Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon

Recruitment and retention of skilled, qualified nurses to northern regions of Canada is an on-going problem. One of many contributing issues may be the lack of management education afforded to the Nurses-In-Charge (NICs) in remote communities. If managers lack adequate education, they cannot properl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dietrich Bragg, Anne Catherine
Other Authors: Boone, Margaret
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/1622
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spelling ftlakeheaduniv:oai:knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca:2453/1622 2023-05-15T16:16:55+02:00 Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon Dietrich Bragg, Anne Catherine Boone, Margaret 2007 application/pdf http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/1622 en_US eng http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/1622 Nurses Education Yukon Thesis 2007 ftlakeheaduniv 2022-05-01T17:26:21Z Recruitment and retention of skilled, qualified nurses to northern regions of Canada is an on-going problem. One of many contributing issues may be the lack of management education afforded to the Nurses-In-Charge (NICs) in remote communities. If managers lack adequate education, they cannot properly support the staff with whom they work; the environment of the health centre therefore deteriorates, then retention and recruitment of nurses becomes difficult. This study investigates the type and frequency of management education given to NICs in the Yukon Territory. It also attempts to identify the type of education these NICs feel would benefit them. Finally, a job satisfaction questionnaire attempts to determine how NICs feel about their work relationships and their job in general. Background Information: For the past decade, Canada has been experiencing a nursing shortage (Maslove & Fooks, 2004, Office of Nursing Policy, 2005) which is expected to worsen during the next decade (Canadian Nurses Association, 2002). When there is a nursing shortage, outpost nursing stations and remote health centers suffer greatly, especially in First Nations communities; in 2001, there was a reported vacancy rate of at least 40% on reserves, resulting in the closure of some nursing stations for lack of staff (Fletcher, 2001). This kind of shortage results in poor continuity of care to the detriment of patient well being (Minore et ah, 2005). Although nurse retention is a complex issue, especially in northern Canada where little research has been done (MacLeod, Kulig, Stewart & Pitblado, 2004), overwork, burnout, and lack of management support and appreciation are some of the top reasons nurses cite for leaving northern areas (Tyler & Riggs, 2000). Thesis First Nations Yukon Lakehead University Knowledge Commons Yukon Canada Macleod ENVELOPE(-61.966,-61.966,-64.091,-64.091)
institution Open Polar
collection Lakehead University Knowledge Commons
op_collection_id ftlakeheaduniv
language English
topic Nurses Education Yukon
spellingShingle Nurses Education Yukon
Dietrich Bragg, Anne Catherine
Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon
topic_facet Nurses Education Yukon
description Recruitment and retention of skilled, qualified nurses to northern regions of Canada is an on-going problem. One of many contributing issues may be the lack of management education afforded to the Nurses-In-Charge (NICs) in remote communities. If managers lack adequate education, they cannot properly support the staff with whom they work; the environment of the health centre therefore deteriorates, then retention and recruitment of nurses becomes difficult. This study investigates the type and frequency of management education given to NICs in the Yukon Territory. It also attempts to identify the type of education these NICs feel would benefit them. Finally, a job satisfaction questionnaire attempts to determine how NICs feel about their work relationships and their job in general. Background Information: For the past decade, Canada has been experiencing a nursing shortage (Maslove & Fooks, 2004, Office of Nursing Policy, 2005) which is expected to worsen during the next decade (Canadian Nurses Association, 2002). When there is a nursing shortage, outpost nursing stations and remote health centers suffer greatly, especially in First Nations communities; in 2001, there was a reported vacancy rate of at least 40% on reserves, resulting in the closure of some nursing stations for lack of staff (Fletcher, 2001). This kind of shortage results in poor continuity of care to the detriment of patient well being (Minore et ah, 2005). Although nurse retention is a complex issue, especially in northern Canada where little research has been done (MacLeod, Kulig, Stewart & Pitblado, 2004), overwork, burnout, and lack of management support and appreciation are some of the top reasons nurses cite for leaving northern areas (Tyler & Riggs, 2000).
author2 Boone, Margaret
format Thesis
author Dietrich Bragg, Anne Catherine
author_facet Dietrich Bragg, Anne Catherine
author_sort Dietrich Bragg, Anne Catherine
title Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon
title_short Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon
title_full Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon
title_fullStr Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon
title_full_unstemmed Management education of nurses-in-charge in Yukon
title_sort management education of nurses-in-charge in yukon
publishDate 2007
url http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/1622
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.966,-61.966,-64.091,-64.091)
geographic Yukon
Canada
Macleod
geographic_facet Yukon
Canada
Macleod
genre First Nations
Yukon
genre_facet First Nations
Yukon
op_relation http://knowledgecommons.lakeheadu.ca/handle/2453/1622
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