Retirement decision-making among registered nurses and allied health professionals: A descriptive analysis of canadian longitudinal study on aging data

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Abstract

A population’s health is dependent on the availability of skilled health professionals. We know little about retirement decision-making among publicly employed Canadian registered nurses (RNs) and allied health professionals (AHPs). We identified and compared factors reported to influence early versus 65+ retirement decisions among RNs (n = 794) and AHPs (n = 393). RNs, on average, retired at 58.1 years and AHPs at 59.4 years. More than two thirds retired before age 65. Among RNs, caregiving demands predict early retirement – policies supporting employed RN caregivers may reduce early workforce exits among publicly employed RNs.

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APA

Hewko, S. J., Reay, T., Estabrooks, C. A., & Cummings, G. G. (2019). Retirement decision-making among registered nurses and allied health professionals: A descriptive analysis of canadian longitudinal study on aging data. Healthcare Policy, 15(2), 20–27. https://doi.org/10.12927/HCPOL.2019.26074

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