AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on how nurses in London use networks to tackle recruitment and retention issues within the healthcare system.
  • Through interviews conducted in 2019, it reveals that executive nurses utilized strategic collaborations and sociomaterial contexts to initiate changes aimed at improving these challenges.
  • The findings emphasize the significance of teamwork among nurses across different organizations, suggesting that this collaborative approach can enhance patient care and could be beneficial for nurses in other regions facing similar recruitment and retention problems.

Article Abstract

Aim: To discuss nurses' use of networks to address nursing recruitment and retention in London, UK.

Design: Qualitative evaluation of the Capital Nurse programme reporting on 30 narrative interviews with executive, clinical and student nurses in 2019.

Results: Executive nurses within the Capital Nurse programme recognized the importance of sociomaterial contexts in the health and social care system in London and worked strategically across these contexts to achieve change. Supported through the Capital Nurse programme, executive nurses from health organizations across London initiated collaborative working to improve recruitment and retention. Primarily by designing and delivering sociomaterial products (organizational and educational) to support nurses to build a career in London. Drawing on ideas from actor network theory, in particular sociomaterial contexts, nurses' actions at all levels to develop and sustain networks to address nursing recruitment and retention across the NHS in London are described.

Conclusions: Capital Nurse supported collaborative working both within single organizations and across organizations in London. There is evidence of change in how nurses across the capital work together to improve patient care, improve recruitment and retention. Findings may resonate with nurses in other settings who seek to address the problem of recruitment and retention. They show how nurses coming together in networks to effect changes in practice can work successfully.

Impact: Nurses' use of networks led to novel models of communication and action to address the problems of recruitment and retention in London. We argue that sociomateriality should be considered outside the clinical practice setting, as part of nurses' professional development and organizational practice, that is how they plan their career, how they address recruitment and retention, how they communicate across organizations about nursing issues.

No Patient Or Public Contribution: This was an evaluation of a staff development project in London, which sought to elicit nurses' experiences of participation in Capital Nurse.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jan.15799DOI Listing

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