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Leading Nurses through Hospital Change Few industries are confronted with more c

ID: 126605 • Letter: L

Question

Leading Nurses through Hospital Change

Few industries are confronted with more change and more turbulence than the health care industry. As the perusal of any newspaper or news website will indi- cate, there is constant pressure on health care organiza- tions to provide quality care in a cost-controlled environment that is characterized by ever-increasing regulation. This pressure can be seen most clearly in the advent of managed care during the 1980s and beyond. Managed care involves integrated and com- prehensive systems of health care providers, insurance companies, and government programs, coordinated around specific care plans and guidelines designed to simultaneously enhance the quality of care provided, control the cost of that care, and maintain access to care for as many people as possible. As you might guess, it’s pretty much impossible to succeed in all three of these important goals of cost, quality, and access, but hospitals and other health care organiza- tions keep on trying.

I’ve run into many such organizations in my research on communication in health care organiza- tions. One of these organizations—we’ll call it Uni- versity Hospital—is discussed in several of my publications (Miller, 1998; Miller et al., 2000). Uni- versity Hospital is a large teaching hospital that employs nearly 5,000 individuals and is responsible for half a million patient visits a year. University Hospital is acknowledged as a very high-quality medical center—for example, it typically scores extremely well on accreditation surveys. However, like all health care organizations, University Hospital needed to improve in a number of financial areas, including average length of stay and cost per discharge. My involvement with University Hospital began when I learned of changes that were occurring in the nursing department and was asked to be a part of understanding and instituting those changes. As part of a hospital-wide effort to improve financial and care performances, the nurses were beginning a pro- gram of “differentiated nursing practice” (Hoffart & Woods, 1996) in which nursing roles were defined on a variety of specific levels of responsibility. These roles would require new training, new responsibilities, and a new orientation toward the systematized provision of care. The centerpiece of this program was the “care coordinator” role.

Care coordinators were defined as registered nurses charged with coordinating care for patients “from admissions to discharge.” This coordination involved communication with relevant physicians, social work- ers, allied health personnel, insurance representatives, and families. The nurses selected for these roles were the best and the brightest that University Hospital had to offer.

Sounds like a good change, right? Coordinated care from admissions to discharge is certainly an admirable goal. However, remember that the nurses selected for these positions were trained in traditional, clinical nursing. They were then thrown into a role that required them to work with individuals from a variety of hospital disciplines (with different turf issues and different levels of power) within an incredibly complex organizational structure. And they were doing this with little or no training and with a job description that was purposefully ambiguous; nurses were asked to design the job in the best way possible. Indeed, the final line of the job description for care coordinators read “Role in development/work in progress”!

So, imagine you are me, asked to help the leaders of the nursing department take their nurses—and espe- cially the new care coordinators—down this path of organizational change. The department is directed by two nurses—we’ll call them Hannah and Jen—who have an incredible amount of energy. Both are well- liked by the nurses they supervise. Hannah has been with the hospital for many years and knows all the ins and outs of the system. She is the steady hand guid- ing the nursing department, and she feels a bit over- whelmed by all the change she is being asked to institute. Jen has been with University Hospital for only a few years but has made quite an impact as a charismatic leader who wants University Hospital— and especially the nursing department—to be on the cutting edge of managed care initiatives. Jen is a pro- ponent of all sorts of New Age things, and she is par- ticularly smitten with “chaos theory” as a way to manage organizational change. She figures that they have selected the best people they can for the care coor- dinator roles, and she trusts that they will use their own imagination and ingenuity to craft roles that will work for the new system. Indeed, when a care coordi- nator complained about the stress of the changes they were going through, Jen quoted her favorite chaos the- orist, saying, “Chaos is the rich soil from which crea- tivity is born” (Merry, 1995, p. 13). Oddly enough, the nurse did not feel comforted.

Question: What are two things University Hospital should have done or could do moving forward to promote success in this change initiative? It's fine to integrate your two concepts into your answer here

(Please inculde an anaylsis)

Explanation / Answer

The new modification and work put on by the University Hospital are admirable. They intend to deliver the quality of care integrated financial aspect as well as the accessibility to all.

The Care Coordinator role they formulated is a big step for this initiative. The goal is to coordinate the patient from the time of admission to discharge by the nurse.

what I feel that can be done is that

TRAINING

To provide a proper training to the Care Coordinator before they put them into action. Providing Induction and Orientation classes for the various department and the functions should be made aware of. Along with these, they should get a knowledge about the immediate person of contact in each department in case of emergency. Give time and space to the nurse to get familiarise with each department.

-Give them a proper knowledge of their power and limitations of the role as the Care coordinator. And how to use it.

-Give special training to improve the various communication skills. Encourage to practise the skill with the fellow partner.

-Do role play and mock test to become more familiarise with the skill.

-Conduct class in every month to improve the skills.

Allocate a Counselor

They should get the benefit of a grievance committee or a counsellor to help them to relieve their stress and thus to work more efficiently. Stress can happen due to various reason in this role, so the staff should need an access to a person to feel better and light

My analysis

Care coordination is a good and innovative concept, so I feel before putting them into proper action, it should be done as a trial and error methods. This will help the management to understand the limitations and strength of this concept.

Conclusion

Care coordination is a challenging role that the nurse should be well trained off. Be supportive and encouraging to the staffs to work better. Nursing is a teamwork and the new responsibility with the change in role, they will make a change in society.