NCM 105 Nursing Leadership and Management
NCM 105 Nursing Leadership and Management
NCM 105 Nursing Leadership and Management
Personality: adaptability,
alertness, creativity,
cooperativeness, personal
integrity, self confidence,
emotional balance and control,
independence
Abilities: ability to enlist
cooperation, popularity and
prestige, sociability/interpersonal
skills, social participation, tact
and diplomacy
Leaders are born and not made
• People oriented
3. LAISSEZ – FAIRE OR PERMISSIVE
• Delegating approach
Joyce Clifford
Art of getting things done thru people
1. Charisma
2. Rational/Legal Authority
“Stresses the Social
Environment”
2. Acquiring Resources
3. Coordinating Activities
Stressing the importance of
cooperation b/w management
and labor, he noted that the
degree of cooperation
depends on the non-financial
inducement
Stressed the role of informal
organization for
• aiding communication
• meeting individual’s needs
• maintaining cohesiveness
“Mother of Modern
Management”
Stressed the importance of
coordinating the psychological
and sociological aspect of
management
Perceived
the organization as a
social system and
management as social
process
She considered subordination
“offensive”
Distinguishedbetween power w/
others and power over others
and indicated that legitimate
power is produced by a circular
behavior whereby superior and
subordinates mutually
influence one another.
The law of the situation dictates
that a person does not take
orders from another person
but from the situation
Author of “The Hawthorne
Studies”
Though criticized for poor
research methods, the
“Hawthorne Studies”
stimulated considerable interest
in human problems on the job
• Autocrat
• Democrat
• Laissez-Faire
Developed “Sociometry” to
analyze group behavior
Claimed that people are either:
attracted to
repulsed by
indifferent towards others
• “lifetime employment”
• Slow evaluation & promotion
• Non-specialized career paths
• Implicit control mechanisms
• Collective decision-making &
responsibility
• Holistic concern
US organization
• Short-term employment
• Rapid evaluation & promotion
• Specialized career paths
• Explicit control mechanisms
• Individual decision-making
• Individual responsibility
• Segmented concern
Gave a more extensive
discussion of the Art of
Japanese Management:
Application for American
Executives in 1981.
Explain that organization in the
US tend to savor strategy,
structure, and systems,
whereas the Japanese
organization focus on staff,
skills, style, and
superordinate goals
Theory of Management is based on his work at the University
of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research
He identified 3 types of variables
in organization
Includes:
• Leadership behavior
• Organizational structure
• Policies
• Controls
These are:
• Perceptions
• Attitudes
• motivations
Includes:
• Measures of profits
• Costs
• Productivity
“Managers may act in ways
harmful to the organization
because they evaluate end
results to the exclusion of
intervening variables.”
B E
(1,9) (9,9)
C
(5,5)
A D
(1,1) (9,1)
• Knowledge factors
• Attitude factors
• Ability factors
INTERPERSONAL ROLE
• Symbol
• Leader
• Liaison
INFORMATIONAL ROLE
• Monitors Information
• Disseminates Information
• Spokesperson or Representative
DECISIONAL ROLE
• Entrepreneur or Innovator
• Troubleshooter
• Negotiator
Forecasting or setting the broad outline
of work to be done
Cost effective
1. Develop the purpose or mission
statement, goals, objectives,
philosophy
Managerial support
Operational
Personnel or manpower
Flexible
Cash flow
Fixed ceiling
Fixed
cost - not related to volume and
remain constant.
Variablecost - related to volume and
varies according to different factors.
Direct
cost - related to providing
product service.
Indirect
cost - incurred in support of
providing products service.
COST AWARENESS
COST FAIRS
2. Forecast workload
Purpose
structure
Informal
– consists of the personal
and social relationship of the
members in the organization
1. Freeform
2. Collegial
3. Project management
4. Task force
5. Matrix
Diagrammatic representation of
the organizational structure
Types according to depiction
CHIEF NURSE
SN SN SN
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
DIRECTOR
TRAINING OFFICER
CHIEF NURSE
SN SN SN
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
CN
SN SN SN
NA NA NA
Depicts
the manager at the top w/ a
wide span of control
CN
SN SN SN SN SN
NA NA NA NA NA
shows
outward flows of
communication from center
SN
CN
SN SN
Is the process of determining
and providing the acceptable
number and mix of nursing
personnel to produce a
desired level of care to meet
the patient’s demand.
The Hospital Nursing Service
Administration Manual of the Department
of Health has recommended the following
nursing care hours (NCH) for patients in
the various nursing units of the hospital.
