Abstract
Strategic investment in nursing workforce development is both a financial and organizational imperative. In 2014, Kaiser Permanente Northern California launched the Nurse Scholars Academy (NSA) with an initial $30 million investment in response to the Institute of Medicine's Future of Nursing report. Over the past decade, NSA has served as a replicable model for health care organizations by aligning academic-practice partnerships with long-term workforce strategy. Degree completion among NSA Scholars consistently outperforms national benchmarks, with retention rates exceeding the 75% to 80% national average (Figure 1). Retention across degree pathways remains high during academic progression (Figure 2) and is sustained after program completion, with graduates demonstrating long-term commitment to Kaiser Permanente (Figures 3 and 4). These outcomes directly contribute to reduced turnover, with the organization reporting registered nurse (RN) turnover rates 15 percentage points below national medians, equating to an estimated $4.3 million in annual labor cost avoidance. Beyond financial returns, NSA's outcomes illustrate broader organizational value: reduced burnout, increased confidence and capability, strengthened leadership pipelines, and enhanced professional advancement opportunities. Using the Abdi ROI scale, NSA's impact extends into non-monetary domains such as cultural transformation, reputation, and community trust. Together, these outcomes affirm that investments in nursing development yield sustainable financial benefits, advance workforce resilience, and reinforce Kaiser Permanente's role as a national leader in nursing excellence.