Abstract

BackgroundThe proportion of registered nurses (RNs) with employment in health-related positions before their initial RN education has increased in the past two decades. Previous research found that prior health-related employment is positively associated with RN workforce supply, potentially due to the wage differences based on different career paths. This study’s objective is to test the hypotheses that prior health-related employment is associated with differences in starting wages and with different rates of wage growth for experience as an RN.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional analysis using the 2008 National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses (NSSRN) linked with county-level variables from the Area Health Resource File. We estimated a Heckman model where the second-stage equation’s outcome variable was the logarithm of the RN hourly wage, accounting for the self-selection of working or not working as an RN (i.e., the first-stage equation’s outcome variable). Key covariates included interaction terms between years of experience, experience squared, and six categories of prior health-related employment (manager, LPN/LVN, allied health, nursing aide, clerk, and all other healthcare positions). Additional covariates included demographics, weekly working hours, marital status, highest nursing degree, and county-level variables (e.g., unemployment rate). We estimated the marginal effect of experience on wage for each type of prior health-related employment, conducting separate analyses for RNs whose initial education was a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) (unweighted N = 10,345/weighted N = 945,429), RNs whose initial education was an Associate degree (unweighted N = 13,791/weighted N = 1,296,809), and total population combining the former groups (unweighted N = 24,136/weighted N = 2,242,238).ResultsPrior health-related employment was associated with higher wages, with the strongest wage differences among BSN-educated RNs. Among BSN-educated RNs, previous employment as a health care manager, LPN/LVN, or nursing aide produced statistically higher starting wages ($1.72-$3.86 per hour; $3400–$7700 per year; p = 0.006–0.08). However, experience-based wage growth was lower for BSN-educated RNs previously employed as allied health workers, LPN/LVNs, or nursing aides. Among Associate degree-educated RNs, wage difference was not observed except for higher initial wage for RNs with previous employment as LPN/LVNs.ConclusionsPrior employment in health-related positions was associated with both starting salary and experience-based wage growth among BSN-educated RNs. The higher wage return for those with a BSN may motivate non-RN healthcare workers to seek a BSN in their transition to RN jobs, which could help advancement toward the 80 % BSN workforce recommended by the U.S. Institute of Medicine.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12913-016-1667-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The proportion of registered nurses (RNs) with employment in health-related positions before their initial Registered nurses (RN) education has increased in the past two decades

  • Prior employment in health-related positions was associated with both starting salary and experience-based wage growth among Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN)-educated RNs

  • This study indicated that prior healthcare employment was associated with a different starting RN wage and different wage growth over the period of RN experience, as hypothesized

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Summary

Introduction

The proportion of registered nurses (RNs) with employment in health-related positions before their initial RN education has increased in the past two decades. Previous research found that prior health-related employment is positively associated with RN workforce supply, potentially due to the wage differences based on different career paths. The proportion of RNs with prior employment in health-related positions before completing their initial RN education was 67.2 % in 2008, having increased steadily from 28.8 % in 1992 [1]. Prior health-related employment in higher wage occupations (e.g., health care manager and licensed practical nurses or licensed vocational nurses (LPN/ LVN)) was positively associated with working longer hours. Such positive associations with RN workforce supply could be partly explained by the wage differences between RNs with and without prior health-related employment as well as by the global wage difference between RNs and non-RN health related occupations

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