Practice development: a critique of the process to redesign an assessment

Main Article Content

Jane Cioffi RN, B.App.Sc (Adv Nsg), Grad Dip Ed (Nsg), M.App.Sc (Nsg), PhD
Clair Leckie B.Sc, Dip ND, PhD student
Jan Tweedie RN, M.Sc (Health Policy and Management)

Keywords

practice development, assessment, acute care, facilitation, process

Abstract

Objective: This paper presents a brief description of an activity to redesign a nursing assessment followed by a critique of the practice development process used.


Setting: Adult acute care general hospital wards.


Primary argument: Practice development can address shortfalls in clinical practice by using a systematic process to change practice so improving health care. Through the application of a professional development activity addressing assessment the described process provides the basis for a critique that gives directions for ongoing similar activities.


Conclusions: Directions identified for ongoing practice development activities are: engage all staff in the change process who own the practice; appoint alternative persons with delegated authority for key facilitators; build professional development into the practice change; provide service users (eg patient representatives) with mentoring; develop transformational strategies that address not only the dominant organisational culture but also existing subcultures; and employ an emancipatory practice development process. The main recommendation for practice development in bureaucratic organisations is to develop and establish the evidence base necessary to ensure the process is effective.

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