Literature DB >> 17330986

The power of professional nursing practice--an essential element of patient and family centered care.

Pat Reid Ponte1, Greer Glazer, Emma Dann, Kathleen McCollum, Anne Gross, Rosalie Tyrrell, Patricia Branowicki, Patricia Noga, Marion Winfrey, Mary Cooley, Suzelle Saint-Eloi, Carolyn Hayes, Patrice K Nicolas, Deborah Washington.   

Abstract

Understanding power and learning how to use it is critical if nurses' efforts to shape their practice and work environments are to be successful. As part of our efforts to develop a Fast-Track BSN-to-PhD nursing program, we met with nurse leaders from six organizations to explore what power means, how nurses acquire it, and how they demonstrate it in their practice. Through these discussions, we identified eight characteristics of powerful nursing practice that, together, form a framework that can guide nurses' efforts to develop a powerful practice and shape the health care delivery settings and academic institutions in which they work. In this article we review recent studies of organizational power and share discussions which helped us better understand nursing power and the ways in which it is manifested. We also reflect on what power means for individual nurses and the profession and discuss how our insights influenced our Fast-Track program.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17330986

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Online J Issues Nurs        ISSN: 1091-3734


  1 in total

1.  Nurses' Perceptions of the Concept of Power in Nursing: A Qualitative Research.

Authors:  Rana Rezai Sepasi; Abbas Abbaszadeh; Fariba Borhani; Hossein Rafiei
Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res       Date:  2016-12-01
  1 in total

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