Abstract

The transition from student to working nurse has long been recognized as challenging. This paper presents the findings of research into the opportunities and limitations encountered by newly qualified nurses when taking on the nursing role. The study had an ethnographic design. Observation, interviews, and document analysis were used to gain insight into nurses' daily work from the perspective of recently graduated nurses. Thirteen nurses were monitored closely during their first year in a hospital setting in Norway. These new nurses generally entered the field with empathy for their patients, enthusiasm for the profession, and readiness to learn more about being a good nurse. However, their more experienced colleagues seemed to neither respect nor nurture this attitude. The new nurses experienced heavier responsibilities than expected, fragmentation of patient care, and stressful interactions with colleagues. The lack of a supportive work environment and role models increased the new nurses' experience of overwhelming responsibility in their daily work situations. The nurses learned to cope the hard way, despite the organizational culture, not because of it. Adjusting the profession's expectations of new nurses, and offering good role models and more comprehensive support programmes, would markedly ease the transition for new nurses.

Highlights

  • The transition from student to working nurse has long been recognized as difficult and has attracted the attention of researchers for decades [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We present the findings of a study that focused on the question: What opportunities and limitations do newly qualified nurses encounter when taking on the nursing role?

  • Our study showed that the new nurses were keenly aware of their patients’ needs and wanted to give them the best care possible, and that they were concerned about creating good relationships with their patients

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Summary

Introduction

The transition from student to working nurse has long been recognized as difficult and has attracted the attention of researchers for decades [1,2,3,4,5]. Professional discussions of the deteriorating conditions for nursing as a caring profession have cited the apparent movement among nurses away from both a wish for human contact and a willingness to comfort the sick and suffering for its own sake [10, 11] Such studies indicate that the conditions for nursing remain challenging in terms of increased pressure in the work environment and new nurses’ readiness and willingness to care for patients. This situation inspired us to investigate empirically how new nurses are taking on the nursing role in hospitals. Efforts to improve the quality of study programmes and subsequent nursing practice led to a shift towards research-based teaching.

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