Abstract
With increased demand for registered nurses (RN), due to increasing shortage and turnover rate, the role of meaningful recognition becomes of paramount importance. We hypothesized that RNs and leaders value forms of recognition differently, due to generational gap and changing health care environment. This study included 46 RN/support staff (RN/SS group) and 10 nurse leaders (leaders group) from a Level 1 trauma center. Mean values from 5-point Likert scale survey on 31 forms of recognition (grouped into 6 categories) and demographics (age, nursing experience, and gender) were compared. All participants were separated into groups: 35 years of age and younger (millennials; n = 29) and older than 35 years (Gen X/boomers; n = 27). Majority of RN/SS were 26-35 years of age (43.5%) and 50.0% had less than 3 years of nursing experience. Half of the leaders were 36-45 years of age (p = .01 vs. RN/SS), and 70.0% had 16 years of experience or greater (p = .001). There was 9:1 female-to-male ratio in both groups (p = .8). The RN/SS rated "salary increase" highest and leaders rated "celebration for years of service" highest (both means: 4.4). When categorized, "monetary rewards" ranked highest both by RN/SS and leaders (means: 4.4 and 4.1). Overall, there was no statistically significant difference between mean values. The Gen X/boomers rated statistically significantly higher 9 forms and 3 categories (written/public acknowledgment and private verbal feedback) than millennials. Mean values for forms/categories of recognition were lower for RN/SS than for leaders, but differences were not statistical. Age drove the most difference in most meaningful forms, as preference for monetary rewards stems from the younger generations' focus on work-life balance.