Leadership Chapter 1, 3, 4 vocabulary

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Clinical process

a defined sequence of steps needed to ensure that basic functions are fulfilled in a standardized manner, ensuring safety and quality, such as medication procurement and administration

Role theory

a framework used to understand how individuals perform within organizations

Advanced practice RN

a group of nurses, prepared at the graduate level, with defined roles and scopes that function in expanded nursing roles. Those roles are: certified registered nurse anesthetists, certified nurse-midwives, clinical nurse specialists, and certified nurse practitioners

Case management

a person-oriented service that reflects multidisciplinary cooperation and coordination

Quantum theory

a physics theory stating that energy is not a smooth flowing continuum but, rather, bursts of energy that are related

Triple aim

a shortcut for describing contemporary healthcare reform; to improve access, improve quality, and decrease or control healthcare costs

Transformational leadership

an act of encouraging followers to follow the leader's style and change their interests into a group interest with concern for a broader goal

Mentor

an experienced person who helps a less experienced person navigate into expertise

Scientific management

analytical approach

Bureaucratic management

authoritative

Managed care

care purchased through a public or private healthcare organization whose goal is to promote quality healthcare outcomes for patients at the lowest cost possible through planning, directing, and coordinating care delivered by healthcare organizations that it may own, have contractual agreements with, or have authority over by virtue of the fact that it reimburses the organization for services provided its patients. This model rewards providers for low utilization of care that is relatively low in cost; also, a system of care in which a designated person determines the services the patient uses

Total quality management

comprehensive and structured approach to continuously improve

Vision

desired future state

Entrenched workforce

employed persons older than 35 years who are thought of as the Baby Boomer generation

Human relations

employees aren't just motivated by financial reward, but want personal recognition and reward

Role

expected or actual behavior, determined by a person's position or status in a group

Trait theory

individual traits that affect how they lead

Change agent

individuals with formal or informal legitimate power whose purpose is to initiate, champion, and direct or guide change

Values

inner forces that influence decision making and priority setting

Situational

leader adapting to whatever the situation might be

Patient protection and affordable care act

legislation aimed at increasing access to uninsured Americans to quality, affordable care while reducing costs of unnecessary services; was upheld as constitutional by the supreme court in 2012

Six sigma (lean)

looking at eliminating waste

Quality indicators

measurable elements of quality that specify the focus of evaluation and documentation

Emotional intelligence

monitoring emotions in a situation to guide actions and inform thought processes

Follower

person who contributes to a group's outcomes by implementing activities and providing appropriate feedback; have a complementary set of healthy and assertive actions

Leader

person who demonstrates and exercises influence and power over others; an individual who works with others to develop a clear vision of the preferred future and to make that vision happen

Manager

person with accountability for a group of people

Servant leadership

putting the needs of someone else's above yours

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, pre-prescribed method. Traditional organizational 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.

Evidence-based organizational practice

scientifically derived approaches to delivering care that optimizes professional roles, practices, and coordination of activities

Transactional leadership

the act of using rewards and punishments as part of daily oversight of employees in seeking to get the group to accomplish a task

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; guiding others through a set of derived practices and procedures that are evidence-based and known to satisfy pre-established outcomes based on repeated clinical situations; is about tasks

Organizational culture

the attitudes, behaviors, and policies evident in an organization that create the ambiance and operation of the workplace

Management functions, skills, roles

the better you work with people, the more successful you'll be

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

Magnet Recognition Program

the only national designation build on and evolving through nursing research that is designed to recognize nursing excellence of healthcare organizations through a self-nominating, appraisal process

Emerging workforce

the so-called 20-something generation, who were born between the years of 1965-1985

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 efforts; the process of engaged decision making linked with actions taken in the face of complex, unchartered, or perilous circumstances in clinical situations for which no standardized solution exists; is about people skills

Social networking

the use of technology and other mechanisms to create a web of relationships with common involvement in an area of focus or concern

Chaos theory

theoretical construct defining the random-appearing yet deterministic characteristics of complex organizations

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; engaging with others who are leading or managing by contributing to problem identification, completing tasks, and providing feedback for evaluation

Style theory

uses a certain style to form relationships

Management by objectives

you have a set of objectives and you manage to each objective


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