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Postgraduate nurses’ insights into the nursing leadership role. Do they intuitively link the role to patient safety?

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Version 2 2023-01-30, 01:37
Version 1 2018-07-25, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2023-01-30, 01:37 authored by Joyce Hendricks, V Cope, G Baum
Nursing leaders are compelled to ensure a safety and quality agenda in the acute care environment as patient outcomes are linked to nursing care. Good nursing leadership where focus is directed to accountability and responsibility for clinical outcomes and patient safety, results in reduced adverse events and patient mortality. Integral to the future of high-quality effective clinical care with an absence of errors is the training of the next generation of nursing leaders. In this discussion paper, the extent to which future nurse leaders intuitively acknowledge patient safety as part of their leadership role was examined amongst a cohort of postgraduate nursing students. A content analysis to search for quality and safety terminology was conducted on 146 essay responses to a question about the nurse leader role in today’s healthcare environment. The results indicated minimal acknowledgement of patient safety as an intuitive consideration in the nursing leadership role. Recommendations are discussed graduate nursing educational curricula with patient safety strategies as a central component to the practice of leadership.

History

Volume

5

Issue

9

Start Page

72

End Page

77

Number of Pages

6

eISSN

1925-4059

ISSN

1925-4040

Publisher

Sciedu Press

Additional Rights

an international open access peer-reviewed scientific journal

Peer Reviewed

  • No

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2015-05-17

External Author Affiliations

Edith Cowan University

Era Eligible

  • No

Journal

Journal of Nursing Education and Practice

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