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Differences in Perioperative Nurse Job Satisfaction by Specialty Certification Status

To describe differences in perioperative RN job satisfaction by specialty certification status. A retrospective, exploratory, cross-sectional design. We conducted a secondary analysis of annual data from the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators (NDNQI) RN Survey with 12 Job Satisfaction S...

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Published in:Journal of perianesthesia nursing 2023-04, Vol.38 (2), p.246-252
Main Authors: Cramer, Emily, Stucky, Christopher H., Stobinski, James X., Wymer, Joshua A., Boyle, Diane K.
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creator Cramer, Emily
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description To describe differences in perioperative RN job satisfaction by specialty certification status. A retrospective, exploratory, cross-sectional design. We conducted a secondary analysis of annual data from the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators (NDNQI) RN Survey with 12 Job Satisfaction Scales. The sample consisted of 776 perioperative units in 206 hospitals with 13,061 study participants. We used multilevel mixed modeling to examine differences in job satisfaction for nurses holding CAPA (Certified Ambulatory Perianesthesia Nurse), CPAN (Certified Post Anesthesia Nurse), CNOR (certification for perioperative registered nurses), CRNFA (Certified RN First Assistant), other specialty certification, and not specialty certified. Twelve percent of RN participants held a perioperative nursing certification (CAPA, CPAN, CNOR, CRNFA), 15% held other nursing specialty certifications, and 73% were not certified. Regardless of certification status, nurses were the most satisfied with nurse-nurse interactions and task. They were the least satisfied with nursing administration, decision-making, and pay. CNOR certified nurses reported the lowest levels of job satisfaction in the study. CAPA and CPAN certified nurses reported higher job satisfaction than their noncertified colleagues on multiple job satisfaction scales (ie, CAPA 10 of 12; CPAN 5 of 12). CNOR certified nurses did not report meaningful differences in job satisfaction from non-certified nurses. As job satisfaction impacts retention, productivity, and patient care quality, our findings have important implications for hospital leaders, nurses, and health care consumers. Based on our findings, we identified nursing professional development as a potential gap in job satisfaction that leaders can target for improvement. Our findings suggest that higher specialty nursing certification rates in perianesthesia nurses may potentially improve job satisfaction and retention of nurses.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jopan.2022.04.018
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subjects Certification
credentialing
Cross-Sectional Studies
Humans
Job Satisfaction
Nurses
perianesthesia
perioperative
Retrospective Studies
specialty nursing certification
Surveys and Questionnaires
title Differences in Perioperative Nurse Job Satisfaction by Specialty Certification Status
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