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Human resource management activities on the front line : a nursing perspective

journal contribution
posted on 2012-01-01, 00:00 authored by D O'Donnell, Trish LivingstonTrish Livingston, T Bartram
Objective: To identify the practical human resource management (HRM) issues that may impact on job satisfaction, nurse retention and ultimately quality of patient care of the nurse unit manager's (NUM) role.
Background: NUMs are in the unique position within the healthcare industry to impact upon and effect large numbers of people, including nurses, doctors, patients and their families, and processes on a daily basis. More effective HRM practices could improve performance in terms of staff satisfaction, positive patient outcomes and the cost effectiveness of staff retention.
Method: Two focus groups, one group of nine NUMs and one group of five staff nurses, were conducted at an Australia public hospital. A descriptive phenomenological approach informed data generation and data analysis.
Results: The NUMs reported that they were not adequately trained in the skills required to effectively manage staff conflict such as manipulation and bitterness, requiring disciplinary intervention on an ongoing basis. The consequences included reduced staff morale, decreased staff satisfaction, increased stress to the NUM and ultimately retention issues for both the NUM and Unit staff.
Conclusion: This study highlights the potential impact of inadequate implementation and understanding of HRM policy and practice by NUMS on the front line. Further research is required to understand why this phenomenon exists and how it can be remedied.

History

Journal

Contemporary nurse

Volume

41

Issue

2

Pagination

198 - 205

Publisher

EContent Management

Location

Maleny, Qld.

ISSN

1037-6178

eISSN

1839-3535

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2012, eContent Management