National Study of Nursing Faculty and Administrators' Perceptions of Professional Identity in Nursing.

Nurse Educ

Author Affiliations: Assistant Professor (Dr Landis) and Associate Professor and Vice Chancellor for Research (Dr Barbosa-Leiker), College of Nursing, Washington State University, Spokane; Associate Dean, Innovative Partnerships and Practice Professor (Dr Godfrey), University of Kansas; Professor Emeritus and Founder of Civility Matters (Dr Clark), Boise State University, Idaho; Position Chief Program Officer (Dr Brewington), National League for Nursing, Washington, DC; Clinical Professor and Director Health Systems/Administration (Dr Joseph), University of Iowa College of Nursing; Professor (Dr Luparell), Montana State University College of Nursing, Bozeman; Associate Professor, Director (Dr Phillips), Institute for Educational Excellence, Duke University School of Nursing, Durham, North Carolina; Adjunct Faculty (Dr Priddy), Texas Christian University, Fort Worth; and Campus Assistant Director (Ms Weybrew), ADN Program, American Career College, Los Angeles, California.

Published: December 2021

Background: Establishing a professional identity in nursing is integral to professional development, yet this area of inquiry remains understudied.

Purpose: This segment of a multiphased national study measured nursing faculty's perceived level of importance regarding key components of professional identity in nursing using the newly developed Professional Identity in Nursing Survey (PINS).

Methods: Fifty subject matter experts from nursing education, practice, and regulation utilized the DeVellis scale development process to develop the PINS over the course of 2 years. Nearly 1200 nurse educators evaluated the importance of a 34-item scale relating to professional identity in nursing.

Results: At endorsement of 95% or greater, 28 items were found to be important components of nursing identity. Effective communication, integrity, and being trustworthy and respectful were reported as most important to nursing identity.

Conclusions: Nurse educators identified the important items to assess professional identity in nursing. Item refinement and psychometric evaluation of the survey are the next phase of the multiphased study.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NNE.0000000000001063DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

professional identity
24
identity nursing
20
nursing
10
national study
8
nurse educators
8
professional
7
identity
7
study nursing
4
nursing faculty
4
faculty administrators'
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!