| Literature DB >> 29246221 |
Mary Halter1, Olga Boiko2,3, Ferruccio Pelone2,4, Carole Beighton2, Ruth Harris3, Julia Gale5, Stephen Gourlay6, Vari Drennan2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nurses leaving their jobs and the profession are an issue of international concern, with supply-demand gaps for nurses reported to be widening. There is a large body of existing literature, much of which is already in review form. In order to advance the usefulness of the literature for nurse and human resource managers, we undertook an overview (review of systematic reviews). The aim of the overview was to identify high quality evidence of the determinants and consequences of turnover in adult nursing.Entities:
Keywords: Consequences; Determinants; Nurses; Nursing staff; Personnel turnover; Research design (data quality, data reporting); Review, systematic; Workforce
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29246221 PMCID: PMC5732502 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-017-2707-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Medline search strategy and number of articles found −17/01/2015
| Search line number | Search concept | Search terms | Number of retrieved articles |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nursing | exp/Nursing staff | 34,054 |
| 2 | exp Nursing Care/ | 58,012 | |
| 3 | exp Nurses/ | 41,985 | |
| 4 | (nurse or nurses or nursing).tw. | 175,720 | |
| 5 | 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 | 229,449 | |
| 6 | Turnover | exp Personnel Turnover/ | 2969 |
| 7 | (turnover or (leave adj5 (nurse or nurses or nursing)) or (leaving adj5 (nurse or nurses or nursing)) or (retention adj5 (nurse or nurses or nursing)) or (retain adj5 (nurse or nurses or nursing)) or (stay adj5 (nurse or nurses or nursing))).tw. | 44,114 | |
| 8 | 6 or 7 | 45,826 | |
| 9 | Systematic reviews | meta-analysis.pt.,ti,ab,sh. | 63,056 |
| 10 | (meta anal$ or metaanal$).ti,ab,sh. | 76,516 | |
| 11 | ((methodol$ or systematic$ or quantitativ$) adj5 (review$ or overview$ or survey$)).ti,ab,sh. | 66,923 | |
| 12 | (medline or embase or index medicus).ti,ab. | 57,130 | |
| 13 | ((pool$ or combined or combining) adj (data or trials or studies or results)).ti,ab. | 10,736 | |
| 14 | literature.ti,ab. | 350,875 | |
| 15 | 9 or 10 or 11 or 12 or 13 or 14 | 457,235 | |
| 16 | 15 and review.pt.,sh. | 217,379 | |
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| limit 217 to english language |
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Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram
General characteristics of the included systematic reviews
| Author(s) (year) | Aim(s) Research question(s) | Selection criteria used to include primary studies (PICOS) | Scope | Type, number, and quality of included studies as reported by the author(s) | Review authors’ summary of findings | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Geography | ||||||||
| 2. Time limit | ||||||||
| 3. Language | ||||||||
| Chan et al. (2013) [ | To examine and describe the published empirical research on nurses’ intention to leave their current employment or the profession. |
| RNs working in non-specialty wards | 1 | International (by USA) |
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| The reasons for nurses’ intention to leave are complex and influenced by many factors, categorised as individual and organizational factors. Individual factors are job satisfaction, burnout and demographic factors, whereas organizational factors comprise work environment, culture, commitment, work demands and social support. This review indicates that job satisfaction is the most influential. |
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| determinants (aspects, factors) | 2 | 2001–2010 | Quantitative | 29 | |||
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| Not stated | 3 | English |
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| Intention to leave |
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| All types of peer-reviewed primary studies (no literature reviews, dissertations) | Qualitative |
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| Mix-Methods |
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| Other | 2 | |||||||
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| No details available. | ||||||||
| Critical Review of Quantitative | ||||||||
| Research Worksheet (Miller 2006) [ | ||||||||
| Coomber & Barriball (2007) [ | To explore the impact of job satisfaction components on intent to leave and turnover for hospital-based nurses. |
| Hospital nurses | 1 | International (by UK) |
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| From the four themes discussed, three were organisational factors (leadership, stress and pay) and only one an individual/ demographic factor (educational attainment). |
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| determinants | 2 | 1997–2004 | Quantitative | 6 | The empirical evidence shows that stress and issues concerning leadership consistently exert both direct and indirect effects on job satisfaction and intent to leave | ||
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| Not stated | 3 | Not stated |
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| intent to leave/turnover |
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| Primary and secondary research (no literature reviews) | Qualitative | 3 | |||||
| Mix-Methods |
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| Quality | ||||||||
| No details available. | ||||||||
