Career transitions of inactive nurses: a registration database analysis (1993-2006)

International Journal of Nursing Studies
Mohamad AlameddineR B Deber

Abstract

One important strategy to address nursing shortages is to tap into the pool of licensed nurses who are not currently working in nursing and induce them to return to the nursing labour market. However, there is a paucity of research examining their likelihood of return to the active labour market. Analyze the career transitions of nurses registered with the College of Nurses Ontario but not working in the province's nursing labour market to determine the proportion of these nurses rejoining the active nursing workforce and examine the variation by inactive sub-category and age group. Quantitative analysis of a linked longitudinal database for all those registered with the College of Nurses of Ontario for the years 1993-2006. Registration records of all 215,687 nurses registered at any time in those years were merged by their unique registration number. Each nurse was placed for each year into an employment category. Two groups of nurses were defined: active (registered, working in nursing in Ontario) and inactive (registered, not working in nursing in Ontario). Inactive nurses were then sub-categorized into five mutually exclusive sub-categories: 'not working and seeking nursing employment', 'working in non-nursing and seeking n...Continue Reading

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Citations

Aug 12, 2017·PloS One·Mohamad AlameddineHelen Samaha-Nuwayhid
Jan 13, 2018·Revista brasileira de enfermagem·Jonas Sâmi Albuquerque de OliveiraSelma Regina de Andrade

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