Do New Graduate Nurses Need a Formal Residency Program?

The following article closely examines the current curriculum of the generic four year baccalaureate degree and questions the inherent limitations of clinical nurse training in the academic setting as well as the orientation process for new graduate registered nurses (RNs) in the hospital organization setting. The author explores the structure of medical training residency programs to address reality shock in new graduate nurses and discusses the benefits of a structured transition program for new graduate nurses. Nurses Career Support Article

After four years of nursing school, do nurses need this additional training? To answer this question, it is prudent to examine the traditional four year baccalaureate nursing curriculum. In general, the first two years of study are dedicated to the fulfillment of general education courses such as English, history, statistics and any other non-nursing courses mandated to meet graduation requirements. Other courses while non-nursing in scope are necessary to build a strong foundation toward nursing theory. Such courses include nutrition, chemistry, organic chemistry, microbiology, anatomy and physiology I and II and sometime physics and pathophysiology. It is not until the last two years of the curriculum that students immerse themselves in the core nursing theory and clinical practice.

What happens in the last two years? In the United States nurses are trained as generalist nurses, this means that the student is not required to focus on specialization. Therefore, the student nurse is rotated through one rotation or semester of pediatrics, obstetrics, psychiatric, and community. The emphasis is placed on adult and older adult which together may consist of two clinical rotations. The last clinical rotation is the preceptorship where students are paired one-to-one with a professional registered nurse and work more independent of clinical faculty.

It is not until the senior preceptor-preceptee training period that students have a more "real world" feel for the autonomy of nursing practice. Clinical rotations in nursing school do not mimic the full responsibilities of a professional registered nurse. Yes, during earlier rotations students are exposed to bits and pieces of various aspects of the field to learn the why and how things are done, but with clinical faculty to student ratio set at 1:10 the clinical rotation experience is limited.

What happens then during a semester rotation? If there are 12 patients on a floor and there are only 2 RN's and one technician. Ideally, the student group would be divided evenly among the two nurses so that each nurse would provide report to five students. This is not always the case as some nurses do not want to mentor students, patients refuse to have student nurses, or the patient census decreases.

For each rotation there is a new unit or hospital; the learning process in interrupted. Students must acclimate to new surroundings become familiar with the nursing staff, type of equipment; learn the layout of the unit, and everyday routines of the unit. In addition, students need to familiarize themselves with the "regulars" identified as physicians and other healthcare providers who work on the unit daily, as well as learn with charting systems and communication networks on how to contact providers and hospital departments.

Nursing and ancillary staff tend to be reserved in their interactions uncertain of student nurse scope of practice, and skill level. Clinical becomes focused on setting the patient up for the day and a how to list such as how to read and understand daily orders, how to administer medication, how to document in the electronic record, and how to work the smart pump. Students become more focused on "task", but the nurses' role exceeds far beyond the few items on a check list to accomplish during the day. It is not until the graduate nurse starts their first job that they are immersed in an overwhelming world of responsibility.

What about new nurse orientation process? Yes, each time a nurse is hired whether a newly graduated nurse or a seasoned nurse with years of experience there is the same orientation process. The orientation process is developed to familiarize nurses to the hospital and routines of the department. New hires are evaluated on their ability to function as an autonomous nurse. It is understood that a nurse with years of experience would need less time being mentored than a new graduate nurse.

The new graduate nurse needs more then what the generic orientation process offers, unlike nurses with years of practice, new graduate nurses experience high levels of anxiety, fear, and frustration related to meeting the needs of the individual patient and the needs of the setting (Kramer, 1974), learning and practicing new invasive procedural skills, delegating to ancillary staff, collaborating with and reporting to physicians on a frequent basis. For even the most experienced RN the hospital environment is considered at times very stressful, demanding, and not conducive to providing safe patient care with increasing responsibilities, more technology, high nurse-to-patient ratios, and higher acuity patients. Nurses have taken a greater role doing more invasive procedures from phlebotomy, urinary catheter insertion, nasogastric tube insertion, bladder irrigation, insertion peripheral intravenous catheter, wound and chest tube management, to name a few. Today, patients admitted to a medical/surgical floor are patients who in the past would have been admitted to the intensive care unit. The current orientation process plays a limited role to the socialization of new graduate nurse.

