Correlates to long-term-care nurse turnover: survey results from the state of West Virginia.

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Abstract

The authors sought statistical correlates to long-term-care nurse turnover using surveys from 253 practicing nurses across 54 of 55 counties in West Virginia. A chi-square test for homogeneity showed significant relationships between select demographic variables and job-related dimensions categorized either as benefits (pay, schedule flexibility and growth opportunity, travel time to work, patient behavior, facility conditions, supervisor relations) or job-related dimensions categorized as costs (travel time to work, patient behavior, facility conditions, supervisor relations, and family needs). Five demographic characteristics: gender, education level, job title, county in West Virginia region, and facility size bore no relationship to any job-related dimension listed.

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Hodgin, R. F., Chandra, A., & Weaver, C. (2010). Correlates to long-term-care nurse turnover: survey results from the state of West Virginia. Hospital Topics, 88(4), 91–97. https://doi.org/10.1080/00185868.2010.528258

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