The experience of learning to speak up: a narrative inquiry on newly graduated registered nurses.
Authors: Law, B.Y.-S. and Chan, E.A.
Journal: J Clin Nurs
Volume: 24
Issue: 13-14
Pages: 1837-1848
eISSN: 1365-2702
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.12805
Abstract:AIMS AND OBJECTIVES: To explore the process of learning to speak up in practice among newly graduated registered nurses. BACKGROUND: Speaking up is an important aspect of communication to ensure patient safety within a healthcare team. However, nurses have reported being hesitant about speaking up or being unable to be heard, despite adopting various safety tools. A power differential could be a factor in their hesitation to speak up. While a large number of new graduates are employed in the lower rungs of the hospital hierarchy to resolve local and global nursing shortages, the process of their learning to speak up remains under-explored. DESIGN: The narrative concept of experience is addressed through the three-dimensional space of a narrative inquiry. METHODS: Eighteen new graduates were recruited. Stories of experiences of speaking up emerged naturally during repeated unstructured interviews and ongoing email conversations with three participants. RESULTS: The complex process of learning to speak up is schematically represented. Three interrelated narrative threads were identified: (1) learning to speak up requires more than one-off training and safety tools, (2) mentoring speaking up in the midst of educative and miseducative experiences and (3) making public spaces safe for telling secret stories. CONCLUSIONS: Speaking up requires ongoing mentoring to see new possibilities for sustaining professional identities in the midst of miseducative experiences under the potential shaping of the Chinese culture and generational differences. Appreciative inquiry might be a new approach that can be used to promote positive cultural changes to encourage newly graduated registered nurses to learn to speak up to ensure patient safety. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE: Cultivating a safe and open culture of communication and mentoring new graduates to speak up will benefit patient safety now and in the future by helping to retain committed patient advocates who could mentor future generations.
Source: PubMed
The experience of learning to speak up: a narrative inquiry on newly graduated registered nurses
Authors: Law, B.Y.-S. and Chan, E.A.
Journal: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
Volume: 24
Issue: 13-14
Pages: 1837-1848
eISSN: 1365-2702
ISSN: 0962-1067
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.12805
Source: Web of Science (Lite)
The experience of learning to speak up: A narrative inquiry on newly graduated registered nurses
Authors: Law, Y.S. and Chan, E.A.
Journal: Journal of Clinical Nursing
Volume: 24
Issue: 13-14
Pages: 1837-1848
Source: Manual
The experience of learning to speak up: a narrative inquiry on newly graduated registered nurses.
Authors: Law, B.Y.-S. and Chan, E.A.
Journal: Journal of clinical nursing
Volume: 24
Issue: 13-14
Pages: 1837-1848
eISSN: 1365-2702
ISSN: 0962-1067
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.12805
Abstract:Aims and objectives
To explore the process of learning to speak up in practice among newly graduated registered nurses.Background
Speaking up is an important aspect of communication to ensure patient safety within a healthcare team. However, nurses have reported being hesitant about speaking up or being unable to be heard, despite adopting various safety tools. A power differential could be a factor in their hesitation to speak up. While a large number of new graduates are employed in the lower rungs of the hospital hierarchy to resolve local and global nursing shortages, the process of their learning to speak up remains under-explored.Design
The narrative concept of experience is addressed through the three-dimensional space of a narrative inquiry.Methods
Eighteen new graduates were recruited. Stories of experiences of speaking up emerged naturally during repeated unstructured interviews and ongoing email conversations with three participants.Results
The complex process of learning to speak up is schematically represented. Three interrelated narrative threads were identified: (1) learning to speak up requires more than one-off training and safety tools, (2) mentoring speaking up in the midst of educative and miseducative experiences and (3) making public spaces safe for telling secret stories.Conclusions
Speaking up requires ongoing mentoring to see new possibilities for sustaining professional identities in the midst of miseducative experiences under the potential shaping of the Chinese culture and generational differences. Appreciative inquiry might be a new approach that can be used to promote positive cultural changes to encourage newly graduated registered nurses to learn to speak up to ensure patient safety.Relevance to clinical practice
Cultivating a safe and open culture of communication and mentoring new graduates to speak up will benefit patient safety now and in the future by helping to retain committed patient advocates who could mentor future generations.Source: Europe PubMed Central