What's the problem? The turnover rate among newly graduated RNs is extremely high. Turnover is defined as the number of new graduate RNs that leave a position before 12 months (Trepanier, Early, Ulrich, & Cherry, 2012). In a survey conducted by Bowles and Candela (2005), perceptions of first job experience nurses new to the profession, 30% left their job within the first year of employment and 57% left their first job within two years of employment. Twenty-six percent of survey respondents cited the most common reason for leaving was stress caring for high acuity patients, feeling patient care was unsafe, and unacceptable nurse-to-patient ratios (Bowles & Candela, 2005). Similar comments were discussed by Beecroft, Kunzman, and Krozek (2001) who reported new graduate nurse turnover rates of 35% to 60% within the first year of employment. In addition to concerns about new graduate nurse turnover the loss financially is approximately $40,000 in employer hiring and orientation expenses (Halfer & Graf, 2006), but even a conservative estimate of $10,000 per RN results in a substantial financial loss (The HSM Group, Ltd, 2002). Reality shock is proposed to contribute to a majority of new graduate RN turnover.

What can we learn from medicine? What are the benefits of residency? The residency experience for medicine is now a common expectation not only from medical graduates but those who hire physicians. Dr. William Osler, a British Canadian who arrived in 1888, known as one of the four founding physicians of Johns Hopkins Medicine is best known for the establishment of the medical residency program (The Johns Hopkins University, n.d.). The success of the program is credited to the developed pyramidal structure consistent of medical students, interns, fewer assistant residents, and a single chief resident (The Johns Hopkins University, n.d.). The pyramidal hierarchy is an excellent example of well-planned socialization. Training is developed to immerse individuals and gradually increase responsibility and accountability. This gradual immersion into the profession with its built-in support system allows individuals to develop a greater sense of control and decrease level of stress.

Kramer (1974) identified that new nurse graduates experienced increase anxiety, and increase fear in the first 12 months of clinical practice. This is not to say that the nursing profession should adopt an intricate system, but at the informal level it is easy to identify a similar hierarchy in the nursing field with student nurses, new graduate nurses, nurses, and veteran nurses. The Institute of Medicine's (2011) Future of Nursing recommendations support the development of nurse residency programs for both the RN and APRN level. New graduate nurse transition programs have been documented to increase retention rates in organizations (Chappell, 2014; Mennick, 2007), greater satisfaction with mastery of work organization and clinical task (Halfer & Graf, 2006). Recently, the findings from a new graduate nurse residency program reported a decrease in the 12-month turnover rate from 36% to 6% (Trepanier et al., 2012).

What are some components to nursing residency? In addition to the normal orientation process, transition programs should be at least one-year in length, include peer-to-peer interaction, debriefing, self-reflection, mentor support programs, (Chappell, 2014) and skills development. Trepanier et al (2012) described components to nursing residency that consisted of five categories didactic direct instruction, clinical immersion and competency validation, looping, mentoring, and supportive debriefing. A brief description of each follows. The didactic direct instruction and case study takes 15-20% of RN residency incorporating core concepts and multispecialty classes such as 12 lead ECG. Clinical immersion and competency validation process promotes the application of content. At this phase, the new graduate is not primarily responsible for direct patient care, but works under close supervision of the preceptor. Looping is a term used to describe the floating of new graduates to floors outside their dedicated learning unit where patients may have been transferred or admitted to the dedicated learning unit. For example, if the dedicated learning unit is the intensive care unit then time may be spent in the emergency department and the operating room. Supportive mentoring includes assigned mentor circle groups that are facilitated by experienced RNs and includes special topics such as career development. Supportive debriefing allows new graduates to discuss their experiences and voice their feelings (Trepanier et al., 2012).

This article has highlighted many of the limitations to the training of student nurses in nursing school and the inadequacies of hospital orientation for the new graduate nurse. New graduate RN residency programs are a human capital project that assists not only nurses, but also improves patient outcomes. Kelly (2014) reported shorter patient length of stay (LOS) when RNs worked on the same unit for at least one year. Nurse residency programs are a worthwhile investment that requires more resource, funding and further consideration by nurse leadership and hospital organizations.

