ABSTRACT
The nursing workforce is at the center of many changes associated with care delivery transformation. To achieve this transformation, frontline staff must be engaged in their work, committed to their organization's mission, and capable of delivering high-quality care. In this article, the authors describe strategies for addressing 1 of the greatest opportunities for improving nurse engagement identified using these data: ensuring nurses feel professional development and promotion opportunities offered at their organization help them to improve.
Subject(s)
Nurse's Role , Nursing Staff, Hospital , Staff Development , Delivery of Health Care , Health Care Reform , Humans , Quality Assurance, Health Care , United StatesABSTRACT
The nursing workforce is at the center of many changes associated with care delivery transformation. To achieve this transformation, frontline nursing staff must be engaged in their work, committed to their organization's mission, and capable of delivering high-quality care. To identify top opportunities for driving nursing engagement, researchers from The Advisory Board Company analyzed engagement survey responses from more than 343 000 employees at 575 healthcare organizations. In this article, the authors describe 3 strategies for addressing 1 of the greatest opportunities for improving nurse engagement: ensuring nurses feel their organization helps them reduce stress and burnout.
Subject(s)
Burnout, Professional/prevention & control , Health Care Reform , Nursing Staff, Hospital/psychology , Burnout, Professional/nursing , Humans , Organizational Culture , Personnel Turnover , United StatesABSTRACT
Nurses play a critical role in care transformation. To achieve transformation, frontline staff must be engaged in their work, committed to their organization's mission, and capable of delivering high-quality care. Data from the Advisory Board Survey Solutions show that nurses are both the least engaged and most disengaged among all frontline staff. To identify the most promising opportunities for driving engagement, researchers from The Advisory Board Company analyzed engagement survey responses from more than 343,000 employees at 575 healthcare organizations. This article describes 3 strategies for addressing 1 of the greatest opportunities identified from the data: ensuring that nurses feel that their ideas and suggestions are valued by the organization.