Authors

  1. Tellson, Alaina PhD, RN, NPD-BC, NE-BC
  2. Murray, Cindy MBA, MHA, BSN, RN, CENP
  3. Boysen, Carrie
  4. Dodd, Jamie BS, RN
  5. Maldonado, Lauren
  6. Mohl, Christine MSN, BBA, RN, CNML
  7. Walker, Janice DHA, MBA-HCM, BSN, RN, NEA-BC

Abstract

As hospitals are experiencing a nursing shortage, nursing leaders must build innovative partnerships and strategies between nursing and recruitment to close the workforce gap. One large health care system was experiencing a high vacancy rate. To improve recruitment and retention efforts, nursing leaders partnered with the recruitment department and other key stakeholders to develop strategies. Together, they designed a candidate-centric recruiting and hiring process, designed innovative recruitment campaigns including recruiting former employed nurses, recruitment of traveling nurses into employees, increased graduate nurse recruitment efforts, and implementation of a registered nurse (RN) Ambassador program. The team improved work process efficiency for recruiters and candidates. Retention efforts focused on engaging nurses in the work environment, decreasing nurse leader workload to allow a focus on staff relationships, and improving exit processes in an effort to retain the nurse. The actual vacancy rate was as high as 20.9% in July 2021 to 8% in September 2022, indicating the system is closing the vacancy rate and nearing the goal of 5%.