J Korean Acad Nurs Adm.  2023 Dec;29(5):553-563. 10.11111/jkana.2023.29.5.553.

Future Outlook of Nursing Management Research: Analysis of Articles Published in the Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration from 2012-2021

Affiliations
  • 1Professor, Department of Nursing, Chungbuk National University, Chungju, Korea
  • 2Professor, College of Nursing, Research Institute of Nursing Science, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea
  • 3Associate Professor, School of Nursing, Baekseok University, Cheonan, Korea
  • 4Professor, College of Nursing, Dankok Univerisitym Cheonan, Korea
  • 5Associate Professor, School of Nursing, Research Institute of Nursing Science, Hallym University, Chuncheon, Korea

Abstract

Purpose
To examine the characteristics, core variables, and their correlations in articles published in the Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing Administration (JKANA) from 2012-2021 and suggest future directions for nursing management research.
Methods
A total of 506 articles were analyzed according to study design, participants and setting, statistical methods, keywords, and core concepts and variables.
Results
Quantitative research accounted for 73.5%, and most participants were staff nurses (66.8%) and nursing students (9.1%). Furthermore, 318 studies (62.8%) conducted surveys, and settings were mainly acute hospitals(81.5%) and nursing schools (9.7%). Statistical methods for data analysis included independent t-test (81.2%), one-way ANOVA (77.2%), Pearson correlation coefficients (77.2%), post-hoc testing (74.3%), and linear regression(65.9%). Among 2,058 keywords, the most frequent were “nurses” (49.2%), “job satisfaction” (10.7%), and “personnel turnover” (9.1%). The most frequently core concepts were job satisfaction (10.5%), turnover intention(9.5%), organizational commitment (8.5%), and job stress (7.5%). The most frequently variables with significant correlations were turnover intention, work environment, job satisfaction, job stress, burnout, and emotional labor.
Conclusion
Most JKANA studies examined nursing-related outcomes and performance. Future research should examine the effects of nursing practice and policy on patient outcomes.

Keyword

Classification; Nursing management research; Nursing research; Trend
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