270 likes | 484 Views
Clinical Leadership Skills Acquisition in Nurse Residents. Susan Pettorini-D’Amico, DNP, RN. Background. There is a shortage of nurses which has led to a shortage of nurse leaders There is also a lack of nurse leadership development programs which affects leadership succession
E N D
Clinical Leadership Skills Acquisition in Nurse Residents Susan Pettorini-D’Amico, DNP, RN
Background There is a shortage of nurses which has led to a shortage of nurse leaders There is also a lack of nurse leadership development programs which affects leadership succession The Institute of Medicine report (2011) has identified nurse leadership as important in realizing health care reform and calls for nurse leadership programs to be developed and used Nurse residency programs can be used to develop clinical leadership skills
Purpose of the Study To measure the ability of a residency program to impart clinical leadership skills to nurse residents Nurse residents should have clinical leadership skills taught to successfully build the next generation of nurse leaders Clinical leadership skills can be further developed into administrative leadership skills thus addressing succession planning
Conceptual Framework Patricia Benner’s Model of Novice to Expert (1984) Dreyfus model of skill acquisition Five levels of skill attainment: novice, advanced beginner, competent, proficient, expert Expertise develops as nurses progress through these stages Nurse residents can been seen as students progressing through these same stages
BENNER’S STAGES AND THE NURSE RESIDENT The nurse resident is an advanced beginner Through clinical rotations and classroom content, the resident advances to a competent practitioner Measuring acquisition of the leadership topics can show that clinical leadership skills have been taught
Research Model Theoretical Diagram
Research Question What is the effect of a nurse residency program on clinical leadership skills acquisition in the new nurse resident?
University Healthsystem Consortium/American Association of Colleges of Nursing UHC/AACN Program Purpose of the program: To aid the nurse resident in completing the transition from an advanced beginner to competent nurse Goals include improving the resident’s ability to think critically, manage patient outcomes and provide clinical leadership at the point of care Curriculum focuses on three main topics: Patient Outcomes, Professional Roles and Leadership
Leadership Topics Patient Care Delivery and Resource Management Communication Conflict Resolution Organization of data
Design A non-equivalent comparison group posttest research design was used to examine the relationship between the independent and dependant variable Independent Variable: The UHC/AACN Nurse Residency Program Dependant Variable: Clinical leadership skills acquisition in nurse residents
Setting A 1500 bed tertiary medical center with two campuses (one which used the UHC/AACN residency program, one which did not) York Street campus: UHC/AACN residency program used Chapel Street campus: No formal program used
Sample Power analysis: 102 subjects needed (power 0.80, effect size 0.5, alpha 0.05). Final sample: 40 (underpowered) Inclusion criteria for York Street campus was only those nurses who have completed the UHC/AACN residency program. Inclusion criteria for Chapel Street campus was any nurse who completed one year as a new nurse graduate in the hospital Excluded from the study was any nurse resident or graduate who did not complete one year of employment at either institution
Instrument Clinical Leadership Survey Developed by Patrick, Laschinger, Wong and Finegan (2011) Measures for clinical leadership skills at the point of care Psychometric testing: Confirmatory factor analysis on each item. Content validity index of 85%. Reliability coefficient equaled 0.86
Procedure Sacred Heart IRB and Yale Human Investigative Committee approval Recruitment via flyers in work areas and at nursing leadership meetings Survey monkey site for survey access
Results Final number of surveys in data set: 44 Number used in data analysis: 40 York Street: n=14 Chapel Street: n=26 Study underpowered
Description of the Sample CharacteristicsChapel Street (n =26)
Description of the Sample Characteristic York Street (n =14)
Results of CLS Scores Chapel Street Scores York Street Scores
. Normal Distribution of Chapel Street scores Normal Distribution of York Street scores
Results: T-test, Chi-square T-test for mean group scores P= 0.200 (study underpowered) Pearson’s Chi-square test
Discussion • First study to use the Clinical Leadership Survey to attempt to measure this concept in this population • Study not powered due to small size of the sample • No statistical significance found between the means of the two groups • Not possible to conclude the residency program did not instill clinical leadership skills
Limitations Recruitment procedure a challenge Homogenous nature of the sample History, maturation and conflicting organizational initiatives Was leadership content of residency program overshadowed by other components? Natural leadership tendency of nurses who work at Level 1 trauma centers?
Implications Nursing Practice: Further research to study which residency programs are successful in building nurse leaders in the clinical arena Nursing Education: Replicate study in a broader scale to be able to inform education about the need to build clinical leadership skills in undergraduate programs
Implications continued Policy: Use this study as a guide to research which residency programs are successful in instilling clinical leadership skills to be able to guide both practice and education
Future Research • Use recruitment strategies to gain a larger sample • Compare nurses at the beginning and the end of the residency program (one group, pre-test, post test) • Compare different residency programs • Compare groups of nurses without residency programs to be able to learn best practices
Thank You Questions and Answers