Abstract: The nursing profession faces significant challenges, including high turnover rates, burnout, and job dissatisfaction, with over one-quarter of registered nurses planning to leave the profession within 5 years. Simultaneously, health care organizations spend 38. 6 billion annually on regulatory compliance, creating substantial administrative and financial burdens. A dual-role nursing model that combines traditional bedside care responsibilities with regulatory compliance and quality improvement activities can be used as a strategic solution to address both nursing retention challenges and organizational regulatory costs. The proposed model utilizes existing bedside nurses in expanded roles that split time between direct patient care and regulatory activities. Implementation involves comprehensive training on Medicare Conditions of Participation, participation in regulatory councils and committees, and application of Rogers' Diffusion of Innovation theory to promote compliance adoption among peers. The dual role model addresses multiple organizational challenges simultaneously by: reducing regulatory compliance costs through utilization of existing staff rather than contracted services or dedicated positions; enhancing nurse job satisfaction, autonomy, and professional development opportunities; improving regulatory readiness through clinicians who understand frontline care delivery; and supporting the American Nurses Association's Nursing Human Capital Value Model by positioning nurses as capital investments rather than operational expenses.
Shawnna Cunning (Mon,) studied this question.