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Why Are Nurses Quitting?

Post University

The Impact of Stress and Burnout on Nursing Staff Nursing has always been a stressful, challenging profession, but in recent years, the healthcare landscape has evolved so quickly that it has left many nurses dealing with burnout.

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Graduation Season and the Rise of a New Generation of Nurses: A Beacon of Hope Amid a National Shortage

Minority Nurse

They spoke about wanting to serve their communities, to be there for people during their most vulnerable moments, and to advocate for better health outcomes. Meeting the Moment New nurses are uniquely positioned to meet the needs of today’s healthcare landscape.

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Future-Proofing Healthcare

Penn Nursing

As an ER nurse, Jennifer Gil , MSN, RN saw the return of plenty of patients who had made little progress. Many didn’t have the “resources to connect to preventative care or mental health services,” Gil says. She wondered, too, about the connection between crowded ERs and nursesburnout.

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Small Patients, Big Discoveries

Penn Nursing

“We’ve adjusted and structured the curriculum to focus on the lifespan of a patient’s health,” says assistant professor Amanda Bettencourt, PhD, APRN, CCRN-K, ACCNS-P, Gr’19. Nurses Help NursingBurnout” is an omnipresent word in nursing today.

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Empowering Healthcare: Special Grant Funding Program to Address Nursing Workforce Challenges and Improve Health Outcomes

Daily Nurse

The selected hospitals can receive up to $5 million respectively to pursue the Magnet Recognition Program or the Pathway to Excellence program from the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC), as well as implement or expand virtual nursing and nurse residency programs.

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Understanding Nurses Experiencing Moral Injury

Nurse.com

What was frequently confused as burnout in previous years has recently been accurately identified as moral injury for nurses. The volume of research in this area is growing rapidly, and it is safe to conclude that immune modulations caused by psychosocial stressors or interventions directly affect health outcomes.

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Understanding Nurses Experiencing Moral Injury

Nurse.com

What was frequently confused as burnout in previous years, has recently been accurately identified as moral injury for nurses. The volume of research in this area is growing rapidly, and it is safe to conclude that immune modulations caused by psychosocial stressors or interventions directly affect health outcomes.