Making New Health Services Work: Nurse Leaders as Facilitators of Service Development in Rural Emergency Services
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15025Dato
2018-10-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Nurse leaders in middle management positions in Norway and other Western countries
perform additional new tasks due to high demands for quality and efficacy in healthcare services.
These nurses are increasingly becoming responsible for service development and innovation in
addition to their traditional leadership and management roles. This article analyses two Norwegian
nurse leaders efforts in developing an emergency service in rural municipal healthcare. The analysis
applies an ethnographic approach to the data collection by combining interviews with the nurse
leaders with observations and interviews with six nurses in the emergency service. The primary
theoretical concepts used to support the analysis include “organizing work” and “articulation work”.
The results show that in the development of an existing emergency room service, the nurse leaders
drew upon their experience as clinical nurses and leaders in various middle management positions
in rural community healthcare. Due to their local knowledge and experience, the nurses were able
to mobilize and facilitate cooperation among relevant actors in the community and negotiate for
resources required for emergency medical equipment, professional development, and staffing to
perform emergency care within the rural healthcare context. Due to their distinctive professional
and organizational competency and experience, the nurse leaders were well equipped to play a
key role in developing services. While mobilizing actors and negotiating for resources, the nurses
creatively balanced these two aspects of nursing work to develop the service in accordance to their
expectation of providing the highest quality of nursing care to their patients. The nurse leaders
balanced their professional ambitions for the service with legal directives, economic incentives,
and budgets. Throughout the development process, the nurses carefully combined value-based and
goal-based management concerns. In contrast, other studies investigating nursing management and
leadership have described that these orientations are in opposition to each other. This study shows
that nurses leading the processes of change in rural communities manage the change process by
combining the professional and organizational domains of the services.