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What might make nurses stay? A protocol for discrete choice experiments to understand NHS nurses’ preferences at early- and late-career stages

What might make nurses stay? A protocol for discrete choice experiments to understand NHS nurses’ preferences at early- and late-career stages
What might make nurses stay? A protocol for discrete choice experiments to understand NHS nurses’ preferences at early- and late-career stages
Introduction: like many countries, England has a national shortage of registered nurses. Employers strive to retain existing staff, to ease supply pressures. Disproportionate numbers of nurses leave the National Health Services (NHS) both early in their careers, and later, as they near retirement age. Research is needed to understand the job preferences of early- and late-career nurses working in the NHS, so tailored policies can be developed to better retain these two groups.

Methods and analysis: we will collect job preference data for early- and late-career NHS nurses, respectively using two separate discrete choice experiments (DCEs). Findings from the literature, focus groups, academic experts and stakeholder discussions will be used to identify and select the DCE attributes (i.e. job features) and levels. We will generate an orthogonal, fractional factorial design using the experimental software Ngene. The DCEs will be administered through online surveys distributed by the regulator Nursing and Midwifery Council. For each group, we expect to achieve a final sample of 2,500 registered NHS nurses working in England. For early-career nurses, eligible participants will be registered nurses who graduated in the preceding five years (i.e. 2019-2023). Eligible participants for the late-career survey will be registered nurses aged 55 years and above. We will use conditional and mixed logit models to analyse the data. Specifically, Study-1 will estimate the job preferences of early-career nurses and the possible trade-offs. Study-2 will estimate the retirement preferences of late-career NHS nurses and the potential trade-offs.

Ethics and dissemination: the research protocol was reviewed and approved by the host research organisation Ethics Committees Research Governance (University of Southampton, number 80610). The results will be disseminated via conference presentations, publications in peer-reviewed journals and annual reports to key stakeholders, the Department of Health and Social Care, and NHS England/Improvement retention leaders.

Registration: on OSF https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/RDN9G
HEALTH ECONOMICS, Nursing Care, STATISTICS & RESEARCH METHODS, State Medicine, Humans, Nurses, Focus Groups, England, Research Design
2044-6055
Ejebu, Ourega-Zoé
4f545ae3-4823-44ab-8d59-185d30929ada
Turnbull, Joanne
cd1f8462-d698-4a90-af82-46c39536694b
Atherton, Iain
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Rafferty, Anne Marie
f8585833-856a-4b45-9da2-16103331152e
Palmer, Billy
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Philippou, Julia
e044b13b-8a23-4ea8-8207-7ca4545bdf26
Prichard, Jane
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Jamieson, Michelle
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Rolewicz, Lucina
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Williams, Matthew
b0f899a3-e291-4085-9565-b141d79069dc
Ball, Jane
85ac7d7a-b21e-42fd-858b-78d263c559c1
Ejebu, Ourega-Zoé
4f545ae3-4823-44ab-8d59-185d30929ada
Turnbull, Joanne
cd1f8462-d698-4a90-af82-46c39536694b
Atherton, Iain
66a18532-f1ea-4ce8-a931-fc831f96a558
Rafferty, Anne Marie
f8585833-856a-4b45-9da2-16103331152e
Palmer, Billy
900860fc-9338-4bdf-8ae0-e561b6c144e7
Philippou, Julia
e044b13b-8a23-4ea8-8207-7ca4545bdf26
Prichard, Jane
64ba5e39-0b0f-4529-877f-aa6ecc7e7e2e
Jamieson, Michelle
8efb089d-d647-40a0-bd6c-49a019bb40ce
Rolewicz, Lucina
616de9ff-1b17-446b-ac10-37a51d0f0cfa
Williams, Matthew
b0f899a3-e291-4085-9565-b141d79069dc
Ball, Jane
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Ejebu, Ourega-Zoé, Turnbull, Joanne, Atherton, Iain, Rafferty, Anne Marie, Palmer, Billy, Philippou, Julia, Prichard, Jane, Jamieson, Michelle, Rolewicz, Lucina, Williams, Matthew and Ball, Jane (2024) What might make nurses stay? A protocol for discrete choice experiments to understand NHS nurses’ preferences at early- and late-career stages. BMJ Open, 14 (2), [e075066]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2023-075066).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: like many countries, England has a national shortage of registered nurses. Employers strive to retain existing staff, to ease supply pressures. Disproportionate numbers of nurses leave the National Health Services (NHS) both early in their careers, and later, as they near retirement age. Research is needed to understand the job preferences of early- and late-career nurses working in the NHS, so tailored policies can be developed to better retain these two groups.

Methods and analysis: we will collect job preference data for early- and late-career NHS nurses, respectively using two separate discrete choice experiments (DCEs). Findings from the literature, focus groups, academic experts and stakeholder discussions will be used to identify and select the DCE attributes (i.e. job features) and levels. We will generate an orthogonal, fractional factorial design using the experimental software Ngene. The DCEs will be administered through online surveys distributed by the regulator Nursing and Midwifery Council. For each group, we expect to achieve a final sample of 2,500 registered NHS nurses working in England. For early-career nurses, eligible participants will be registered nurses who graduated in the preceding five years (i.e. 2019-2023). Eligible participants for the late-career survey will be registered nurses aged 55 years and above. We will use conditional and mixed logit models to analyse the data. Specifically, Study-1 will estimate the job preferences of early-career nurses and the possible trade-offs. Study-2 will estimate the retirement preferences of late-career NHS nurses and the potential trade-offs.

Ethics and dissemination: the research protocol was reviewed and approved by the host research organisation Ethics Committees Research Governance (University of Southampton, number 80610). The results will be disseminated via conference presentations, publications in peer-reviewed journals and annual reports to key stakeholders, the Department of Health and Social Care, and NHS England/Improvement retention leaders.

Registration: on OSF https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/RDN9G

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 November 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2024
Published date: 1 February 2024
Additional Information: Funding Information: this work is supported by the National Institute for Health and Care Research Policy Research Programme (NIHR-PRP) (grant number NIHR203842).
Keywords: HEALTH ECONOMICS, Nursing Care, STATISTICS & RESEARCH METHODS, State Medicine, Humans, Nurses, Focus Groups, England, Research Design

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485835
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485835
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 16c8bb63-8bac-41dc-aafb-05df391a0d1f
ORCID for Ourega-Zoé Ejebu: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0608-5124
ORCID for Joanne Turnbull: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5006-4438
ORCID for Jane Prichard: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7455-2244
ORCID for Jane Ball: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8655-2994

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Dec 2023 17:33
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 02:09

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Contributors

Author: Joanne Turnbull ORCID iD
Author: Iain Atherton
Author: Anne Marie Rafferty
Author: Billy Palmer
Author: Julia Philippou
Author: Jane Prichard ORCID iD
Author: Michelle Jamieson
Author: Lucina Rolewicz
Author: Matthew Williams
Author: Jane Ball ORCID iD

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