| Cowden et al. (2011) [ | To examine the relationship between managers’ leadership practices and staff nurses’ intent to stay in or to leave their current position. |
| Staff nurses and their managers | 1 | International (by Canada) |
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| The findings of the present study support a positive relationship between transformational leadership, supportive work environments and staff nurses intent to remain in their current position. Stated intentions to stay are strongly predictive of retention and turnover. Relational leadership styles attentive to the individual needs of the nurse promote staff nurses intentions to stay. |
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| determinants | 2 | 1985–2010 | Quantitative | 22 | |||
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| Non stated | 3 | English |
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| Intention to stay (behavioural intention) |
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| Peer-reviewed qualitative or quantitative studies | Qualitative | – | |||||
| Mix-Methods | 1 | |||||||
| Other | – | |||||||
| “..All studies were rated as moderate or strong” p.468 | ||||||||
| Tool adapted from several existing frameworks (Cummings and Estabrooks 2003 [ | ||||||||
| D’Ambra & Andrews (2014) [ | To determine the impact of incivility as experienced by new graduate nurse and negative effect of incivility on retention and patient care, and identify current organisational strategies suggested by that literature to mitigate the occurrence of incivility. |
| Newly graduated RNs | 1 | International (by USA) |
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| The reasons for nurses’ intention to leave are complex and influenced by many factors, categorised as individual and organizational factors. Individual factors are job satisfaction, burnout and demographic factors, whereas organizational factors comprise work environment, culture, commitment, work demands and social support. This review indicates that job satisfaction is the most influential. |
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| Interventions to reduce workplace incivility | 2 | 2002–2012 | Quantitative | 3 | |||
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| – | 3 | English |
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| Recommended |
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| All types of peer-reviewed primary studies (no literature reviews, dissertations) | Qualitative | 2 | |||||
| Mix-Methods | – | |||||||
| Other | 11^ | |||||||
| ^very unclear/no tabulation of papers | ||||||||
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| No details available. | ||||||||
| Tool adapted from two existing frameworks (Schmidt and Brown 2012 [ | ||||||||
| Flinkman et al. (2010) [ | To review and critique the published empirical research on nurses’ intention to leave the profession |
| RNs or nurses with different educational background | 1 | International (by Finland) |
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| A number of variables influencing nurses’ intention to leave the profession were identified, including demographic, work-related and individual-related variables. The proportion of nurses considering or intending to leave the profession varied considerably across studies. |
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| Determinants | 2 | 1995-Jul 2009 | Quantitative | 31 | The timeframe for leaving intention also varied | ||
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| Not stated | 3 | English, Swedish, Finnish |
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| Intention to leave |
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| Nurses’ retention | Qualitative | – | ||||||
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| Not stated (no editorials, opinions or discussions) | Mix-Methods | – | |||||
| Other | – | |||||||
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| “..All studies had theoretical, methodological and measurement weaknesses.” p 1424 | ||||||||
| Cooper 1989 [ | ||||||||
| Li & Jones (2013) [ | To describe the conceptualization of nurse turnover, to evaluate the methodologies and calculation of costs in those studies, to identify the range of nurse turnover costs reported in the literature and offer suggestions for future study. |
| Any type of nursing staff member | 1 | International (by USA) |
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| Nurse turnover is costly for health-care organizations, as these costs must be paid using organizational resources and accounted for in organizational budgets. The costs of per nurse turnover ranged from $10,098 to $88,000. The ratio of nurse turnover costs relative to nurses’ salary ranged from 0.31 to 1.3. The total turnover costs also ranged from $0.55 million to $8.5 million. |
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| Consequences | 2 | 1990–2010 | Quantitative | 10 | |||
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| Not stated | 3 | English |
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| Organisation: turnover costs |
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| Not stated | Qualitative |
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| Mix-Methods | – | |||||||
| Other | – | |||||||
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| “..The scores of studies ranged between 7 and 11.” (maximum achievable 14) p.407 | ||||||||
| Quality index with seven criteria adapted from Beck 1995 [ | ||||||||
