Abstract
Workplaces vary in their ability to recruit and retain workers. We introduce two new concepts which can be used as proxy measures of the relative attractiveness of a particular setting, where setting can be defined narrowly (e.g., a particular organization) or broadly (e.g., a sub-sector). "Stickiness" is defined as the transition probability that an employee stays in a given setting; "inflow" as the proportion of new employees. Using a longitudinal dataset of all nurses registered with the College of Nurses of Ontario, Canada 1993-2003, employment site was used to define consistent sectors and sub-sectors. Each nurse was assigned to one sector/sub-sector per year. Stickiness and inflow values were calculated for each sub-sector, and the trends across time were analyzed. Results show that despite shrinkage in the hospital sub-sectors, hospitals remained highly sticky. The expanding sub-sectors, in general, appear relatively unattractive to nurses; they couple medium/low stickiness with high inflow. Considerable variability across sub-sectors was evident. Stickiness and inflow were found to be useful as proxy measures of the relative attractiveness of the various sub-sectors of nursing employment over time. The concepts may be used for other workforces for which linked longitudinal data are available. © 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Alameddine, M., Laporte, A., Baumann, A., O’Brien-Pallas, L., Mildon, B., & Deber, R. (2006). “Stickiness” and “inflow” as proxy measures of the relative attractiveness of various sub-sectors of nursing employment. Social Science and Medicine, 63(9), 2310–2319. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2006.05.014
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