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Public health nurses perception of clinical leadership in Ireland: narrative descriptions
Authors:MARIE CARNEY RG  RM  RNT  FFNMRCSI  MBA  PhD
Affiliation:Associate Professor of Nursing and Director of Undergraduate Nursing, Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, Dublin, Ireland
Abstract:Aim  The aim of the study was to identify how clinical leadership skills are perceived by Public Health Nurses' in the course of their everyday work and the effectiveness and consequences of such skills in primary care delivery.
Background  Public health nurses deliver primary care to children and adults as part of small teams or in individual situations. Leadership skills are needed to fulfil their many roles.
Method  Rigorous analysis of narrative interviews with public health nurses working in primary care environments in Ireland was undertaken. Narrative information was obtained by having conversations with 20 public health nurses relating to their perceptions on what clinical leadership meant to them and how their leadership skills influenced effective primary care delivery.
Results  Analysis of conversations identified the tensions existing between the various roles and responsibilities of the public health nurse and other primary care workers. This tension was perceived by the nurses as being the main barrier to effective primary care delivery from their perspective.
Conclusions  Clinical leadership is viewed narrowly by public health nurses as management skills rather than leadership skills were mainly identified. Education for the role was identified as a critical success factor.
Relevance to nurse managers  Public health nurses are well placed to shape and influence health service culture through effective clinical leadership.
Keywords:clinical leadership    cost effectiveness    health service organizations    professionalism    public health nurse
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