Re: Future of Army Nursing
Team nursing vs primary nursing vs nursing with IV/Med nurses. The hospitals I have been affiliated with have gone through these changes with the last being over 8 years ago. I would lean towards saying the changes came mostly due to two factors; costs and the nursing shortage. There was a year in each situation where the turnover of nurses had to have exceeded 70%.
- Nursing research with a quick turnaround for implementation.
- One year of orientation / training that is superb undertaking.
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15-year blueprint? 4 years will accomplish their goals? Four or 15 years thats new for me most civilian hospitals / cooperations would think 15 months was too long. I would think by years 3-5, depending on loss levels, the backbone should be there.
- 60% civilian nursing staffing that surprised me but than again the last two major hospitals I worked at the agency nurses just as many times as not outnumbered the staff nurses. I wonder what the Army plan is for addressing this. Wouldn't that mean only 40% are prone to deployment???
Very good article thanks for posting.
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