Esquisábel-Soteras Beatriz, Robert Glenn, Acilu-Fernández Aitor, González-García Alberto, Neddermann-Carrillo Sofía, Vázquez-Calatayud Mónica, Pardavila-Belio Miren Idoia
School of Nursing, Department of Community, Maternity and Pediatric Nursing. Campus Universitario, University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain.
Navarra's Health Research Institute (IdiSNA), Pamplona, Spain.
J Adv Nurs. 2025 Apr 16. doi: 10.1111/jan.16973.
To explore nurse managers' perceptions at first-line, middle and executive levels regarding their transition to first-line management in two divisions of a highly specialised university hospital in Spain.
A qualitative descriptive study.
A purposive sampling technique was employed to conduct four focus groups and two semi-structured interviews with 31 nurse managers across three hierarchical levels in two divisions of a highly specialised university hospital in Spain. Participants included two Chief Nursing Officers, four Nursing Directors and 25 first-line nurse managers. Data were analysed thematically.
Three themes emerged: 'Bridging the Readiness Gap: Training, Role Clarity, and Institutional Alignment', revealing the lack of structured transition plans, role ambiguity and gaps in managerial skills, such as human resources, financial management and leadership; 'Fighting Loneliness: A Common Challenge in Care Management', highlighting the isolation of first-line nurse managers due to the absence of structured mentorship and peer support; 'Clinical Expertise as a Cornerstone: The Role of Prior Experience in Nurse Management', examining how clinical expertise facilitates leadership transitions but also presents challenges, particularly for managers promoted within their teams, where authority negotiation and role redefinition become critical.
Findings underscore the need for structured training and mentorship to address role ambiguity, enhance managerial competencies and support nurse managers' transitions through targeted education.
Structured transition programmes focusing on role clarity, training and institutional alignment can ease transitions, boost leadership confidence and enhance peer collaboration. Providing mentoring and training tailored to first-line nurse managers can improve team dynamics, support professional integration and strengthen organisational cohesion.
Tailored educational interventions are essential in supporting nurse managers' transitions. Structured mentorship and targeted training enhance leadership readiness, adaptability and institutional alignment, strengthening healthcare leadership, efficiency and patient care quality.
No patient or public contribution.
探讨西班牙一家高度专业化大学医院两个科室中一线、中层和高层护理管理者对向一线管理过渡的看法。
一项定性描述性研究。
采用目的抽样技术,在西班牙一家高度专业化大学医院的两个科室,对三个层级的31名护理管理者进行了四个焦点小组讨论和两次半结构化访谈。参与者包括两名首席护理官、四名护理主任和25名一线护理管理者。对数据进行了主题分析。
出现了三个主题:“弥合准备差距:培训、角色明确与机构协调”,揭示了缺乏结构化的过渡计划、角色模糊以及人力资源、财务管理和领导力等管理技能方面的差距;“对抗孤独:护理管理中的共同挑战”,强调由于缺乏结构化的指导和同行支持,一线护理管理者感到孤立;“临床专业知识作为基石:既往经验在护理管理中的作用”,探讨临床专业知识如何促进领导角色的转变,但也带来挑战,特别是对于在团队内部晋升的管理者,在这种情况下,权力谈判和角色重新定义变得至关重要。
研究结果强调需要结构化培训和指导,以解决角色模糊问题,提高管理能力,并通过有针对性的教育支持护理管理者的过渡。
注重角色明确、培训和机构协调的结构化过渡计划可以缓解过渡过程,增强领导信心并加强同行协作。为一线护理管理者提供量身定制的指导和培训可以改善团队动态,支持专业融合并增强组织凝聚力。
量身定制的教育干预对于支持护理管理者的过渡至关重要。结构化指导和有针对性的培训可提高领导准备度、适应性和机构协调性,加强医疗保健领导力、效率和患者护理质量。
无患者或公众参与。