Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Reasons for entering and leaving nursing: an Australian regional study
View through CrossRef
Objective: To compare and contrast the reasons that nurses and nursing students provide for entering and leaving nursing.
Design: A quantitative cross‑sectional cohort design with online survey.
Setting: Regional public health service district and regional university nursing school.
Subjects: Nurses (n= 272) and nursing students (n=259).
Main outcome measures: Demographics of nurses and nursing students including age, sex and length of time as a nurse, and reasons for entering and leaving the profession.
Results: Among the nurses 88.4% were female and 37% 50 years of age or older. Almost half (45.3%) of the nursing students were 30 years of age or older and 44.1% of all students were working as nursing assistants or enrolled nurses whilst studying. Of these working students 32.5% had been nursing in excess of five years. Self interest, vocation and altruism were identified by both students and nurses as the main reasons for entering nursing. Respondents above and below 30 years of age gave the same reasons for entering nursing. Choice of factors for considering leaving nursing differed between groups and ages. Compared to students, nurses were most likely to cite disillusionment with nursing. Students under 30 years of age indicated pursuit of another career and starting a family to be the major factors while older students offered disillusionment with nursing and health concerns.
Conclusions: Retention strategies may need to differ for the age of nurse. However, recruitment needs to be informed by the altruistic and vocational reasons why nurses and nursing students are drawn to nursing rather than focussing on perceived generational differences.
Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation
Title: Reasons for entering and leaving nursing: an Australian regional study
Description:
Objective: To compare and contrast the reasons that nurses and nursing students provide for entering and leaving nursing.
Design: A quantitative cross‑sectional cohort design with online survey.
Setting: Regional public health service district and regional university nursing school.
Subjects: Nurses (n= 272) and nursing students (n=259).
Main outcome measures: Demographics of nurses and nursing students including age, sex and length of time as a nurse, and reasons for entering and leaving the profession.
Results: Among the nurses 88.
4% were female and 37% 50 years of age or older.
Almost half (45.
3%) of the nursing students were 30 years of age or older and 44.
1% of all students were working as nursing assistants or enrolled nurses whilst studying.
Of these working students 32.
5% had been nursing in excess of five years.
Self interest, vocation and altruism were identified by both students and nurses as the main reasons for entering nursing.
Respondents above and below 30 years of age gave the same reasons for entering nursing.
Choice of factors for considering leaving nursing differed between groups and ages.
Compared to students, nurses were most likely to cite disillusionment with nursing.
Students under 30 years of age indicated pursuit of another career and starting a family to be the major factors while older students offered disillusionment with nursing and health concerns.
Conclusions: Retention strategies may need to differ for the age of nurse.
However, recruitment needs to be informed by the altruistic and vocational reasons why nurses and nursing students are drawn to nursing rather than focussing on perceived generational differences.
Related Results
JIT 2023 - Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos
JIT 2023 - Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos
Es un honor presentar este libro que compila los trabajos de investigación y desarrollo presentados en las Jornadas de Jóvenes Investigadores Tecnológicos (JIT) 2023. Este evento s...
Reclaiming the Wasteland: Samson and Delilah and the Historical Perception and Construction of Indigenous Knowledges in Australian Cinema
Reclaiming the Wasteland: Samson and Delilah and the Historical Perception and Construction of Indigenous Knowledges in Australian Cinema
It was always based on a teenage love story between the two kids. One is a sniffer and one is not. It was designed for Central Australia because we do write these kids off there. N...
Developing a Mobile Learning Virtual Nursing Diagnosis (VND) Media for Medical Surgical Nursing Course
Developing a Mobile Learning Virtual Nursing Diagnosis (VND) Media for Medical Surgical Nursing Course
Link of Video Abstract: https://youtu.be/4zHCrIC1IGE
Background: The development of innovative and technology-aligned learning media is a necessary solution for nursing students...
Novel Nursing Terminologies for the Rapid Response System
Novel Nursing Terminologies for the Rapid Response System
PURPOSE. Nursing terminology with implications for the rapid response system (RRS) is introduced and proposed: critical incident nursing diagnosis (CIND), defined as the recogniti...
Nursing as concrete philosophy, Part I: Risjord on nursing knowledge
Nursing as concrete philosophy, Part I: Risjord on nursing knowledge
AbstractThis essay addresses the problem of the essentiality of nursing knowledge and what kind of theory, if any, is essential to nursing practice. The overarching aim of the essa...
Effects of the Humanized Nursing Model in Obstetric Nursing Based on the Use and Gratification Theory
Effects of the Humanized Nursing Model in Obstetric Nursing Based on the Use and Gratification Theory
Objective: To explore the application effect of the humanized nursing model in obstetric nursing based on the use and gratification theory. Methods: A total of 148 parturients who...
Nursing Education
Nursing Education
Histories of nursing education typically date to the introduction of formal trained nursing in western Europe and North America in the late nineteenth century. White women reformer...
Stressors affecting nursing students in Pakistan
Stressors affecting nursing students in Pakistan
AimTo determine factors contributing to stress experienced by preregistration nursing students in Pakistan, using the Stressors in Nursing Students scale. The aim was to explore th...


