Literature DB >> 20010012

The importance of a servant leader orientation.

Marjorie Jenkins1, Alice C Stewart.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Ensuring a quality nursing workforce for the future in a time of increasing labor shortage and declining nurse satisfaction is a key challenge to the health care industry. Understanding what impacts job satisfaction is vital to solving the problem of nurse attrition. PURPOSES: We suggest that the approach to supporting staff in the care giving role requires additional expectations of managers who supervise inpatient nursing staff. This study empirically tested the impact of nurse managers' servant leadership orientation on nurse job satisfaction. METHODOLOGY/APPROACH: Nurses providing direct bedside patient care within inpatient departments of a five-hospital system were asked to respond to four questionnaires. Seventeen departments participated. There were 346 available nurses across the departments. The average response rate was 73% across all of the units surveyed. Hypotheses were tested using multivariate regression analysis of the nurse-nurse manager dyad.
FINDINGS: Statistical findings of this study provided evidence that behaviors and attitudes of the nurse manager do impact employee job satisfaction. Departments where staff perceived that managers had higher servant leadership orientation demonstrated significant positive impact on individual employee job satisfaction. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Nursing is a unique occupation in that it requires both competence in professional service and compassion in patient caregiving. Hospitals are not factories dealing with inanimate objects or data. The results of this research suggested that the management approach in a health care environment might be enhanced by a more servant-oriented management approach. Specific policy changes that may be implied on the basis of findings of this research include key areas of management selection, management development, and management reward/evaluation.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20010012     DOI: 10.1097/HMR.0b013e3181c22bb8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Care Manage Rev        ISSN: 0361-6274


  2 in total

1.  Sustainability of Nursing Leadership and Its Contributing Factors in a Developing Economy: A Study in Mongolia.

Authors:  Bing-Long Wang; Munkh-Ulzii Batmunkh; Oyunsuren Samdandash; Duumaam Divaakhuu; Wing-Keung Wong
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2022-05-25

2.  Assessment of a Leadership Enhancement Program for Nursing Managers of An Acute General Hospital in Hong Kong.

Authors:  Leung Andrew Luk
Journal:  Open Nurs J       Date:  2018-06-29
  2 in total

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