February 09, 2010 | Sarah Kearns | Comments 2
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Half of nurses plan career change, says survey

AMN Healthcare recently conducted its 2010 Survey of Registered Nurses to address the issues of job satisfaction levels and if the recession is affecting nursing career plans. The survey was sent to registered nurses via e-mail and 1,399 nurses completed the survey.

The survey found that almost half (44%) of all nurses plan to make a career change over the next three years, and that more than one-third of the respondents experience job dissatisfaction. Almost 50% of the respondents were nurses between the ages of 40-49, and 59% of the nurses currently hold a position on their hospital’s permanent staff.

AMN Healthcare’s survey also found:

  • 15% of nurses plan to seek a new place of employment should the economy improve a year from now.
  • 28% of nurses agree with the statement, “I will not be working in this job a year from now.”
  • 46% of nurses agree with the statement “I worry this job is affecting my health.”
  • 29% of nurses plan to take steps in the next one to three years that would take them out of nursing altogether (by retiring or seeking non-nursing jobs) or reduce the volume of clinical work they do (by switching to part-time or less demanding roles).
  • 8% of nurses returned to the nursing workforce over the last two years, 3% for economic reasons.
  • Only 6% of nurses are very confident that healthcare reform will provide a mechanism for ensuring an adequate supply of nurses
  • The majority of nurses (55%) believe that the quality of care that nurses provide today has declined compared to when they started in nursing.
  • More than one-third of nurses (36%) said they either would not recommend nursing as a career to young people or were not sure that they would.

Another topic the survey asked nurses to comment on was the nursing shortage and comparing it to five years ago. Thirty-three percent of nurses said the shortage has gotten worse, despite an economic downturn that has sent many RNs back to nursing from other areas of work.

An additional 28% said they have seen no change to the nursing shortage over the last five years, while a minority of nurses surveyed (39%) said the nursing shortage is not as bad as it was five years ago. The survey suggests that most nurses believe the heavy patient loads and demanding work assignments characteristic of nursing shortages have not changed.

Nurse satisfaction was also a topic on the survey, and even though 78% of nurses said they are satisfied with their career choice as a nurse, only 66% responded saying they were satisfied in their current job position. The survey also asked nurses if they “often feel like resigning from my position,” and 29% agreed with the statement.

Finally, the survey reported almost half of the nurses (44%) will continue to hold their current position, and as the economy begins to turn around, they will seek out a different career opportunity. The nurses reported they would change their current role by switching to a less demanding nursing position, working as a travel nurse, switching to part-time, retiring, or taking other steps.

Do you agree with the survey findings? As the economy turns around, do you plan to stay in your current position or seek employment elsewhere?


Source: AMN Healthcare

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Sarah Kearns About the Author: Sarah is an Editorial Assistant in the patient safety group at HCPro, Inc. She contributes to two monthly newsletters; Briefings on the Joint Commission and Briefings on Patient Safety, and manages four e-zines; Accreditation Connection, AHAP Staff Challenge, Nurse Manager Weekly, and Healthcare Training Weekly. She also helps research new products for the patient safety and nursing market. She graduated from the University of Connecticut in 2008 where she earned her bachelor's degree in English.

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  1. I went to the AMN website (They are a staffing agency.) to seek a link to this study. I wanted to know more about the study so that I could assess its legitimacy, the population surveyed, etc. I could find no mention of the study on the AMN website. Could you please provide a link so that readers can adequately assess the quality and applicability of the data presented?

  2. Sarah Kearns

    Hi Linda,

    Here is the link to the survey… http://www.amnhealthcare.com/pdf/10_NurseSurveyWeb.pdf

    If that does not work, go here: http://www.amnhealthcare.com/services-products/whitepapers-surveys-casestudies.aspx and then scroll down to the survey part and you will be able to pull up the survey there.

    Thanks!

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