Chapter 1 Leading, Managing, following
Magnet recognition
A distinction granted by the American Nurses Credentialing Center for quality nursing service.
Values
Inner forces that influence decision-making and priority setting.
Emotional intelligence
Monitoring emotions in a situation to guide actions and inform thought processes.
Complexity theory
Requires leaders to expand and respond to engaging dynamic change and focus on relationships rather than on prescribing and approaching change as a lock-step, prescribed method. Traditional organization hierarchy plays a less significant role as the "keeper of high level knowledge" and replaces it with the idea that knowledge applied to complex problems is better distributed among the human assets within an organization, without regard to hierarchy. Leaders try less to control the future and spend more time influencing, innovating, and responding to the many factors that influence health care.
Management
The activities needed to plan organize, motivate, and control the human and material resources needed to achieve outcomes consistent with the organization's mission and purpose.
Vision
The desired future state.
Process of care
The desired sequence of steps that have been designed to achieve clinical standardization.
Motivation
The instigation of action based on various factors, both intrinsic and extrinsic.
Management theory
The theory related to the activities described in Management.
Leadership
The use of personal traits to constructively and ethically influence patients, families, and staff through a process in which clinical and organizational outcomes are achieved through collective traits.
Followership
Those with whom a leader interacts; involves assertive use of personal behaviors in contributing toward organizational outcomes while still acquiescing certain tasks to the leader or other team members.