Abstract

Purpose: The country of Liberia is just rebuilding the healthcare infrastructure after 20 years of civil war. Although many countries have invested a great deal of funding and personnel into rebuilding various sectors, healthcare leadership development, especially related to building nursing capacity has lagged. Many of the ward managers are young and there are only a handful of masters prepared nurses in the country.

Methods: This past year nursing leadership at the John F. Kennedy Medical Center, Indiana University School of Nursing and the University of Massachusetts developed a week long intensive leadership workshop in which 9 of the ward nurse managers and 2 of the faculty from the diploma program at Tubman National Institute for Medical Arts participated. The Kouzes and Posner Leadership Model served as an underlying framework for the workshop. The workshop objectives focused on 3 primary areas: recognizing individual leadership strengths, leadership team building, conflict management and strategic thinking. Each day the participants created the agenda for the next day's session to keep the program relevant to their needs.

Results: The participants engaged in creating cases reflecting real world problems they were dealing with as teams and proposed solutions and 'ways forward' using consultation from the faculty. Two specific, on-going projects were developed : 1) Integrating students into clinical areas to enhance learning and 2) Patient care equipment management. One of the faculty is engaging with the participants in person every quarter until the next workshop this year to provide on-going support for their activities.

Conclusions: Workshop evaluations reflected the participants' perceptions about their own growth and their identification as a leader. Future workshops will continue to build on participant based needs assessment and use student centered pedagogies to maximize learning and continue to support leadership team development.

Description

41st Biennial Convention - 29 October-2 November 2011. Theme: People and Knowledge: Connecting for Global Health. Held at the Gaylord Texan Resort & Convention Center.

Author Details

Marion E. Broome; Wvannie Scott-McDonald PhD, RN; Mary Riner PhD, RN; Donna Gallagher APRN-C, MS, RN, FAAN

Sigma Membership

Unknown

Lead Author Affiliation

Indiana University, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA

Type

Presentation

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Global Leadership, Kouzes and Posner Leadership Model, Learner Centered Leadership

Conference Name

41st Biennial Convention

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Grapevine, Texas, USA

Conference Year

2011

Rights Holder

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All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.

Acquisition

Proxy-submission

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Developing leadership capacity for nursing practice in Liberia

Grapevine, Texas, USA

Purpose: The country of Liberia is just rebuilding the healthcare infrastructure after 20 years of civil war. Although many countries have invested a great deal of funding and personnel into rebuilding various sectors, healthcare leadership development, especially related to building nursing capacity has lagged. Many of the ward managers are young and there are only a handful of masters prepared nurses in the country.

Methods: This past year nursing leadership at the John F. Kennedy Medical Center, Indiana University School of Nursing and the University of Massachusetts developed a week long intensive leadership workshop in which 9 of the ward nurse managers and 2 of the faculty from the diploma program at Tubman National Institute for Medical Arts participated. The Kouzes and Posner Leadership Model served as an underlying framework for the workshop. The workshop objectives focused on 3 primary areas: recognizing individual leadership strengths, leadership team building, conflict management and strategic thinking. Each day the participants created the agenda for the next day's session to keep the program relevant to their needs.

Results: The participants engaged in creating cases reflecting real world problems they were dealing with as teams and proposed solutions and 'ways forward' using consultation from the faculty. Two specific, on-going projects were developed : 1) Integrating students into clinical areas to enhance learning and 2) Patient care equipment management. One of the faculty is engaging with the participants in person every quarter until the next workshop this year to provide on-going support for their activities.

Conclusions: Workshop evaluations reflected the participants' perceptions about their own growth and their identification as a leader. Future workshops will continue to build on participant based needs assessment and use student centered pedagogies to maximize learning and continue to support leadership team development.