Ten Areas for ICU Clinicians To Be Aware of to Help Retain Nurses in the ICU

Vincent, Jean-Louis; Boulanger, Carole; van Mol, Margo M. C.; Hawryluck, Laura; Azoulay, Elie

Ten Areas for ICU Clinicians To Be Aware of to Help Retain Nurses in the ICU

Vincent, Jean-Louis; Boulanger, Carole; van Mol, Margo M. C.; Hawryluck, Laura; Azoulay, Elie

Abstract

Shortage of nurses on the ICU is not a new phenomenon, but has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic. The underlying reasons are relatively well-recognized, and include excessive workload, moral distress, and perception of inappropriate care, leading to burnout and increased intent to leave, setting up a vicious circle whereby fewer nurses result in increased pressure and stress on those remaining. Nursing shortages impact patient care and quality-of-work life for all ICU staff and efforts should be made by management, nurse leaders, and ICU clinicians to understand and ameliorate the factors that lead nurses to leave. Here, we highlight 10 broad areas that ICU clinicians should be aware of that may improve quality of work-life and thus potentially help with critical care nurse retention.

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Critical Care
2022
Profession(s)
Nurses
Topic(s)
Recruitment & Retention
Moral Distress or Moral Injury
Burnout
Resource Types
Commentaries & Blogs
Study Type(s)
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Action Strategy Area(s)
Workload & Workflows
Leadership
Setting(s)
Hospital
Academic Role(s)
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