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Nursing Trends in 2023 and Beyond

Diversity Nursing

Nurses at the forefront of healthcare continue to face challenges that change how we provide Nursing care to our patients. As the Nursing field continues to evolve, here are some of the top Nursing trends to watch in 2023 and for the years to come.

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Collaboration: The key to patient care success

American Nurse

Each of the nursing teams you’ll read about on the following pages found opportunities to collaborate, strategize, and implement successful projects and programs with their interprofessional teammates to enhance patient care and improve outcomes, engage nurses, and ensure a healthy work environment for everyone.

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Why I go to the office

American Nurse

Steps in the right direction Bedside nursing work is one of those jobs that can’t be done remotely, so staff receive benefits from the unavoidable steps required for travel and the nature of the work itself. study reported that on average, staff nurses walk 4 to 5 miles in a 12-hour shift. A 2006 U.S.

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Nurses on What Made Them Want to Quit and Why They Decided to Stay

Scrubs

nurses plan on quitting their jobs at the end of 2022, which would leave thousands of medical facilities and millions of patients without the care and support they need. We asked millions of nurses if they have ever thought about quitting and what made them decide to stay. That’s why I love nursing.

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Connections ease nurses’ burdens

American Nurse

I highlighted these insights in this summary of findings from a qualitative, interpretive phenomenological study, which used hermeneutics (interpretation of written or spoken language) to identify emerging themes of the lived experience of intensive care unit (ICU) nurses.

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How to Avoid Nursing Burnout

Diversity Nursing

Nurse burnout is often brought on by everyday stressors like insufficient staffing, increased workload, high patient acuity, and even verbal or physical abuse from patients. These stressors result in physical, mental, and emotional fatigue. Identifying the symptoms of Nurse burnout is the first step in preventing it from progressing.

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Tips for thriving–not just surviving–on the night shift

American Nurse

At Hackensack University Medical Center, a large, academic acute care hospital, which has received multiple Magnet® designations from the American Nurses Credential Center, the Night Council plays an essential role in the shared decision-making structure. Proper nutrition can help night shift workers reduce these health risks.

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