| Schluter et al. (2008) [ | Does unresolved moral distress and poor organizational ethical climate increase nurse turnover? |
| Predominantly nurses in hospital settings | 1 | International (by Australia) |
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| There are a number of published articles characterized by loosely defined terms implying that poor ethical climate causes nurses to leave the profession. A systematic appraisal of these articles reveals that, …, it is not rigorously substantiated by the data presented |
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| determinants | 2 | 1980–2007 | Quantitative | 6 | |||
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| Not stated | 3 | English |
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| Nurse turnover |
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| Qualitative / quantitative primary studies (no theoretical or discussion-based articles) | Qualitative | 3 | |||||
| Mix-Methods | – | |||||||
| Other | – | |||||||
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| “..Most articles were of fair quality.”p 313 | ||||||||
| Hawker et al. 2002 [ | ||||||||
| Toh et al. (2012) [ | The aim of this review was to establish the best available evidence regarding the relationship between the nursing shortage and nurses’ job satisfaction, stress and burnout levels in oncology/haematology settings. |
| RNs at inpatient and outpatient oncology/ haematology units, wards or healthcare facilities | 1 | International (by Singapore) |
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| RNs suffered from job satisfaction, stress and burnout, which ultimately led to them leaving the specialty (oncology) or profession. |
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| Determinants | 2 | 1990–2010 | Quantitative | 7 | |||
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| Not stated | 3 | English |
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| Intention to leave current nursing position |
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| Not stated | Qualitative | – | |||||
| Mix-Methods | – | |||||||
| Other | – | |||||||
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| No details available. | ||||||||
| Joanna Briggs Institute Meta Analysis of Statistics Assessment and Review Instrument (JBI-MAStARI) [not referenced in Toh et al.]. | ||||||||
| Wagner (2007) [ | (1) What is the predictability of organizational commitment as a variable in nursing turnover studies, (2) how do organizational commitment and job satisfaction compare as predictor variables in nursing turnover studies and (3) what is the usefulness of organizational commitment in nursing turnover research? |
| Nurses | 1 | International (by USA) |
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| Organizational commitment had statistically significant predictive ability in the 23 nursing turnover studies; but only 5 studies substantiated this as direct relationship. The research revealed that when using mediator variables such as intent to leave or intent to remain in turnover studies, organizational commitment is a highly desirable component. Finally, the literature demonstrated that organizational commitment is a stronger predictor of nursing turnover than is job satisfaction. |
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| Determinants | 2 | 1960–2006 | Quantitative | 23 | |||
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| – | 3 | English |
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| Turnover |
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| Intent to leave or intent to remain | Qualitative | – | ||||||
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| Primary studies (type not stated) | Mix-Methods | – | |||||
| Other | – | |||||||
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| No details available. | ||||||||
| Not clear | ||||||||
Articles most frequently included in the reviews assessed
| Articles | Coomber | Wagner | Schluter | Flinkman | Cowden | Toh | Chan | Li | D’Ambra | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 [ | 2007 [ | 2008 [ | 2010 [ | 2011 [ | 2012 [ | 2013 [ | 2013 [ | 2014 [ | ||
| Bycio | 1995 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Taunton | 1997 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Ingersoll | 2002 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Cowin | 2002 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Lu | 2002 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Larrabee | 2003 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Sourdif | 2004 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Lynn | 2005 [ | x | x | x | ||||||
| Hart | 2005 [ | X | x | x | ||||||
| Tourangeau | 2006 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Chang | 2006 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Estryn-Behar | 2007 [ | x | ||||||||
| Flinkman | 2008 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Mrayyan | 2008 [ | x | x | |||||||
| Chen | 2008 [ | x | x | |||||||
Fig. 2Methodological quality of the included reviews. Judgment of the presence of AMSTAR quality items in the nine reviewed reviews
Fig. 3Number of primary studies per determinant for the outcome measure of turnover
Fig. 4Number of primary studies per determinant reviews for the outcome measure of retention
Fig. 5Number of primary studies per determinant for the outcome measure of intention to stay
Fig. 6Number of primary studies per determinant for the outcome measure of intention to leave