Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Research
Psychiatric nurses were asked to self-reflection on orientation of action toward change
Results yielded an outcome that nurses were either enthusiastic, hesitant, or withdrawn about changing practices to patient-centered care on the admission unit of a psychiatric hospital.
Chief executive officers of hospitals were surveyed on the process of change at their facilities to reduce cost and maintain quality care within the organization.
With the economic crisis we are in today, many hospitals are facing the same concern. Although the research yielded some limitations with the research, it showed the need for the change process to relieve the financial burden on hospitals to maintain high quality care on a budget.
Research
It has been used to enhance scope of practice in nurses at a time when there is a workforce shortage in the healthcare profession. The need to ensure organizational readiness for change to broaden practice roles.
Public health nurses seem to take on larger roles and responsibilities because of the heavy work load to meet the needs of ill population, workforce demands and expectations.
Nursing Practice
Nursing leadership and management is the effective change agent needed for the evolvement of change in the nursing profession. Lippitts phases can be used in nursing practice especially with the advancement in technology, the nature of healthcare organizations, and professional standards. The style, policies, procedures, relationships with subordinates and behaviors of a nurse manager have to be evaluated to suit the new breed of nurses. Although we experience change everyday, nurses have a difficult time embracing planned change. Nursing leadership must be a person who is influential to support and encourage success is the process of change.
My Practice
As nurses we often experience continual change especially as the profession of nursing advances. The change to computerized charting was met with resistance by many nurses, as we strived to validate how the process would falter; to justify keeping things the way they are. The change was a smooth success and as I reflect back, I can recall the phases.
P1: Every employee was notified of the change and how it would affect them. P2: Each unit had a meeting to discuss how they felt about the change P3: It was evident that the change agent (for me was my manager and educator) was dedicated to the change being successful. P4: Responsibilities were designated to staff to be super users, well educated about the system to support the staff in the change. P5: My manager addressed all concerns of the nurses on the unit and advocated for the system to be personalized to our unit to enhance functionality for the population of patients we care for. P6: Continually surveying the staff to see what we do/do not like about the system and adjusting screens and tabs to make the charting easier. P7: For the first six weeks we had tech support and the builders of the program on hand , on every unit. Now they are reachable by telephone if help is needed.