13 December 2011

Taking steps to form partnerships

A workshop is like a partnership, and partnerships were indeed formed during a workshop I presented recently in Cape Town to a group of 12 nursing service managers. Throughout, the underlying dynamics of collaboration and shared leadership were emphasized and enforced.

Designed to develop dialogue between partners by pushing them beyond their comfort zone and challenging their thinking, the workshop exposed these health practitioners to a variety of new legislative measures related to health care delivery and required them to explore differences in the legislation through questioning, prodding and reflecting upon underlying principles. It was an environment that involved voluntary cooperation and commitment.

Workshop participants
As equal partners in the process, the workshop participants felt free to openly air their views. As a result, members shared information, creative ideas and solutions that applied in their work settings that, inter alia, included the specialities of psychiatric nursing, infection control and forensic nursing in healthcare settings of various sizes.

In the various sessions, all participants took an active role in sharing their unique qualities and work responsibilities and how they were professionally accountable in practice. This further enhanced a sense of partnership in identifying shared problems and helped foster suggestions for problem-solving strategies.

Throughout the workshop, participants drew upon previous experiences and personal reflection to coach each other. The opportunity to use past experiences as resources was essential and led to the development of a united team. By valuing the motivational needs of the group and their contributions as partners in health care delivery, all participants felt empowered to accept responsibility for transformation in their health care organisations. The coordination of information between different hospitals and services will lead to future collaboration among participants.

For Reflections on Nursing Leadership (RNL), published by the Honor Society of Nursing, Sigma Theta Tau International.