Literature DB >> 24024551

The impact of safety and quality of health care on Chinese nursing career decision-making.

Junhong Zhu1, Sheila Rodgers, Kath M Melia.   

Abstract

AIM: The aim of the study was to understand why nurses leave nursing practice in China by exploring the process from recruitment to final exit. This report examines the impact of safety and quality of health care on nursing career decision-making from the leavers' perspective.
BACKGROUND: The nursing shortage in China is more serious than in most developed countries, but the loss of nurses through voluntarily leaving nursing practice has not attracted much attention.
METHOD: This qualitative study draws on a grounded theory approach. In-depth interviews with 19 nurses who have left nursing practice and were theoretically sampled from one provincial capital city in Mainland China. FINDING: 'Loss of confidence in the safety and quality of health care' became one of the main categories from all leavers' accounts of their decision to leave nursing practice. It emerged from three themes 'Perceiving risk in clinical practice', 'Recognising organisational barriers to safety' and 'Failing to meet expectations of patients'. DISCUSSION: The findings indicate that the essential work value of nursing to the leavers is the safety and quality of care for their patients. When nurses perceived that they could not fulfil this essential work value in their nursing practice, some of them could not accept the compromise to their value of nursing and left voluntarily to get away from the physical and mental stress. However, some nurses had to stay and accept the limitations on the safety and quality of health care.
CONCLUSION: The study suggests that well-qualified nurses voluntarily leaving nursing practice is a danger signal for patients and hospitals, and has caused deterioration in nursing morale for both current and potential nursing workforces. It suggests that safety and quality of health care could be improved when individual nurses are empowered to exercise nursing autonomy with organisational and managerial support. IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING MANAGEMENT: The priority retention strategies need to remove organisational barriers to the safety and quality of health care. Under the current nursing shortage, Chinese hospital managers might consider recruiting nurses and care assistants of different educational levels, which would effectively improve nursing team work and support nurses' to stay and actively achieve their work values for the safety and quality of health care.
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  China; nursing; quality; safety; voluntary leaving; work value

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 24024551     DOI: 10.1111/jonm.12140

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nurs Manag        ISSN: 0966-0429            Impact factor:   3.325


  4 in total

1.  Patient Safety Culture and Spiritual Health in the Operating Room: An Iranian Exploratory Qualitative Study.

Authors:  Imani Behzad; Mousavi Elahe
Journal:  J Relig Health       Date:  2022-04-27

2.  A qualitative exploration of nurses leaving nursing practice in China.

Authors:  Junhong Zhu; Sheila Rodgers; Kath M Melia
Journal:  Nurs Open       Date:  2014-12-22

3.  Linking Transformational Leadership with Nurse-Assessed Adverse Patient Outcomes and the Quality of Care: Assessing the Role of Job Satisfaction and Structural Empowerment.

Authors:  Muhammad Asif; Arif Jameel; Abid Hussain; Jinsoo Hwang; Noman Sahito
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-07-04       Impact factor: 3.390

4.  The Impact of the Predictive Nursing Education Process on Degree of Comfort and Quality of Life for Patients in the Oncology Department.

Authors:  Yan Yu; Lijuan Hu; Xingu Chen; Mei Ge; Huijuan Zhu; Yusheng Yan
Journal:  Iran J Public Health       Date:  2017-09       Impact factor: 1.429

  4 in total

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