Nursing Leadership Issues In Nursing

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Background The nursing leadership problem is there are not enough bachelor prepared nurses to staff hospitals nationwide, because Magnet hospitals have a goal to have 80% of nurses in the hospitals to have a four year Bachelor of Science in nursing degree by the year 2020 (Sarver, Cichra, & Kline, 2015). This problem of the shortage of nurses stems from the baby boomers retiring and needing more medical care. So to offset the need for nurses, more two year programs for nurses have begun around the area to increase the nurse population to accommodate the baby boomers. The problem is leading to the nurses who are working short staffed becoming dissatisfied with their job and jumping around from hospital to hospital causing high turnover rates …show more content…

The process management has to go through to get a job approved is very extensive and requires several signatures from different levels of command, and then the Human Resource department ultimately makes the decision how many nurses the manager is allowed to hire for a particular unit based on average census over the last six month. Management is also limited on who they get to interview based on the applications that are put in by nurses and then further decreased by who human resources clears for the manager to interview. Management is currently only receiving applications from nurses who have bachelor …show more content…

Since we have determined the pro’s and con’s for nursing staff regards to bachelor degrees, we will now explore the hospitals’ pro’s and con’s to hiring a nurse with a bachelor’s degree. The American Medical Association printed an article describing the relationship between nurses with bachelor degrees or higher in regards to surgical mortality rates and failure to rescue. The study was designed to test whether hospitals with high proportions of direct-care nurses educated at the BSN level or above have lower risk- adjusted mortality rates and lower rates of failure to rescue. The study also tested whether the educational backgrounds of hospital nurses are a predictor of patient mortality beyond factors as nurse staffing and experience. The results showed for each 10% increase in the proportion of nurses with higher degrees decreased the risk of mortality and of failure to rescue by 5%, after controlling for patient and hospital characteristics. The study reported if the proportion of BSN nurses in all hospitals was 60% rather than 20%, 3.6 fewer deaths per 1000 patients and 14.2 fewer deaths per 1000 patients with complications would be expected. Nurse’s years of experience was not found to be a significant predictor of mortality or failure to rescue in the

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