Where Are the Critical Care Nurses? A Statewide Analysis of Actively Practicing Nurses’ Transitions Out of the Clinical Area

Tran, Alberta K.; Knafl, George J.; Baernholdt, Marianne; Fraher, Erin P.; Jones, Cheryl B.

Where Are the Critical Care Nurses? A Statewide Analysis of Actively Practicing Nurses’ Transitions Out of the Clinical Area

Tran, Alberta K.; Knafl, George J.; Baernholdt, Marianne; Fraher, Erin P.; Jones, Cheryl B.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Critical care nurse shortages and burnout have spurred interest in the adequacy of nursing supply in the United States. Nurses can move between clinical areas without  additional education or licensure. PURPOSE: To identify transitions that critical care nurses make into non-critical care areas, and examine the prevalence and characteristics associated with those transitions. METHODS: Secondary analysis of state licensure data from 2001-2013. DISCUSSION: More than 75% of nurses (n = 8,408) left critical care in the state, with 44% making clinical area transitions within 5 years. Critical care nurses transitioned into emergency, peri-operative, and cardiology areas. Those observed in recession years were less likely to make transitions; female and nurses with masters/doctorate degrees were more likely. CONCLUSION: This study used state workforce data to examine transitions out of critical care nursing. Findings can inform policies to retain and recruit nurses back into critical care, especially during public health crises.

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Nursing Outlook
2023
Profession(s)
Nurses
Topic(s)
Recruitment & Retention
Burnout
Resource Types
Peer-Reviewed Research
Study Type(s)
Descriptive / Qualitative Study
Action Strategy Area(s)
Workload & Workflows
Setting(s)
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Academic Role(s)
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