Approaches to Health Management: Sexuality

A father of a 17-year-old wants to know whether his child is sexually active.

  • What will you tell him?
  • What if the child is 14 years old?
  • What if the child is 11 years old?
  • What is your state law (Florida)  regarding parental notification?

Submission Instructions:

  • Your initial post should be at least 500 words, formatted and cited in current APA style with support from at least 2 academic sources. 

Management of Power

Case Scenario

Holyfield Healthcare Systems and Jonesville Regional Hospital, each with different organizational structures, are merging. The senior leadership, of which you are a part, must decide on the overarching organizational structure that will be used for the newly formed healthcare system. This will impact the distribution of power, which includes lines of authority, chain of command, and how operations will be carried out. Before the new structure can be adopted, a thorough exploration of the two existing structures, with attention paid to how power is distributed and wielded, must occur. In addition, leadership styles and their impact on power management within each organization will be explored. 

Overview of Organizational Power: For this , you will begin by providing an overview of the types of organizational power, how power affects the health of an organization, and the impact of power on the work environment.

Organizational Structures and Power: From the four major organizational structures, Line, Matrix, Service-Line, and Flat, you will identify which one is currently used at each of the two healthcare systems (Holyfield and Jonesville). Then you will compare the characteristics of the two organizational structures*. The comparison will include a description of how power is distributed, managed, and wielded within each of the organizational structures. Then you will select one of the two structures to use in the newly merged system and provide a substantive, evidence-based rationale for your choice. *Shared governance and the Magnet Model are not considered organizational structures for this.

Leadership Styles and Power: Of the five major leadership styles**; authoritarian, democratic, laissez-faire, situational/contingency, and interactional; choose one used at each of the existing healthcare systems (Holyfield and Jonesville) and describe its characteristics. You will discuss how each leadership style is supported by the organizational structure chosen earlier for that system. As part of the discussion, you will include how power is distributed, managed, and wielded by each style. Finally, you will discuss your preference for the leadership style that is supported by your chosen organizational structure and provide an evidence-based rationale for your choice. **Transformational and transactional leadership are broad types of leadership within which several of the styles fit. Your focus is to be on the styles, not the two broad types. 

Use the following format outline/template for your paper to complete your assignment. Bold-type is used here for emphasis only. Follow the guidelines for use of bold-type and headings using the most current edition of the APA manual.

  • Introduction (no heading)
    • Statement of paper’s purpose
    • Identify the chosen setting and the framework you will apply to it
  • Overview of Power within Organizations (heading, centered)
    • Types of organizational power
    • Impact of power on the health of the organization
    • Impact of power on the work environment
  • Organizational Structure and Power (heading, centered)
    • Describe at least two specific examples with expected outcomes of the framework’s impact on nursing
  • Engagement of staff and leadership (centered, with heading)
    • Identify, compare, and contrast two organizational structures of the scenario facilities
    • Describe how power in distributed, managed and wielded within each structure
    • Preferred organizational structure (of the two) for a merged system with evidence-based rationale
  • Leadership Styles and Power (heading, centered)
    • Compare two leadership styles supported by and used within the structures of the scenario facilities
    • How is power distributed, managed, and wielded by the two leadership styles within the preferred structure described
    • Preferred leadership style (of the two) for the merged system with evidence-based rationale  
  • Conclusion (centered, with heading)
    • Recap of paper’s purpose
    • Summary of what was covered
  1. A minimum of three (3) scholarly sources, no older than 5 years, must be used for the paper. These should be relevant to nursing and should represent the majority of evidence provided in the paper. Other sources, such as textbooks, may be used in addition to these; however, they will not be counted as part of the scholarly source requirement.
  2. The paper should contain all elements required under the guidelines and provided by the outline.
  3. The outline provided should be followed for organizing the paper. Only level-one headings are required. Remember, the introduction does not have a heading.
  4. A maximum of four (4) pages, excluding title and reference pages, is required. 
  5. Microsoft (MS) Word is required for completing the assignment . The paper should be written in the third person, in active voice. Refer to “Guidelines for Writing Professional Papers in Graduate Programs” found in the Student Resources Central of the course.
  6. The assignment is graded on the quality of written communication using standard English grammar, sentence structure, use of scholarly evidence, and organization based on the required components. Quality is also measured by the completeness of required content elements of the assignment.

