Background And Purpose: Patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs) are critically ill and suffer from life-threatening sickness of injury. To work in ICU, registered nurses require additional knowledge and skills. While practices regarding the hire of new graduate nurses (NGNs) into settings such as the ICU vary, it is common that NGNs are being hired. However, NGNs in general, are at a higher risk for turnover within the profession as compared to their more experienced colleagues. NGNs in ICU settings may be at higher risk of turnover due to the complexity of the care context. It is of particular importance that the experiences of NGNs in ICU be explored with the intent of identifying what these nurses experience but also to consider how they can be best supported during a period of transition. This manuscript reports the findings from a mixed design study that sought to understand the transition of a cohort of NGNs over a period of 2 years.
Methods: This study used both a purposive and convenience sample of NGNs. The qualitative component incorporated Thorne's (2016) interpretive description. Face-to-faceinterviews were completed.
Results: Five themes were identified: an emotional transition, a social transition, a transitioning mindset, transitioning through firsts, and transitioning with confidence. Within each theme, there is a distinct difference and elements of transition were evident. Findings demonstrate that the NGNs appeared to be more confident in their skills and in their nursing practice over time. Findings from this study provide important insight into the experiences of NGNs in ICUs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/1541-6577.33.4.428 | DOI Listing |
J Prof Nurs
December 2024
Mercy Medical Center, 345 St. Paul Place, Baltimore, MD 21202, United States of America. Electronic address:
Background: The many educational pathways to obtain a professional nursing degree create confusion among healthcare leaders about new graduate nurses' (NGNs) competency expectations when entering practice.
Purpose: This research sought to identify, among Maryland nursing academic and practice leaders, a standard set of NGN competencies after completing their prelicensure program and nurse residency program (NRP) at 12 months.
Method: A mixed-method approach was used, including a survey of 109 outcome statements and faculty and practice leader focus groups.
J Nurs Scholarsh
December 2024
Koç University School of Nursing, Istanbul, Turkey.
Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of the education program developed based on the structural empowerment (SE) and psychological empowerment (PE) theories and flipped classroom model for the empowerment of new graduate nurses (NGNs).
Design: Single-center, parallel-group, randomized controlled trial.
Methods: The study was conducted between June 2021 and September 2023 in two phases: developing the education program to empower NGNs and evaluating its effectiveness.
Can J Nurs Res
December 2024
Ted Rogers School of Management, Toronto Metropolitan University, 288 Church St., Toronto, ON, Canada, M5B 1Z5.
Background: The aim of this study is to explore the practice experiences of new graduate nurses (NGNs) in publicly funded acute healthcare settings in the Greater Toronto Area, their perspectives on the determinants of their desire to stay or leave the nursing profession, and to identify action-oriented strategies to promote retention of NGNs.
Design: Qualitative, descriptive.
Methods: Fifteen NGNs participated in focus group sessions, where a semi-structured interview guide was created to generate discussion on NGNs' lived and professional experiences.
J Adv Nurs
November 2024
Mo-Im Kim Nursing Research Institute, College of Nursing, Yonsei University, Seoul, South Korea.
Aim: To investigate changes in professional nursing values during the transition from Generation Z senior nursing students to second-year newly graduated nurses (NGNs).
Design: A longitudinal study with secondary data analysis.
Methods: A national-level dataset for 2020-2023 from the New Nurse e-Cohort Study was used, including a total of 366 participants aged 21-25 years (born after 1995) who graduated from nursing school in 2021.
J Nurses Prof Dev
October 2024
This article reports research that examined how registered nurses in practice develop clinical judgment in new graduate nurses (NGNs) and how NGNs respond. Teaching themes were setting the tone for learning, use of cognitive-focused teaching-learning strategies, including mentoring thinking, debriefing and reflection, and using real-life scenarios. NGN responses were learning focused, emotional, or resistant.
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