School of Nursing, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
J Clin Nurs. 2021 Jul;30(13-14):1927-1941. doi: 10.1111/jocn.15745. Epub 2021 Mar 24.
This study determines whether the culture within an acute care hospital empowers 'all' nurses to be leaders by exploring intersectionality and nursing leadership in the context of the social environment.
Nurses practice leadership in their day-to-day activities as clinical leaders alongside traditional roles of management and leadership. However, some nurses do not acknowledge nursing work as leadership activity, nor is it seen so by others where hierarchical leadership approaches remain prevalent. Social constructs of gender and race are barriers to accessing formal leadership positions for some, while dominant power structures such as class diminish the value of bedside nursing work. Unexplored is the impact of the intersection of these and other social identities on nurses being leaders.
An embedded case study design.
Thirty-one participants participated in semi-structured interviews. Four levels of analysis including inductive and deductive approaches were applied to the data. The research complied with COREQ guidelines for reporting qualitative research.
This study shows nurses do not identify themselves as leaders without an associated title and the pathway to leadership varies depending on intersecting social constructions.
The impact of the organisational structures and the experience of navigating intersecting social constructions on nurses being leaders goes unseen, privileging some while disadvantaging others.
Health organisations need to be aware of intersectionality in the workplace and explore equity in their structures to be genuinely empowering. Nursing leadership must examine strategies that challenge and decolonise the nursing profession. Bedside nurses should be given more power and respected as leaders of the patient experience, achievable through a renewed emphasis on the fundamentals of care and resonant leadership, which can neutralise a culture of managerialism. Intersectionality can inform the development of new nursing leadership roles that enable nurses to remain clinically active, widening opportunities.
本研究通过探索社会环境中护理的交叉性和领导作用,确定急性护理医院内的文化是否使“所有”护士都能够成为领导者。
护士在日常活动中作为临床领导者与管理和领导的传统角色一起实践领导能力。然而,一些护士并不承认护理工作是领导活动,其他人也不这么认为,因为等级领导方法仍然很普遍。性别和种族的社会结构是一些人获得正式领导职位的障碍,而阶级等主导权力结构则降低了床边护理工作的价值。护士作为领导者的这些和其他社会身份的交叉影响尚未得到探索。
嵌入式案例研究设计。
31 名参与者参加了半结构式访谈。数据应用了包括归纳和演绎方法在内的四个层次的分析。该研究符合 COREQ 报告定性研究的准则。
本研究表明,没有相关头衔的护士不会自认为是领导者,领导途径因交叉的社会结构而异。
组织结构的影响以及在交叉社会结构中导航的经验对护士成为领导者的影响被忽视了,这使一些人受益,而使其他人处于不利地位。
卫生组织需要意识到工作场所中的交叉性,并探索其结构中的公平性,以实现真正的赋权。护理领导必须研究挑战和非殖民化护理专业的策略。应该赋予床边护士更多的权力,并尊重他们作为患者体验领导者的地位,这可以通过重新强调护理的基本要素和共鸣领导来实现,这可以消除管理主义文化。交叉性可以为新的护理领导角色的发展提供信息,使护士能够保持临床活跃,扩大机会。