Authors
Fiona Bogossian, Peta Winters‐Chang, Anthony Tuckett
Publication date
2014/9
Journal
Journal of Nursing Scholarship
Volume
46
Issue
5
Pages
377-388
Description
Purpose
To explore nurses' perceptions of the nature of nursing work as a factor that contributes to attrition from the profession.
Design
A nonpurposive sample of nurses from the Nurses and Midwives e‐cohort Study in Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom provided electronic responses about reasons for leaving the profession. Data were then subjected to qualitative content analysis.
Findings
Nurses at the “coal face,” that is, those who actually do the work of nursing, in real working conditions, express dissatisfaction in relation to hygiene factors relating to the nature of nursing work and attribute these to nurses leaving the profession: workload, shift work, violence, and financial remuneration.
Conclusions
Nurses’ satisfaction with work and motivation to work are being sorely tested. There is manifest tension between the core concepts of nursing—compassion and care—and a system of work that …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
F Bogossian, P Winters‐Chang, A Tuckett - Journal of Nursing Scholarship, 2014