4.6 Article

Origins, characteristics and destination of nursing students in South West England

Journal

BMC NURSING
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12912-023-01210-2

Keywords

Supply; Demand; Modelling; Workforce; Nursing; Nursing students

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This study investigates the demographic characteristics, attrition, and career intentions of applicants and enrolled students in nursing and midwifery programs in England. The study finds an increase in the percentage of male applicants for nursing, a higher average age of enrolled students, and an increase in the level of deprivation among applicants. Most applicants and enrolled students come from the same region as the nursing school and continue working there after graduation.
BackgroundWorldwide there are concerns about the supply of nurses into health systems. Understanding and balancing the supply of and demand for healthcare professionals is crucial to efficient healthcare delivery, yet there is relatively little research that examines in detail where nursing students come from and where they go after qualification.ObjectivesTo investigate the demographic characteristics of applicants to nursing and midwifery programmes in England, those that are enrolled, attrition during study, and their career intentions on graduation.MethodsA descriptive case study was conducted in south west England drawing on a complementary set of analyses of routinely collected application and enrolment data from 2017-2020. These were augmented by derivation of student deprivation indices and a follow-up study of nursing and midwifery students qualifying between May 2020 and April 2021.ResultsThe percentage of males applying for nursing doubled and the mean age of all enrolled students (except midwifery) increased during the study period. The mean level of deprivation of applicants increased from the 51(st) to the 55(th) centile indicating widening of participation. Most applying and enrolled students originated from the same region as the nursing school and remained working there on qualification. Successively more males than females were lost from the system at each stage from application to qualification. Qualifying students most common job choice was within acute Trusts, with Medical, District nursing and surgical being the most common choices. The most important factors regarding job choice were location, the characteristics of the Trust, having been there as a student, and family considerations.ConclusionsThe data provide useful information on the nursing educational pipeline. The data discussed here raise questions that would benefit from further regional and national empirical research.

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