Burnout, job satisfaction, and turnover intention among primary care nurse practitioners with their own patient panels

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 NURSING Nursing Outlook Pub Date : 2024-05-23 DOI:10.1016/j.outlook.2024.102190
Do Kyung Kim MPH RN , Paul Scott PhD , Lusine Poghosyan PhD, MPH, FAAN , Grant R. Martsolf PhD, MPH, FAAN
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Abstract

Background

Nurse practitioners (NPs) can enhance NP care and improve access to care by autonomously managing their patient panels. Yet, its impact on workforce outcomes such as burnout, job satisfaction, and turnover intention remains unexplored.

Purpose

To estimate the impact of NP panel management on workforce outcomes.

Methods

Structural equation modeling was conducted using survey data from 1,244 primary care NPs. NP panel management was categorized into co-managing patients with other providers, both co-managing and autonomously managing, and fully autonomous management.

Discussion

Fully autonomous management led to more burnout than co-managing (B = 0.089, bias-corrected 95% bootstrap confidence interval [0.028, 0.151]). Work hours partially (27%) mediated this relationship. This findings indicate that greater autonomy in panel management among NPs may lead to increased burnout, partially due to longer work hours.

Conclusion

Interventions to reduce work hours could help NPs deliver quality care without burnout.

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拥有自己病人小组的初级保健执业护士的职业倦怠、工作满意度和离职意向
背景执业护师(NPs)可以通过自主管理其病人小组来加强 NP 护理并改善获得护理的机会。目的 通过对 1244 名初级护理 NP 的调查数据,估计 NP 小组管理对劳动力结果的影响。讨论与共同管理相比,完全自主管理会导致更多的职业倦怠(B = 0.089,偏差校正后的 95% 引导置信区间 [0.028,0.151])。工作时间部分(27%)调节了这种关系。结论减少工作时间的干预措施可帮助护士在提供优质护理服务的同时不产生职业倦怠。
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来源期刊
Nursing Outlook
Nursing Outlook 医学-护理
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
7.00%
发文量
109
审稿时长
25 days
期刊介绍: Nursing Outlook, a bimonthly journal, provides innovative ideas for nursing leaders through peer-reviewed articles and timely reports. Each issue examines current issues and trends in nursing practice, education, and research, offering progressive solutions to the challenges facing the profession. Nursing Outlook is the official journal of the American Academy of Nursing and the Council for the Advancement of Nursing Science and supports their mission to serve the public and the nursing profession by advancing health policy and practice through the generation, synthesis, and dissemination of nursing knowledge. The journal is included in MEDLINE, CINAHL and the Journal Citation Reports published by Clarivate Analytics.
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