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1.
J Prof Nurs ; 33(2): 102-107, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28363383

ABSTRACT

There are increasing concerns about exclusionary behaviors and lack of diversity in the nursing profession. Exclusionary behaviors, which may include incivility, bullying, and workplace violence, discriminate and isolate individuals and groups who are different, whereas inclusive behaviors encourage diversity. To address inclusion and diversity in nursing, this article offers a code of conduct. This code of conduct builds on existing nursing codes of ethics and applies to nursing students and nurses in both educational and practice settings. Inclusive behaviors that are demonstrated in nurses' relationships with patients, colleagues, the profession, and society are described. This code of conduct provides a basis for measureable change, empowerment, and unification of the profession. Recommendations, implications, and a pledge to action are discussed.


Subject(s)
Codes of Ethics , Cultural Diversity , Interprofessional Relations/ethics , Professional Competence/standards , Attitude of Health Personnel , Bullying/prevention & control , Ethics, Nursing , Humans , Nursing Staff/psychology , Social Isolation , Students, Nursing/psychology , Workplace Violence/prevention & control
2.
J Prof Nurs ; 31(2): 82-8, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25839946

ABSTRACT

Diversity is a topic of increasing attention in higher education and the nursing workforce. Experts have called for a nursing workforce that mirrors the population it serves. Students in nursing programs in the United States do not reflect our country's diverse population; therefore, much work is needed before that goal can be reached. Diversity cannot be successfully achieved in nursing education without inclusion and attention to quality. The Inclusive Excellence framework can be used by nurse educators to promote inclusion, diversity, and excellence. In this framework, excellence and diversity are linked in an intentional metric-driven process. Accelerated programs offer a possible venue to promote diversity, and one accelerated program is examined using a set of metrics and a dashboard approach commonly used in business settings. Several recommendations were made for future assessment, interventions, and monitoring. Nurse educators are called to examine and adopt a diversity dashboard in all nursing programs.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing/standards , Nursing Evaluation Research/methods , Cultural Diversity , Humans , United States
3.
J Prof Nurs ; 31(2): 89-94, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25839947

ABSTRACT

Nurse leaders call for a more diverse nursing workforce, but too few address the concept of inclusion as a recruitment and retention strategy or as part of improving the academic learning milieu. This article addresses organizational considerations of diversity and inclusion as part of the agenda established by the Association of American Colleges and Universities for inclusive excellence, building on the idea that academic environments only become excellent when an inclusive climate is reached. Six organizational strategies to inclusion are presented from the authors' experiences, some structural and others behavioral: admissions processes, invisibility, absence of community, promotion and tenure, exclusion, and tokenism. A call for structural and behavioral adaptions within nursing education to advance an inclusive excellence agenda is presented.


Subject(s)
Cultural Diversity , Education, Nursing/organization & administration , Minority Groups/education , Health Workforce , Humans , Nursing Staff , Organizational Culture
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