Week 5 re

#1

I believe many of us working in hospitals have experienced this scenario in the last few years. My unit is a medical-surgical unit, and in our most recent unit meeting, my manager showed us our budgeting (in hours and staff numbers, not cost), which included travel nurses and float pool nurses. Staffing is a very hot topic in the world of nursing, and it did not come as a surprise that our textbook said that hospitals want to keep vacancy rates at 4% (Mason, et el, 2021). When COVID-19 was going strong, many nurses left their stationary jobs and became travel nurses. These nurses were offered large travel bonuses, higher wages, and stipends for housing and travel. On my unit, travel nurses are generally contracted to work a set number of weeks, and they are paid regardless of whether they are needed to work or not. The main advantages to them are that they are another licensed body that can deliver care to patients, allow for the charge nurse to not have patients, keep patient-to-nurse ratios lower, and allow the unit to take more patients from the ED. The disadvantages of the travel nurse are that, depending on how their contract is written, they get paid even if they are not needed, or an as-needed/part-time employee may get a shift cancelled, they do not know the unit, or sometimes do not know the computer system, and they are not always familiar with the things done at each place they work.

I kind of already touched on some financial impacts that a travel nurse can have on a hospital or a unit. The major ones are that they tend to get paid more than the normal employees, they might get a bonus for choosing to work a set contract, they are often paid regardless of if they are needed for a shift or not, they are often given stipends for housing and travel, and they still have unproductive time because they need to be oriented to the hospital before they can work.

Alternative ways to improve staffing and to keep current staffing present their own set of challenges. Many large companies view their staff as an asset that should be invested in to get the best return. HCA, for example, created the STAR N program to train new nurses and get them involved with the company. While it may seem like a waste of money, these new nurses learn in a carefully controlled environment that gets them ready for their career in the hospital. The goal is that these new nurses will stay with the company for a few years and the hospital will not have to pay to replace them sooner. The only problem with the training program is that it takes time and new hires and may not be of particular help right away; it is along long-term strategy. For short-term relief in staffing, companies often offer pick-up shift bonuses, short contracts in which a nurse agrees to work four to more days a week at a slightly different pay rate with the end of the contract giving them a large payout bonus, and having an in-house float pool which can send licensed staff to short-staffed units. The in-house float pool gives a decent advantage in that the staff can work in different units depending on their training and is less expensive than hiring travel nurses or contracted nurses. Pick-up incentives are short-lived and only kick in under special conditions, so they can also be easy on a budget.

#2

Travel nursing provides a solution to staffing shortages within healthcare. The option of travel nursing has benefited facilities with safe nurse-patient ratios and reduce the burnout many nurses can face. However, staffing travel nurses can be expensive. They are often compensated much more than permanent staff nurses. Another downside travel nurses face is a short orientation to learn policies and procedures. On a patient satisfaction scale, patients may not feel they are receiving the best care if they feel the workflow between travel and permanent staff have been disturbed.

Balancing the financial implications of travel nursing can be difficult. The majority of travel nurses are contracted through an agency. The agency will charge a fee, in addition to the nurse’s wage. Moreover, there are housing costs for travel nurses that will need to be provided. Permanent staff nurses may feel dissatisfied with the use of travel nurses which can lead to turnover or retention incentives from the facility.

Between nurses leaving the bedside due to dissatisfaction and the shortage of nurses estimated to be 9 million by 2030, it is crucial that healthcare facilities find a way to retain their staff now (Pressley & Garside, 2023). Improving the retention of permanent staff nurses will come down to safe nurse-patient ratios, workplace environment, and increased compensation. Offering a competitive salary, child care assistance or retention bonuses can be enticing to permanent staff nurses. This can reduce turnover, which reduces the costs of hiring and orienting new nurses. Having a management team that listens to their nurses and fights for safe nurse-patient ratios can reduce the burnout of nursing, thus reducing the expenses of recruiting for more nurses.

By implementing some of these strategies, healthcare organizations can provide a stable environment for their nurses, while providing safe patient care and reducing the costs that come with turnovers.

2-2 Milestone One: Introduction

Follow rubric verbatim

What to Submit

The draft of your introduction should be submitted as a 2- to 3-page Microsoft Word document with double spacing, 12-point Times New Roman font, and one-inch margins. Any references should be cited in APA format. Use appropriate headings to identify each critical element.

2-1 Discussion: Peer Support Activity—Final Project Needs Assessment

Begin your initial post with a one-sentence summary of your proposal topic. Then, identify why the topic you chose is important to the organization. Next, present specific evidence/data demonstrating the need for this proposal. Discuss any issues you encounter as you work on your draft of this section of your project. This discussion will help you complete Milestone Two, which is due in Module Three.
 

nursing leadership assessment 4

NRP 473

homework

Telehealth Medicine