Work readiness of graduate health professionals

Nurse Education Today
Arlene WalkerA M Trisha Dunning

Abstract

The current exploratory study investigated work readiness among graduate health professionals. A critical incident technique was used to elicit perceptions regarding: strategies and skills that constitute work readiness among health professionals and the work readiness factors that help or hinder health graduates' transition and integration into the workplace. Fifteen medical graduates, 26 nursing graduates and five organisational representatives from a regional hospital in Victoria, Australia participated. Data were collected via qualitative interviews. Participants discussed a total of 92 critical incidents; 52 related to helping and 40 to hindering work readiness factors that impacted graduates' transition and integration experiences. A follow-up thematic analysis indentified four critical work readiness factors: social intelligence, organisational acumen, work competence and personal characteristics. While graduates and organisational representatives considered each factor important, some differences between the groups emerged. Organisational representative's perceived social intelligence and clinical skills critical graduate competencies, yet graduates were unprepared in these areas. The identified work readiness factors w...Continue Reading

References

Feb 1, 1992·BMJ : British Medical Journal·C P Bradley
Jul 1, 1954·Psychological Bulletin·J C FLANAGAN
Apr 26, 2005·Education for Health : Change in Training & Practice·Katinka PrinceAlbert Scherpbier
Jan 9, 2009·International Journal of Mental Health Nursing·Christopher PattersonAmanda Reid
Sep 1, 2009·British Journal of Nursing : BJN·Wayne Robson

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Citations

Oct 28, 2016·Contemporary Nurse·Arlene Walker, Beth M Costa
May 17, 2017·Physiotherapy Theory and Practice·Sarah Barradell
Nov 28, 2018·Journal of Advanced Nursing·Andrea BaumannMargaret Keatings
Dec 20, 2019·Medical Teacher·Sharifah Sulaiha Syed AznalPei Sin Keng
Apr 27, 2021·Frontiers in Psychology·Ashleigh SchweinsbergFilia Garivaldis

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