NURSING Management Process
NURSING Management Process
NURSING Management Process
MANAGEMENT
PROCESS
NURSING MANAGEMENT
Is the process of working through staff
members to be able to provide
comprehensive care to the patient
This includes planning, organizing, directing
and controlling
The task of the nurse manager is to plan,
organize, direct and control available
financial, material, and human resources in
order to provide effective, economic care to
groups of patients
PLANNING ORGANIZING
CONTROLLING STAFFING
DIRECTING/
LEADING
Purpose of the Nursing
Management Process
1. Conceptual skills
refers to an individual’s mental ability to
coordinate a variety of interests and
activities.
2. Interpersonal skills
refer to interpersonal styles which mean the
ways in which individuals interact and
communicate with others
3. Technical skills
are the tools, procedures, and
techniques that are unique to the
nurse manager’s specialized
situation
NURSING MANAGEMENT PROCESS: focuses
on:
Planning
Organizing
Staffing
Directing or leading
Controlling
PLANNING
Is deciding in advance what to do, how to
do a particular task, when to do it, and
who is to do it.
Is predetermining a course of action in
order to arrive at a desired results.
Components of Planning
PLANNING:
PREDETERMINED
ACTION
Designed to:
1. show clear lines of authority,
2. flow of communication and
3. relationships among departments, and
4. to pinpoint person/s responsible and
accountable
Upper
levels
Middle Levels
Lower
Level
Patterns of Organizational
Structure
Tall or Centralized Structure
Flat or Decentralized Structure
TALL OR CENTRALIZED STRUCTURE
SN SN SN
Functional Organization-
purely advisory to the line
CEO
structure with no authority
to put recommendations
into action
SN
CN
SN SN
PRINCIPLES OF ORGANIZATION
Communication:
effective and open communication in all
forms; thread that binds the organization
together.
Directions of communication:
Downward
Upward
Lateral/Horizontal
Outward
UPWARD
(to superior)
DOWNWARD
( subordinates)
Downward- ex: policies,rules,
regulations, performance appraisal
Upward – ex: grievance procedure,
incident reports, written reports
Horizontal/ lateral - endorsements
Outward - image to the public
Unity of Command – employee has one
supervisor and one plan for a group activity with
same objective.
Span of Control - the number of employees that
one supervisor manages in an organization.
To determine the span of control:
• Limit the number of subordinates that you can
effectively inspire, animate, direct, and
coordinate
• Note that too few immediate subordinates
result in oversupervision; too many in
undersupervision
• Be responsible for the actions of subordinates
Delegation of authority – determine the line and
staff of authority which delineates the distribution
of power.
Similar Assignments - responsibilities assigned
to a particular unit of an organization should be
clear-cut and well understood.
Guidelines to follow:
• Do not assign a function to more than one independent unit of
the organization. Overlapping responsibilities causes confusion
and delay
• Assign definite and clear cut responsibilities to each member of
the organization
• Never permit an organization to grow so elaborately as to
hinder work assignment
• Assign specific, clear-cut, and similar functions to subordinates.
• Assign every necessary function to a specific individual.
Unity of Purpose - definite plans must be
formulated based upon the objectives,
policies, standards and work procedures
previously accepted by the organization.
Every component in an organization
should work toward unity of effort and
authority and that responsibility for each
action should be decentralized to the units
and individuals responsible for the actual
performance of operations.