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Frontiers:
Crisis in Caring: Addressing the Nursing Shortage
Lead article by Janet F. Quinn, Ph.D., R.N., FAAN
Softbound,
44 pp, Winter 2002, ISSN 0748-8157
Order code: WWW1-J473,
Price:$29.00
In
this new issue of Frontiers, Janet Quinn, Ph.D., R.N., FAAN,
gets to the heart of the growing nursing shortage epidemic, and offers
healthcare executives her answer to retaining and attracting nurses:
create a healing environment in which nurses can work to care for patients.
In the
ensuing commentaries, James Skogsbergh, president and CEO of Advocate
Health Care in Oak Brook, Illinois, also recommends that hospitals seek
to "develop a culture at the nursing-unit level that sustains,
nurtures, and recognizes its nurses." He supports the existing
magnet certification process and believes this method is the means by
which hospitals can retain nurses.
Sharon
Lee, vice president of nursing and patient care at St. Luke's Regional
Medical Center in Boise, Idaho, gives the reader a unique front-line
perspective. She, too, is an advocate of the magnet hospital approach
and recommends that hospitals examine work redesign, pay attention to
staffing based on patient acuity, collaborate with schools of nursing,
and work to increase the numbers of men and minorities in nursing.
Edward
O'Neil, director of the Center for the Health Professions at the University
of California at San Francisco, further examines Nightingale units,
both their advantages and disadvantages.
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