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  4. Addressing Wellbeing in Novice Nurse Practitioners: A DNP Project Report
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Addressing Wellbeing in Novice Nurse Practitioners: A DNP Project Report

Full metadata

Title
Addressing Wellbeing in Novice Nurse Practitioners: A DNP Project Report
Description
Nurse practitioners (NPs) provide care for more complex patients than ever, and novice nurse practitioners are at increased risk of burnout. NP residency programs are increasing in popularity for new graduate nurse practitioners to ease the transition in to full professional practice and address provider wellbeing. This quality improvement project aimed to understand how participation in a NP residency program related to wellbeing. The scores from a Mini Z 2.0 survey conducted at a Federally Qualified Health Center in the Southwestern United States were compared between NPs, Certified Nurse Midwives, and Psychiatric NPs, with less than five years of experience who completed a residency (n= 12) and those who did not (n= 9). Neither the residency group nor the no-residency group met the Joyful Workplace standard, but the residency group had a mean score of 31.7 and the non-residency group had a mean score of 29.1. Neither group met the Supportive Work Environment standard or the Reasonable Work Pace and Manageable EHR Stress standard. However, a greater difference in means between the two groups was noted with the residency group scoring 2.5 points higher in Supportive Work Environment. Themes from both groups in the open-ended question on the Mini Z survey included concerns about workload demands, charting difficulties, and interprofessional difficulties. There appears to be an advantage in participating in a NP residency, especially in having a supportive work environment, but there are common struggles for novice NPs regardless of residency completion, such as workload and charting demands.
Date Created
2024
Contributors
  • Stanfill, Molly (Author)
  • Moffett, Carol (Thesis advisor)
  • Arizona State University. College of Nursing (Contributor)
Topical Subject
  • Burnout
  • Nurse Practitioner
Keywords
  • nurse practitioner residencey
  • nurse practitioner wellbeing
  • nurse practitioner burnout
Resource Type
Text
Genre
Academic theses
Extent
1 PDF (47 pages)
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Reuse Permissions
All Rights Reserved
Primary Member of
Doctor of Nursing Practice (DNP) Final Projects
Peer-reviewed
Open Access
No
Issuance
single unit
Place of Publication (Text)
Arizona
Place of Publication (Code)
azu
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.2.N.203391
Copyright Date
2024
Cataloging Standards
asu2
Collaborating institutions
College of Nursing and Health Innovation
System Created
  • 2026-04-01 11:27:08
System Modified
  • 2026-04-01 01:31:11
  •     
  • 2 months ago
Additional Formats
  • OAI Dublin Core
  • MODS XML

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Copyright Statement
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  • Reuse Permissions
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