Journal
INTERNATIONAL NURSING REVIEW
Volume 69, Issue 2, Pages 121-124Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/inr.12765
Keywords
Nursing; nursing education; nursing leadership; nursing policy; policy; recruitment and retention; workforce issues
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This paper explores the importance of investing in nursing and its leadership, emphasizing the responsibility of investment, the significance of education, and the need for each country to develop and fund its strategic workforce plan. It also highlights the progress the United Kingdom is making and emphasizes the collective effort needed to influence change and amplify nursing voices.
Investing in nursing and its leadership has been a key global priority in achieving world health. This paper aims to explore what it means to invest in nursing and its leadership and whether we are progressing in its endeavour. Consideration is given to whose responsibility it is to invest, the importance of education to support strategic nurse leaders and enable them to have a voice to lead as well as create a culture in which their staff wish to stay. Further, the paper explores the importance of each country accepting responsibility for developing and funding its strategic workforce plan and paying nurse professionals fairly and taking steps to reduce workforce shortages. Finally, the paper examines the progress the United Kingdom is making and concludes that investment in nursing is everyone's business, the government, healthcare organisations, society and above all nurses themselves. Collectively, we must step up to influence change and have nursing voices heard.
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