Nursing, Global Health, University of Washington, Washington, DC, USA.
Public Affairs, University of Washington, Washington, DC, USA.
Int Nurs Rev. 2019 Sep;66(3):305-308. doi: 10.1111/inr.12551.
This year's International Council of Nurses' global Congress in Singapore featured a theme of strengthening collaboration and partnerships across generations. In their plenary session, the two authors of this article exemplified this theme in both the development and delivery of their session. Together, they developed a set of 'common ground' attributes of nursing policy leaders, reflecting the knowledge and experiences of two very different nursing policy leaders: one a 'Baby Boomer' nurse with almost five decades of national and global policy leadership, and the other, an early career 'Millennial' leader engaged in her first decade of global policy leadership work. Their collaboration resulted in a session featuring reflections on relevance across generations, using symbolic images and a 'Ted-talk' style presentation, and active engagement of the audience. This article speaks to both the process for developing these 'common ground' attributes, and insights and lessons learned that can help inform future collaborations across generations of nurses.
今年在新加坡举行的国际护士理事会全球大会的主题是加强跨代合作和伙伴关系。在全体会议上,本文的两位作者在会议的开发和交付过程中体现了这一主题。他们共同制定了一套护理政策领导人的“共同点”属性,反映了两位非常不同的护理政策领导人的知识和经验:一位是拥有近 50 年国家和全球政策领导经验的“婴儿潮一代”护士,另一位是从事其第一个十年全球政策领导工作的早期职业“千禧一代”领导者。他们的合作促成了一个以代际相关性为主题的会议,使用象征性的图像和“Ted 演讲”风格的演示,并与观众进行了积极的互动。本文既探讨了制定这些“共同点”属性的过程,也探讨了可以为未来跨代护士合作提供信息的见解和经验教训。