| Literature DB >> 34349581 |
Laurie N Gottlieb1,2, Bruce Gottlieb1,3,4,5, Vasiliki Bitzas1,2.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic had the unintended consequence of placing nurses in the spotlight because their knowledge and skills were in desperate need. While it will be years until we fully understand the impact that this pandemic has exacted on the nursing workforce, early studies have found that nurses have been traumatized by this event and many intend to leave the profession This seismic event only further exacerbated an already vulnerable and strained nursing workforce that pre-existed worldwide prior to COVID-19. The pandemic also highlighted the many challenges facing nursing leadership, in particular, how to create conditions to maintain and sustain a healthy nursing workforce. Nurses' job satisfaction has emerged as an important predictor of whether nurses remain in an organization and stay in the profession. When examined more closely, job satisfaction has been related to nurses feeling empowered to exercise autonomy over their own practice and having agency. Autonomy and agency, in turn, are affected by their managers' leadership styles. Leaders are instrumental in setting the tone and creating the climate and culture that either values or devalues autonomy and agency. To help leaders create empowering conditions, we have developed a guide for leaders. This guide, based on the value-driven philosophy of leadership called Strengths-Based Nursing and Healthcare Leadership (SBNH-L), is founded on principles of person-centered, empowerment, relationship-focused, and innate capacities (ie, strengths) that are operationalized in eight core values. This guide can be used by leaders as their roadmap to create empowering workplace conditions that value and facilitate nurses' autonomy and agency.Entities:
Keywords: agency; empowerment; job satisfaction; leadership; nursing; professional autonomy
Year: 2021 PMID: 34349581 PMCID: PMC8326221 DOI: 10.2147/JHL.S221141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Healthc Leadersh ISSN: 1179-3201
Definition of Concepts: Agency, Autonomy, Structural Empowerment, Psychological Empowerment
| The ability to act freely in accordance with one’s own knowledge and professional capacities without unnecessary inhibitions or bureaucracy and without requiring permission or consent. | |
| An organization-centric perspective on empowerment. | |
| A person’s intrinsic motivation concerning how employees experience their work is influenced by perceived meaning, competence, self-determination and impact, and by workplace structures that are put in place to promote empowerment. |
Figure 1Strengths-based Nursing and Healthcare Leadership (SBNH-L) values and foundations.
SBNH-L Values with Definitions and Guiding Questions
| SBNH-L Values | Definitions | Sample Guiding Questions |
|---|---|---|
| What do I need to consider or to think about when putting a policy or directive in place? | ||
| How can I develop each staff member’s capabilities, skills, capacities to enable them to grow, develop, and thrive? | ||
| Whose perspective do I need to know about to understand diversity of views when dealing with a challenge, a change in situation/policy, in order to move forward? | ||
| How do I help staff identify the areas they can change and, or have some control over? | ||
| What considerations do I need to think about or put in place for staff to be at their very best? | ||
| What do I need to consider to nurture a climate that values learning? | ||
| What considerations do I need to think about to promote collaboration among team members? |
Notes: Table derived from Hubley, P., Gottlieb, L.N., Durrant, M. Strengths-Based Nursing and Healthcare Leadership (SBNH-L): Value-Driven Capacities for Leaders. Ingram School of Nursing, McGill University, Montreal, Canada, 2020 and the values are based on Gottlieb, L.N. (2013). Strengths-Based Nursing Care: Health and healing for person and family. NY: Springer Publishing.