References

Beecroft, P., Kunzman, L., & Krozek, C. (2001). RN internship: Outcomes of a one-year pilot program. Journal of Nursing Administration, 31(12), 575-582.

Bowles, C., & Candela, L. (2005). First job experiences of recent RN graduates. JONA, 35(3), 130-137.

Chappell, K. (2014). The value of RN residency and fellowship programs for Magnet Hospitals. JONA, 44(6), 313-314.

Halfer, D., & Graf, E. (2006). Graduate nurse perceptions of the work experience. Nurse Economics, 24(3), 150-155.

The HSM Group, Ltd. (2002) Acute care hospital survey of RN vacancy and turnover rates in 2000. JONA, 32(9), 437-439.

The Johns Hopkins University. (n.d.). The four founding physicians. Johns Hopkins Medicine. Retrived on June 18, 2014 from https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/about/history/history5.html

Kelly, J.C. (2014). Nurse tenure, education linked to shorter hospital stays. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 6, 231-259.

Kramer, M. (1974). Reality shock: Why nurses leave nursing. St. Louis, MO: Mosby.

Mennick, F. (2007). Keeping new RNs in their jobs. American Journal of Nursing, 107(12), 21.

Trepanier,S., Early, S., Ulrich, B., & Cherry, B. (2012). New graduate nurse residency program. Nurse Economics, 30(4), 207-214.

Specializes in Oncology.

I am a new graduate nurse that is about to start my residency program except the hospital I am working for doesn't call it that. They fancy it up and sell it to the new graduates but then later the new grads realize that in this area, there isn't another option. Human Resources is holding the gates closed for new grads that do not want to do this program. The program is contracted though a staffing agency and while the new grads are paid, its a substantial amount less than what a nurse on the floor makes. Additionally, when doing the preceptor portion of the program - if you have been assigned nights - you do not get differential or weekend pay. Yes, you must sign a 2 year contract with a buy out of $7500 that is pro-rated over 2 years if you choose to get out of it. The PRO's of this program for me being a new grad are very few - ACLS is paid for and they require a 6 week didactic portion of this program to be completed prior to preceptorship. Coming out of nursing school and passing my NCLEX, the last thing I really want to do is sit in a classroom and read from a book again because I've been doing that all through my accelerated nursing program.

However, in the area that I live - this is the only option. The hospitals in this area all have novice programs or residency programs and although they benefit new grads a little, they benefit the hospital more especially by way of retention and salary's. I say salary because they are hiring new grads into specialty fields and making them sign contracts for minimum wages (which is understandable for the first year since you have no experience - but what happens when you DO have the experience? do you re-negotiate or leave for a better offer at another hospital?)

I tried my hardest to avoid this program but I am starting it on Monday with a positive outlook and thoughts of the future in my mind. Any additional training is good to have I suppose, even if it hurts my very empty wallet!

ADN's get theirs the second week of school. We took our prerequisite courses that BSN have to do in years one and two. I certainly don't know any nurses that have to take organic chem to get an RN. ADN s are in the field, in facilities, seeing, learning and doing. Used to be, before the economy tanked, that there were internships that could be applied for and potentially lead to a job. Now? Nurses have to pay for the same program, with no guarantee after completion. Nursing school itself is a boot camp...if you go the ADN route. Too many people are afraid of getting **** under their fingernails to do the hard work anyway. That's probably part of the rush to do a BSN and then an NP.

Specializes in ICU, LTACH, Internal Medicine.

Looks like it will be my longest post ever.

1). Medical establishment spent over a century of money and effort to make residency an accepted part of the system. Now, it is considered unalienable part of business of becoming a doctor. It is not a job, it is training, and it is mentioned as "training" in CV. Residents do not carry full licenses and do not have right to practice independently, even their DIA numbers are "controlled" ones and their scripts need to be co-signed to the very end of their programs. If one says he/she is "X" year (specialty) resident, it gives clear picture of what this person can and can't do.

