Retooling the RN workforce in long-term care: Nursing certification as a pathway to quality improvement

This article describes a project to improve nursing care quality in long-term care (LTC) by retooling registered nurses' (RN) geriatric clinical competence. A continuing education course was developed to prepare LTC RNs (N = 84) for national board certification and improve technological compete...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geriatric nursing (New York) 2014-05, Vol.35 (3), p.182-187
Hauptverfasser: Cramer, Mary E., High, Robin, Culross, Beth, Conley, Deborah Marks, Nayar, Preethy, Nguyen, Anh T., Ojha, Diptee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article describes a project to improve nursing care quality in long-term care (LTC) by retooling registered nurses' (RN) geriatric clinical competence. A continuing education course was developed to prepare LTC RNs (N = 84) for national board certification and improve technological competence. The certification pass-rate was 98.5%. The study used a mixed methods design with retrospective pretests administered to RN participants. Multivariate analysis examined the impact of RN certification on empowerment, job satisfaction, intent to turnover, and clinical competence. Results showed certification significantly improved empowerment, satisfaction, and competence. A fixed effects analysis showed intent to turnover was a function of changes in empowerment, job dissatisfaction, and competency (F = 79.2; p < 0.001). Changes in empowerment (t = 1.63, p = 0.11) and competency (t = -0.04, p = 0.97) did not affect changes in job satisfaction. Findings suggest RN certification can reduce persistently high RN turnover rates that negatively impact patient safety and LTC quality.
ISSN:0197-4572
1528-3984
DOI:10.1016/j.gerinurse.2014.01.001