TY - JOUR
T1 - Nurses’ Cross-Border Work Intentions Driven by Psychological Empowerment
T2 - A Cross-Sectional Study
AU - Zhang, Ruoxuan
AU - Wang, Xin
AU - Leung, Angela Y.M.
AU - Jin, Xiaoyan
AU - Dai, Hongxia
AU - Wang, Yan
AU - Zhang, June
AU - Deng, Renli
AU - Poon, Angela C.Y.
AU - Mio, Ka Wa
AU - Liu, Ming
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2026 Ruoxuan Zhang et al. Journal of Nursing Management published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Background: Given the globalization of the nursing workforce, psychological empowerment represents a critical intrinsic determinant of nurses’ mobility intentions, specifically regarding cross-border work. Aim: To identify latent profiles of nurses’ psychological empowerment, examine associated factors, and explore the relationship between these profiles and cross-border working intention. Methods: A cross-sectional multicenter study was conducted from March to September 2023. Using convenience sampling, clinical nurses were recruited through liaisons from nursing societies in nine cities of Guangdong Province. Data were collected through questionnaires covering sociodemographic questionnaire, psychological empowerment, and cross-border working intention, with analyses including chi-square tests, logistic regression, and latent profile analysis (LPA) performed using SPSS 23.0 and Mplus 8.3. Results: A total of 3671 valid questionnaires were collected, and 39.5% of the respondents reported cross-border intentions. LPA identified three psychological empowerment profiles among nurses, ranked from high to low: the core-driven empowerment profile (16.94%), the adaptive empowerment profile (70.42%), and the constrained empowerment profile (12.64%). The nurses with lower salary, intermediate title, and without specialist nurse qualification were more likely to fall into the constrained empowerment profile. Psychological empowerment was positively correlated with nurses’ cross-border work intention. The core-driven profile showed the highest cross-border work intention (50.6%), followed by the adaptive (38.2%) and constrained profiles (31.7%). For cross-border work, the constrained profile prioritized salary (87.1%) as the key concern, while the core-driven profile focused more on good promotion opportunities (70.3%). Conclusion: Psychological empowerment exerts a positive impact on clinical nurses’ cross-border work intention, with the three identified empowerment profiles exhibiting divergent motivational priorities and decision logics. These findings highlight the need for subgroup-specific strategies to balance nursing workforce mobility and stability. Implications for Nursing Management: The findings support a differentiated human resource strategy based on nurses’ psychological empowerment profiles. For core-driven nurses, institutions should provide international career development channels to strengthen their domestic job embeddedness. For adaptive nurses, tailored skill training and decision-making autonomy should be offered to guide their mobility aspirations. For constrained nurses, competitive compensation and family support services should be prioritized to address their stability needs and rebuild professional confidence. These targeted measures balance talent mobility and domestic workforce stability.
AB - Background: Given the globalization of the nursing workforce, psychological empowerment represents a critical intrinsic determinant of nurses’ mobility intentions, specifically regarding cross-border work. Aim: To identify latent profiles of nurses’ psychological empowerment, examine associated factors, and explore the relationship between these profiles and cross-border working intention. Methods: A cross-sectional multicenter study was conducted from March to September 2023. Using convenience sampling, clinical nurses were recruited through liaisons from nursing societies in nine cities of Guangdong Province. Data were collected through questionnaires covering sociodemographic questionnaire, psychological empowerment, and cross-border working intention, with analyses including chi-square tests, logistic regression, and latent profile analysis (LPA) performed using SPSS 23.0 and Mplus 8.3. Results: A total of 3671 valid questionnaires were collected, and 39.5% of the respondents reported cross-border intentions. LPA identified three psychological empowerment profiles among nurses, ranked from high to low: the core-driven empowerment profile (16.94%), the adaptive empowerment profile (70.42%), and the constrained empowerment profile (12.64%). The nurses with lower salary, intermediate title, and without specialist nurse qualification were more likely to fall into the constrained empowerment profile. Psychological empowerment was positively correlated with nurses’ cross-border work intention. The core-driven profile showed the highest cross-border work intention (50.6%), followed by the adaptive (38.2%) and constrained profiles (31.7%). For cross-border work, the constrained profile prioritized salary (87.1%) as the key concern, while the core-driven profile focused more on good promotion opportunities (70.3%). Conclusion: Psychological empowerment exerts a positive impact on clinical nurses’ cross-border work intention, with the three identified empowerment profiles exhibiting divergent motivational priorities and decision logics. These findings highlight the need for subgroup-specific strategies to balance nursing workforce mobility and stability. Implications for Nursing Management: The findings support a differentiated human resource strategy based on nurses’ psychological empowerment profiles. For core-driven nurses, institutions should provide international career development channels to strengthen their domestic job embeddedness. For adaptive nurses, tailored skill training and decision-making autonomy should be offered to guide their mobility aspirations. For constrained nurses, competitive compensation and family support services should be prioritized to address their stability needs and rebuild professional confidence. These targeted measures balance talent mobility and domestic workforce stability.
KW - clinical nurses
KW - cross-border work intention
KW - latent profile analysis
KW - psychological empowerment
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105032156362
U2 - 10.1155/jonm/8714790
DO - 10.1155/jonm/8714790
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105032156362
SN - 0966-0429
VL - 2026
JO - Journal of Nursing Management
JF - Journal of Nursing Management
IS - 1
M1 - 8714790
ER -