If nursing input into interdisciplinary work is to be maximized, nurse managers might consider the role of emotional intelligence in influencing team effectiveness, the quality of client care, staff retention and job satisfaction.
The New Zealand health reforms, announced in 1991 and implemented over the 3-year period 1992-1994, were market-oriented, following a competitive model that had been applied across New Zealand's public sector. Consideration is given to the effects of the health reforms on nursing and midwifery at Capital Coast Health Limited (CCHL), with the introduction of a market/economic model of health care and its accompanying managerialism. The market model, or the economic era of health care, as some describe it, created an environment where nurses felt powerless. All the directors of nursing and on-going hospital educational programs were disestablished in the public sector; nurses were disheartened, confused and lacked representation at senior management. Integral to, and accompanying, corporatization is managerialism. With corporatization, came managers from the non-health care sector who had no understanding of the complexities of health care. Accompanying managerialism is the notion that any able manager was capable of managing any agency, whether public or private. Naturally, there was an underlying conflict between the caring relationships and their related work in the clinical environment, and the desire for efficiency and economy. It seemed that we were dealing with contrasting themes of 'the market' and 'humanity' This led to further confusion and disempowerment, as the dollar gained prominence, for nursing has always been grounded in the 'humanities'. It was into this environment, after 5 years of the health reforms, that a Nurse Executive was appointed and the concept of Shared Governance was introduced. This article describes why Shared Governance was considered an appropriate model to introduce at CCHL, and identifies some of the tangible benefits being realized 18 months post implementation. Discovering that membership in cross-organizational teams provides a mechanism for networking and creating a broader understanding of the organization has been but one of the major benefits.
The worldwide burden of mental illness is increasing. Strong leadership is increasingly emerging as a core component of good mental health nursing. The aim of this article is to demonstrate the ways in which nurses can provide strong and consistent leadership in a values-based practice environment that embodies respect for individuals' dignity and self-determination within a community residential mental health service, which provides a structural foundation for effective action. This is accomplished through the presentation of two vignettes, which highlight how the seemingly impossible becomes possible when an economic paradigm such as agency theory is exchanged for a sociological and psychological paradigm found in leadership as stewardship at the point of service. It is through stronger nursing leadership in mental health that stigma and discrimination can be reduced and better access to treatments and services can be gained by those with mental illness. Nurse leadership in mental health services is not new, but it is still relatively uncommon to see residential services for "high needs" individuals being led by nurses. How nurses meet the challenges faced by mental health services are often at the heart of effective leadership skills and strategies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.