiences of newly licensed registered nurses (NLRNs) who have just completed NRPs. The research question was "What factors have meaning for NLRNs who have experienced transition to practice in nurse residency programs in acute care settings?" Semi-structured interviews were used to collect data from six NLRNs from three different NRPs after completion of their programs. Using interpretative phenomenological analysis, themes and variations within those themes were derived from the descriptive narratives provided from participant interviews. Overarching themes identified were Relationships, Reflection, Active Learning, Resources and Organizational Systems. Findings have implications for practice and education as the nursing profession strives to find ways to transform nurses in an effective and efficient manner.