As the nursing workforce trends younger, some practitioners would consider coming out of retirement to serve in a mentorship capacity, according to recent industry surveys.
The National Sample Survey of Registered Nurses, released in March 2024, found that 38% of the workforce was 55 years old or older in 2017, but decreased to 34% by 2021.
Meanwhile, tenure is considered a complex and “nuanced factor” for workforce dynamics and retention, according to The American Nurses Foundation, Pulse on the Nation’s Nurses Survey Series: Multigenerational Nurse Experience Survey.
“The early-tenure population is particularly important to retain as more experienced nurses reach retirement age,” the ANF report stated. “Supporting and retaining mid-tenure and most-tenured nurses is also crucial given the critical role they play in teaching and mentoring those newer to the profession.”
Roughly 30% of the ANF survey respondents were considering leaving their role within six months – about 45% of early-tenure nurses, 31% of mid-tenure nurses, and 27% of most-tenured nurses.
The report also determined that “finding creative ways” to engage nurses in patient care or coaching who have retired, or are near retirement, would help with the industry’s “experience void.” Of nearly 180 survey respondents who were currently or previously retired, 34% wanted to serve as an educator and 31% wanted to serve as a mentor.
The “2024 Survey of Hospital Nurse Leaders: Roles, Challenges, and Workforce Solutions” echoed sentiments in the previous two surveys, with recruitment/retention, staff burnout, and labor shortages top of mind. Leadership development (30%) was identified as one of the “most useful” methods to help with retention, along with effective onboarding and orientation (31%).
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