Remove Blog Remove Patient Care Remove Shared Governance
article thumbnail

Meet a Champion of Nursing Diversity: Temitope (Temi) Oseromi

Minority Nurse

By fostering a shared governance mindset and building trust among the teams, she empowered nurse leaders to take charge. It also means growing the nursing teams into excellent clinicians, ensuring patient care is delivered safely utilizing best practices and advocating for my teams at different off-unit forums.

article thumbnail

Magnetizing High-quality Nursing Care

Minority Nurse

The Magnet designation for hospitals emerged in 1990 under the auspices of the American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) as a strategy for catalyzing and recognizing the highest possible standards for quality nursing care. A few might include: Shared governance. Walking the Talk. Quality improvement initiatives.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Reducing Mistakes: What Every Nurse Can Do

Minority Nurse

This environment of care is ripe for error and unsafe patient care outcomes. When direct care nurses and nurse leaders fully understand how the environment impacts patient safety, they can develop a better awareness of the behavioral choices nurses make when providing care and build ways to decrease the likelihood of error.

article thumbnail

Magnet Hospitals Support Nurses

Minority Nurse

The rigorous application process comes only after organizations commit to the highest quality of nursing and patient care with established initiatives and programs. Ask what the nursing care model is, if they have shared governance, and if they have opportunities to be part of a unit-based council.