Nursing residencies are 1) count as "job experience"; 2) offered to people who are, or about to become, fully licensed professionals; 3) are, at the present time, not part of established picture. This uncertainty of status gives some NMs creative ideas of paying these "resident nurses" much less than their peers who are not going through residency or not counting "residency" as "professional nurse work experience" (both situations were discussed on this forum).

2). Medical residencies are all about learning. Experience as wide as possible within the specialty is their main selling point. Residents are sent I hospitals in other states, attend conferences, do research (mostly of poor quality but still they do it). Even in most malignant places, educational time is protected one. Attendings can yell, assault, humiliate and harass and get clean of all that, but if they refuse to teach, they don't get out easily. If residency program loses its board passing rate, the review happens the very same year.

Nursing residencies can provide as much (or as little) learning experience, and of whatever quality they want. As all new grads are to pass NCLEX before (or shortly after beginning) the programs and there is simply no other tool to evaluate the teaching that suppose to happen, they just as well may not care at all. There are a few (and of rather questionable quality) exams which could be used as base for such tools according to specialty, like BKAT but they are used minimally.

3). Residency programs are strictly controlled by both Graduate Medical Education Commission and specialty Boards and organizations. A hospital which wants to establish a new program has to satisfy extremely strict requirements; residents have to be able to spend "X" months doing prescribed rotations all year around and have opportunity to do "X" procedures within this time without having to live in hospital or making schedule/interests conflict with anyone. The facility has to have certain specialists available and willing to teach. This, and not the amount of Medicare money, is the main bottleneck for opening new residencies in specialties where there is current shortage of providers. Residents may be worked as slaves, but they have to be taught, and results of the teaching must be demonstrated on regular basis.

With nursing residencies, today anyone and everyone can open another program whenever he/she feels like it. To do so, he should prepare nice folders about dedication this and excellence that and make sure new grads in nearby schools know about his bright and new idea. They will pack the HR with applications next day, and since that all other responsibilities before them can be signed off and forgotten. There is no control, and therefore no responsibility for the nursing residents' achievements, much less for their welfare and future career.

On top of it, medical residencies never had, and have not anything at all to do with "attrition rate". The system is designed the way that there's little chance to escape for resident without risk of losing entire career. Opposite, the residencies tend not to accept their past grads as staff till they work a few years somewhere else and get more experience - because the aforementioned concern about "wide exposure" and opportunity for residents to see different ways to do things.

As it happened before, nursing yet another time tries to get the worst out of the idea which was thought out as good one but came out perverted years ago and currently recognized by many physicians as one in need of radical reform. Nursing (as medical) residencies can work and produce amazing specialists if applied strictly within specialty (i.e. ICU), if learning is considered as primary goal and if there is an effective tool(s) to control the quality of "product" leaving the program. Specialty certification and exams, like CCRN, could play the latter role but till certification remains something not even "recommended", those tools cannot be enforced. And the making the system working will take at least as long as it took for medicine (over 100 years, again). Otherwise, nursing residencies will remain the clever way for management to stop the rotating doors and treat understaffing with Band-Aids in form of easily disposable "nurse residents". I think we all here know the results which will follow.

Specializes in Med-Surg, NICU.

You guys, let's not turn this into an ADN vs BSN...okay?

Well, we need something other than 12 weeks, especially in light of horrible clinical experiences that don't really show us the experience. if 60% of nurses are quitting before two years (and there is no way I'm gonna work med surge for two years as its currently structured) there is clearly something wrong with both the educational and orientation systems we currently have. The real question is why all the RN's in hospital administration who are always preaching about everything (safety, costs, etc) aren't doing anything to fix it. It's clearly too expensive to be allowed to continue, yet it has existed this way far longer than a decade.

Specializes in Critical Care at Level 1 trauma center.

Wait what??? You had to sign a contract stating that you have to pay 12k for your residency?? Wow that is terrible. I did an ICU residency and a level one facility and I got a 4k sign on bonus and my critical care classes were very in depth CRITICAL CARE material not basic nursing school stuff. The CC class was a once a week 8 hr class for 13 weeks and it took place on my day off. I'm sorry you had a bad experience in your residency but I totally recommend new ICU nurses to have a residency.... just as long as they don't have to pay for it as you did.

