Deeds, and words
Archives of Disease in Childhood
; 106(Suppl 3):A12-A13, 2021.
Article
in English
| ProQuest Central | ID: covidwho-1573654
ABSTRACT
‘Complexity, chaos, high rates of change, serious safety and quality issues, and workforce shortages in health care are some of the reasons why clinical leadership is important.’ Joseph & Huber (2015).Increasingly, Practice Education is involved in the early stages of managing an emerging crisis- historically this has not always been the case. We describe key elements used to succeed and in what ways these positively impacted on the teams.Arguably, clinical leadership in nursing education reflects that described by Joseph and Huber (2015);‘the process of influencing point-of-care innovation and improvement in both organizational processes and individual care practices to achieve quality and safety of care outcomes.’Necessity, combined with strong senior leadership during the initial stages of the first wave of the Covid-19 pandemic, led to the Lead Practice Education team taking up leadership positions across the trust to ensure that teams were clinically supported with effective, responsive nursing education. This re-modelling of the team, coupled with adaptations to workstreams enabled a singular focus on clinical nursing. Whether through upskilling and refreshing those in non-ward based roles, disseminating changeable infection control advice or developing education plans for emerging conditions such as PIMS-TS, the leadership of this team was highly effective and well received.Since this time, Lead Practice Educators have been called upon to support the delivery of high flow humidified oxygen to more patients transferring from ICU, and most recently in supporting the Parenteral Nutrition intravenous lines crisis. The ‘traditional’ educational approach, combining clinical leadership with compassion and common sense utilised the following key elements;Rapid Training Needs AnalysisWide organisational reachRapid translation of policy into practiceClinical credibility and visibilityJoseph L, Huber DL. Clinical leadership development and education for nurses prospects and opportunities. J Healthc Leadersh 2015;755–64. https//doi.org/10.2147/JHL.S68071 accessed 30/07/21
Full text:
Available
Collection:
Databases of international organizations
Database:
ProQuest Central
Language:
English
Journal:
Archives of Disease in Childhood
Year:
2021
Document Type:
Article
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