Related Subjects
 

Retaining Rural and Remote Area Nurses: The Queensland, Australia Experience

Author(s): Hegney D, McCarthy A, Rogers-Clark C, Gorman D

Abstract

Because higher-than-average turnover rates for nurses who work in remote and rural areas are the norm, the authors conducted a study to identify professional and personal factors that influenced rural nurses’ decisions to resign. Using a mail survey, the authors gathered qualitative and quantitative data from nurses who had resigned from rural and remote areas in Queensland, Australia. Their findings, categorized into professional and rural influences, highlight the importance of work force planning strategies that capitalize on the positive aspects of rural and remote area practice, to retain nurses in nonmetropolitan areas

Similar Articles

Is remote health different to rural health? Rural Remote Health 17: 3832

Author(s): Wakerman J, Bourke L, Humphreys JS, Taylor J

Social determinants of rural health workforce retention: A scoping review

Author(s): Cosgrave C, Malatzky C, Gillespie J

Remote health service vulnerabilities and responses to the COVID-19 pandemic

Author(s): Fitts MS, Russell D, Mathew S, Liddle Z, Mulholland E, et al.

Qualitative thematic analysis based on descriptive phenomenology

Author(s): Sundler AJ, Lindberg E, Nilsson C, Palmér L