2011
DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-11-200
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Sustaining innovation in the health care workforce: A case study of community nurse consultant posts in England

Abstract: BackgroundRecruiting, retaining and meeting increasing demand for experienced, qualified nurses is an issue of concern for all health care systems. The UK has been creating clinical career structures for nurses that include innovative posts known as nurse consultants. While the numbers overall appear to have grown over the last eleven years, there is evidence that in some specialities and regions the numbers are decreasing. This paper considers the factors that sustain or curtail workforce innovations through … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…The fact that the vast majority of the literature is from the USA might also be seen as an interesting finding of itself, particularly as other countries are appearing willing to at least trial the PA role without health system-specific evidence. There appears to be a progression in the reporting of new workforce roles which moves from the descriptive to single site evaluations to multi-site evaluations [83,84] and to ignore this would diminish the evidence for those considering introducing new roles. Interestingly, no dramatic changes in findings are reported in the included studies over the 40 year period or in the papers from settings outside of the USA, potentially suggesting that issues of context and method are not a complete barrier to the usefulness of the evidence presented in this review.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The fact that the vast majority of the literature is from the USA might also be seen as an interesting finding of itself, particularly as other countries are appearing willing to at least trial the PA role without health system-specific evidence. There appears to be a progression in the reporting of new workforce roles which moves from the descriptive to single site evaluations to multi-site evaluations [83,84] and to ignore this would diminish the evidence for those considering introducing new roles. Interestingly, no dramatic changes in findings are reported in the included studies over the 40 year period or in the papers from settings outside of the USA, potentially suggesting that issues of context and method are not a complete barrier to the usefulness of the evidence presented in this review.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These include the desire to create clinical career pathway opportunities; to retain experienced nurses in direct care giving roles, rather than in administration; improve patient outcomes; improve access to care; and modernize heath systems (Drennan & Goodman, 2011;Horrocks et al, 2002;O'Baugh, Wilkes, Varughan, & O'Donohue, 2007). These include the desire to create clinical career pathway opportunities; to retain experienced nurses in direct care giving roles, rather than in administration; improve patient outcomes; improve access to care; and modernize heath systems (Drennan & Goodman, 2011;Horrocks et al, 2002;O'Baugh, Wilkes, Varughan, & O'Donohue, 2007).…”
Section: Conceptualization Of Advanced Nursing Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has also created difficulties in measuring the impact and efficacy of advanced practice roles. Within the context of these limitations, it is difficult to empirically ascertain the contribution of the various advanced practice roles to patient and health system outcomes (Drennan & Goodman, 2011). Variability in how the nature of advanced practice has been defined and measured adds further to this complexity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6,24,25 Aligning a new role with organizational goals should also increase the sustainability of the role by, for example, ensuring that the new role is not lost when the person who first filled it leaves. 26 In sum, workforce redesign is best conceptualized not as a "skills add-on" but as a process that involves the concurrent redesign of the service and the workers' roles.…”
Section: Lessons Learnedmentioning
confidence: 99%