CASES NCH/Pt/day Prof. to Nonprof
ratio
Period of NCH at each levels of care
depends on the setting in which the
care is being given.
Level I- SELF CARE or MINIMAL CARE
Primary 70 25 5 -
Secondary 65 30 5 -
Tertiary 30 45 15 10
Special T. 10 25 45 20
When computing for the nursing personnel, one should
ensure that there is sufficient staff to cover:
1. All shifts
2. Off-duties
3. Holidays
4. Leaves
5. Absences
6. Time for Staff Development
Rights & privileges given Working Working
each personnel/year hr/wk hr/wk
48 hrs 40 hrs
1. Vacation leave 15 15
2. Sick leave 15 15
3. Legal holidays 10 10
4. Special holidays 2 2
5. Special privileges 3 3
6. Off duties/ R.A. 5901 104 52
7. Distribute by shift
4. Stability
5. Flexibility
…sets a basic time pattern
that is repeated in cycles.
…include systems of scheduling
personnel such as 10-hour and 12-
hour shifts, weekend alternative, team
rotation, and flexible hours.
…is a method of scheduling in
which the nurse manager
determines the needs per day and
shift and the nursing staff
schedule themselves to meet
these needs.
…is a system of measuring worker
output and is commonly defined
as outputs divided by inputs.
…are contract workers hired from a
staffing agency for a period of
time that may be for one to
several days or weeks.
Temporary workers are not
employees of the health care
agency where they work.
Oversees staffing activities through
human resource management that
includes use of a patient
classification system and provision
of qualified nursing personnel in
adequate numbers to meet patient
care needs.
Uses input from employees to
develop and implement a staffing
philosophy and staffing policies that
inspire personnel to work to their
maximum level of productivity.
Basic to planning for staffing of a division of
nursing is the fact that qualified nursing
personnel must be provided in sufficient
numbers to ensure adequate, safe nursing care
for all patients 24 hours a day, 7 days a week,
52 weeks a year.
Guidelines
Average care time for a patient in each
category
Method for calculating required staffing,
personnel mix, and required nursing care
hours
10-hour shift
12-hour shift
Weekend alternative
Flex time
Others
Is commonly defined as output /
input
Percent productivity
= required staff hours / provided
staff hours x 100
…include recruitment, hiring,
assignment, scheduling, calculating
turnover, preparing payroll, developing
and administering policies, and related
activities.
involves tasks like interviewing,
hiring, coaching, retention of
state and performance
evaluation/appraisal
are persons employed in an
agency or department
the process of enlisting personnel for
employment; the process of hiring
the process of choosing or selecting
candidates according to their qualifications
to the job; the process of elimination
capacity to retain employees
once they are hired
Employee recommendation
Word of mouth
Advertisement
Flyers
Newsletter
Bulletin
Posters
Career Days
Job Fairs
Placement
Philosophies in the screening
process:
Interview
1. For staffing
5. Determine quality
Issuance of assignments, orders
and instructions that permits the
worker what is expected of the to
achieve organizational goals and
objectives
…is getting the work done through
employees.
Is the process by which a
manager assigns specific
task/duties to workers with
commensurate authority to
perform the task.
Delegate gradually
Delegate in advance
• Extension of principle of
decentralization
• 24-hour coverage
Disadvantages
Disadvantages
2) communication is complex
• Negotiating
• Procuring
1. Diagnosis
3. Group emphasis
4. Maximum information
5. Discussion of implementation
7. Resistance interpretation
LEWIN’S THEORY
Unfreezingstage – the nurse is
motivated by the need to create
change
Movingstage – the nurse will gather
information
Refreezingstage – changes are
integrated and stabilized as part of
the value system
ROGERS’ THEORY
1. awareness
2. interest
3. evaluation
4. trial
5. adoption
Forces that make or propels one to act
in a certain way.
2. Prioritize problem
Aid
managers in counseling and
coaching
Inventories of talent
Legal purposes
Anecdotal records – objective description of behavior
Rating scale
Ranking
Peer review
Paired comparison
Forced - choice
Subordinates
Critical
incident – describe effective
and effective behavior of employee
Subordinateshave not been
motivated to want to change
Subordinates
become resentful and
anxious when merit system is applied
Halo error – allowing one trait to
influence the evaluation of others or
rating of all traits on the basis of first
impression
Racial bias
Overgeneralization
FRAMEWORK OF QA
Tool
to analyze and evaluate nurses’
bedside records and physical facilities
Ex.
Nurses are professional in
dealing with clients
Measures the quality of care or standards
Standard:
Nurses are professional in dealing with
clients
Criteria :
greets them with corresponding smiles
always attend to their needs
Thank
You!