There’s good news and bad news in the nursing world today. The good news is that new grads are still entering the nursing field in high numbers. The bad news is that, according to the 2025 NSI National Health Care Retention & RN Staffing Report, nearly a quarter of them leave within their first year.
The report’s numbers don’t lie:
Meanwhile, the NCHWA Nursing Workforce Dashboard reports that approximately 34% of nurses are aged 55 or older and approaching retirement.
The result is that nursing teams face serious challenges.
So, what can be done to stabilize the workforce? Departments consisting of experienced nurses and new grads reveal the connection between skill mix and the experience-complexity gap.
As experienced nurses retire and new grads enter the workforce, the gap increases.
The fact is, we’re losing new nurses. And it’s preventable.
One of the most common reasons new grads leave early is the lack of structured preceptorship and sustained mentorship. The two are related but distinct, and hospitals need both to succeed.
Experienced nurses, serving as preceptors and mentors, guide and train new grads as they transition from their school's educational environment to the reality of the job.
Mentors have an immeasurable impact through their ability to:
Mentees adopt these skills and approaches, make them their own, and pass them on to others. A good mentor doesn’t just teach tasks—they create future mentors.
In a recent webinar, Kara Murphy (PRS Global) spoke with Katie Chieda (Fisher-Titus Medical Center) and Amanda Shrout (Sinai & Grace Medical) about these workforce changes and how CNOs can help reduce turnover.
Three key workforce strategy takeaways from Chieda and Shrout include:
1) Keep Retired Nurses EngagedBy 2030, an estimated one million RNs will have retired from the workforce. As experienced nurses retire, hospitals don’t just lose the individual nurse; they lose institutional knowledge, adaptability, mentorship, and expert patient care.
Here’s how to keep them involved:
As the Sinai group leader recently told Shrout, “It's not just good for you, it's also good for us.”
2) Build Retention and Recruitment
Focusing on retention and recruitment will increase your hospital’s skill mix, acknowledge staff, and attract the nurses of tomorrow.
Professional Development & Retention
High School Pipelines & Recruitment
Chieda described how the student experience leads to recruitment and staffing. “Many of those students, generally about 50%, come on in some capacity after they complete their intern program.”
3) Hire International Nurses
Incorporate international nurses into your workforce strategy to add much-needed skill to your teams.
Murphy closed out the webinar with a fun rapid-fire session. Here are just a few of Shrout’s and Chieda's hot takes.
Murphy: What’s the smartest thing you've done for retention?
Shrout: Investing in our teams.
Chieda: Connection to purpose.
Murphy: What’s the most underrated workforce strategy?
Chieda: Knowing the people, what the people need, and meeting them where they are.
Shrout: Visibility. I can walk the halls and most people are like, ‘Oh, yeah, that's the CNO.’ I think in the beginning, they were like, ‘Oh my gosh, the CNO is on our floor’ and now they're just like, ‘hey, Amanda’.
Murphy: If you had unlimited resources tomorrow, what would you do?
Shrout: Build specific retention pathways for everything a nurse could need in their career.
Chieda: Eliminate pay disparities.
Watch the full webinar for more insights.
From recruiting stellar nursing staff to lab techs, PRS Global can help. Contact us today to learn how international direct hires can help close the experience-complexity gap, mentor new grads, and stabilize your workforce.