BACKGROUND Graduate nurses face challenges during their transition to professional practice. Understanding these experiences during a pandemic has not been explored. PURPOSE The purpose of this study is to describe… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND Graduate nurses face challenges during their transition to professional practice. Understanding these experiences during a pandemic has not been explored. PURPOSE The purpose of this study is to describe the lived experiences of graduate nurses transitioning to practice during a pandemic. METHODS Using a hermeneutic phenomenological approach, focus groups were conducted with fifteen nurses who were at three different stages of transition and participating in a 12-month Graduate Nurse Residency Program. FINDINGS Seven themes emerged: 1) being new is overwhelming, even more so during COVID-19, 2) need to be flexible, 3) pandemic knowledge and practice disconnect, 4) communication barriers worsened with masks, 5) being a "COVID nurse," 6) no self-care, and 7) gratitude: still glad to be a nurse. DISCUSSION Findings emphasize the important focus on graduate nurse support and educational foundation for role transition into professional practice, especially during a pandemic. Participants expressed lack of preparedness for practice but remain excited about being a nurse.
               
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