Wait what??? You had to sign a contract stating that you have to pay 12k for your residency?? Wow that is terrible. I did an ICU residency and a level one facility and I got a 4k sign on bonus and my critical care classes were very in depth CRITICAL CARE material not basic nursing school stuff. The CC class was a once a week 8 hr class for 13 weeks and it took place on my day off. I'm sorry you had a bad experience in your residency but I totally recommend new ICU nurses to have a residency.... just as long as they don't have to pay for it as you did.

Sounds like a similar setup to mine, sans sign on bonus.

Specializes in Primary Care; Child Advocacy; Child Abuse; ED.

My classes are also in depth and more detailed than nursing school. We didn't have a sign on bonus or anything that we are required to give back as far as time to the hospital. We only have it once a week also :) I would recommend this residency program also. I can understand if your program was exactly like nursing school how it would feel like a waste of time. I was lucky to go to a school were the clinicals were awesome because we are based out of a hospital. Good luck to everyone in their new jobs :)

My residency program is only 3 months. We are contracted that if we leave the hospital system before 1 year has passed we have to repay $1,200 (estimated value of training).

It mostly non-classroom based. I think it has been an excellent resource for me because as part of the program I have gotten a chance to spend time with RT, OT, ST, lab, IR, respiratory, and imaging. Learning about what they do and their processes has really helped me see the total picture for patient care (and learn about their Nursing staff pet peeves!).

I'm on a respiratory unit and most of my training is there. I am hands-on with vents (which we weren't allowed to touch in nursing school) and have a preceptor with me. I work with him and find it comforting when I'm unsure about something or if it is something that I never have done before (like assisting the MD with a bronchial lavage).

The other NR and I have 2 in-class classes a month, its good because we can discuss policy and what we are seeing on the unit that conflicts without fear of retribution. The Nurse Educators provide an ear and offer advice with problems and any concerns. I meet weekly with my preceptor and nurse manger and we discuss my performance for the week, compare it to the outlined performance standards and I turn in an evaluation on my preceptor.

Honestly, I love it. My confidence has gone up so much since starting. I really feel like I'm making the transition from student to RN and I have the support to do so.

I'm so sorry that you had a bad experience with a nurse residency program but please know, there are some excellent programs out there. I hope that other nursing students reading your post and my reply, will take some great effort to research hospitals that say they have a residency program. Some hospitals are proud to boast that word but when you look closely at their program, it is a home grown curriculum hastily put together and not evaluated. My hospital has the Versant RN Residency program which we have had for 15 years. Our program is 22 weeks in length (more time is needed because we are a children's hospital) and the new grad is supported with a preceptor for the full 22 weeks. They don't have their own patient load until full completion of the program. When we first started it, some of the senior nurses complained about it because they said they only had 6 weeks training and they turned out fine. However, it only took a few years for the culture to shift and now the entire hospital cannot imagine on boarding new grad nurses any other way. We have approximately 50 nurses in a cohort and we hire two cohorts a year with over 1,000 applicants for each cohort. It is extremely competitive to get in but the pay off is worth the effort. We evaluate numerous aspects of the program and make changes to continuously try to improve it. Oh how I wish you could have gone through my residency program and I know you would have had a completely different experience. Please don't discourage new grads to avoid hospitals with residency programs but instead encourage them to diligently search for the best programs out there. Many hospitals are doing away with the penalty contract - I know we did. Our focus in on supporting the new grad and our turnover rate is the lowest it has ever been.

I graduated with my BSN in December and entered into a RN Fellowship in February. It is a 6 month program so I am almost done. I love it. It is different from the RN internship that the hospital offers because the RN Fellowship is longer and no contract is required. The pay is less but the experience, training, and certification trainings are great. The RN Fellowship is offered in several different specialities and locations as it is offered by a huge hospital system. At the end you maybe offered employment, but if not you do have a legitimate 6 months of hospital experience that can go on your resume. However most of us have already signed offer letters as our program ends in a month. I think it's great because as a new nurse I do not want to sharpen my skills and get to know a new staff. Residencies are a great way to build new nurse confidence and increase retention.