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Website spotlight: Nurse residency programs pay for themselves


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Summer-graduating nurses are starting their first jobs, and hospitals are beginning the arduous task of turning novices into competent, professional RNs.

The leap from nursing school to practice is tough and many hospitals complain that nursing school does not prepare students for the real world of nursing.

“The newest literature and research says we need to transform nursing education across the nation,” says Jim Hansen, MSN, RN-BC, supervisor of new graduate and student services at Kootenai Health in Coeur d'Alene, ID. “There’s a gigantic gap in the way nurses are currently prepared and how hospitals need them to practice. Thus far, the ones who have been working to bridge the gap are the hospitals.”

The concept of nurse residency programs has emerged to fill the gap between school and practice. Similar to physician residency programs, the intent is to continue education, mentoring, and support to enable novices to become competent practitioners.

Editor's note: To read the rest of this free article visit Nurse residency programs pay for themselves found in the Reading Room at www.StrategiesForNurseManagers.com.

Do you need continuing education (CE) credits? Check out this month’s CE article about universal gloving being a viable alternative for contact precautions or visit our archives and view a compilation of CE articles (marked with an asterisk).