The Management and Administrative Practices Resulting in the Exit of Nurses from the Irish Healthcare System – a Review
Author(s) -
Syed Aamir Jilani
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
dbs business review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2565-5280
pISSN - 2565-5272
DOI - 10.22375/dbr.v3i0.57
Subject(s) - irish , incentive , workload , retraining , health care , nursing , government (linguistics) , economic shortage , compensation (psychology) , burnout , population , population ageing , health professionals , business , public relations , medicine , psychology , political science , economic growth , management , economics , clinical psychology , philosophy , linguistics , environmental health , international trade , psychoanalysis , microeconomics
The exit of nurses from the Irish healthcare system is a growing concern especially coupled with the ageing population of Ireland. The article explores the many reasons nurses are leaving the country: mainly the disrespect by management, unfair compensation and the shortage of staff leading to professionals being overworked and eventually experiencing burnout. For many professionals, it has become an issue of their own physical and mental well-being. There are a few recommendations discussed to solve the issue of nurses, which includes a strong push to change perspectives of management and a change of policy by the government. These include retraining healthcare management, an emphasis on hiring and retaining nurses by increasing incentives and making the workload easier to carry.
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