Academic–Practice Partnerships for Unemployed New Graduates in California

In California, academic–practice partnerships offer innovative transition programs to new registered nurse (RN) graduates who have not yet found positions in nursing. This report describes the formation of 4 partnerships between 1 or more schools of nursing and clinical practice sites that included...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of professional nursing 2015-07, Vol.31 (4), p.351-358
Hauptverfasser: Van, Paulina, Berman, Audrey, Karshmer, Judith, Prion, Susan, West, Nikki, Wallace, Jonalyn
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container_end_page 358
container_issue 4
container_start_page 351
container_title Journal of professional nursing
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creator Van, Paulina
Berman, Audrey
Karshmer, Judith
Prion, Susan
West, Nikki
Wallace, Jonalyn
description In California, academic–practice partnerships offer innovative transition programs to new registered nurse (RN) graduates who have not yet found positions in nursing. This report describes the formation of 4 partnerships between 1 or more schools of nursing and clinical practice sites that included hospitals and nonacute care settings, such as hospice, clinics, school districts, and skilled nursing facilities. Factors facilitating the partnerships included relationships established as nurse leaders from practice and academia came together to address previous workforce issues, positive interpersonal experiences, an independent convening and coordinating organization, a shared understanding of the employment challenge faced by new RN graduates, and a shared vision for its solution. Partnerships face continuing challenges that include sustaining engagement, resource constraints, and insufficient nursing leadership succession planning. Partnership benefits include improved relationships between academia and practice, a forum to address contemporary issues in nursing education and practice advances, and stimulation of a reassessment of how to integrate ambulatory, transitional, and community-based nursing into prelicensure education. •Four partnerships started transition programs for unemployed new RN graduates.•A neutral convening organization facilitated academic–practice partnerships.•Partnership programs resulted in increased confidence, competence, and employment.•Partnerships subsequently spread throughout California.•Barriers and facilitators link to existing literature and add a new perspective.
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source MEDLINE; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects California
Educational leadership
Interinstitutional Relations
Nurses
Nursing
Nursing education
Nursing Staff
Nursing/Manpower
Nursing/Supply and distribution
Professional practice/nursing
Schools, Nursing - organization & administration
Succession planning
Unemployment
title Academic–Practice Partnerships for Unemployed New Graduates in California
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