YODER-WISE’S LEADING AND MANAGING IN CANADIAN NURSING, 2ND EDITION,
PATRICIA S. YODER-WISE, ALL CHAPTERS 1 – 32 COVERED QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
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NURSING, 2ND EDITION, PATRICIA S. YODER-WISE, JANICE WADDELL,
NANCY WALTON,
ISBN: 9781771721684,
ISBN: 9781771721745,
ISBN: 9781771721677
Table of Contents Part I:
Core ConceptsOverview
1. Leading, Managing, and Following
2. Developing the Role of Leader
3. Developing the Role of Manager
4. Nursing Leadership and Indigenous Health
5. Patient Focus
Context
6. Ethical Issues
7. Legal Issues
8. Making Decisions and Solving Problems
9. Health Care Organizations
10. Understanding and Designing Organizational Structures
11. Cultural Diversity in Health Care
12. Power, Politics, and Influence
Part II: Managing Resources
13. Caring, Communicating, and Managing with Technology
14. Managing Costs and Budgets
15. Care Delivery Strategies
,16. Staffing and Scheduling (available only on Evolve)
17. Selecting, Developing, and Evaluating Staff (available only on Evolve)
Part III: Changing the Status Quo
18. Strategic Planning, Goal-Setting, and Marketing
19. Nurses Leading Change: A Relational Emancipatory Framework for Health and SocialAction
20. Building Teams Through Communication and Partnerships
21. Collective Nursing Advocacy
22. Understanding Quality, Risk, and Safety
23. Translating Research into Practice
Part IV: Interpersonal and Personal Skills
Interpersonal
24. Understanding and Resolving Conflict
25. Managing Personal/Personnel Problems
26. Workplace Violence and Incivility
27. Inter and Intraprofessional Practice and Leading in Professional Practice Settings
Personal
28. Role Transition
29. Self-Management: Stress and Time
Future
30. Thriving for the Future
31. Leading and Managing Your Career
32. Nursing Students as Leaders
, YODER-WISE’S
AND MANAGINGLEADIN YODER-WISE’S
IN CANADIAN LEADING
NURSING, AND MANAGING IN CANADIAN NURSING, 2ND EDITION G
2ND EDITION
Chapter 01: Leading, Managing, and Following
Waddell/Walton: Yoder-Wise’s Leading and Managing in Canadian Nursing, Second
Edition
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. A nurse manager of a 20-bed medical unit finds that 80% of the patients are
older adults. Sheis asked to assess and adapt the unit to better meet the
unique needs of older adult patients. According to complexity principles, what
would be the best approach to take in making this change?
a. Leverage the hierarchical management position to get unit
staff involved inassessment and planning.
b. Engage involved staff at all levels in the decision-making process.
c. Focus the assessment on the unit, and omit the hospital and
communityenvironment.
d. Hire a geriatric specialist to oversee and control the project.
ANS >> B
Complexity theory suggests that systems interact and adapt and that decision
making occursthroughout the systems, as opposed to being held in a
hierarchy. In complexity theory, everybody’s opinion counts; therefore, all
levels of staff would be involved in decision making.
DIF: Cognitive Level: Apply REF: Page
14 TOP: Nursing Process: Implementation
.
2. U S N T
A unit manager of a 25-bed medical/surgical O area receives a phone call from a
nurse who has
called in sick five times in the past month. He tells the manager that he very
much wants to come to work when scheduled, but must often care for his wife,
who is undergoing treatmentfor breast cancer. In the practice of a strengths-
based nursing leader, what would be the best approach to satisfying the needs
of this nurse, other staff, and patients?
a. Line up agency nurses who can be called in to work on short notice.
b. Place the nurse on unpaid leave for the remainder of his wife’s treatment.
c. Sympathize with the nurse’s dilemma and let the charge nurse know
that this nursemay be calling in frequently in the future.
d. Work with the nurse, staffing office, and other nurses to arrange
his scheduleddays off around his wife’s treatments.
ANS >> D
Placing the nurse on unpaid leave may threaten physiologic needs and
demotivate the nurse.Unsatisfactory coverage of shifts on short notice could
affect patient care and threaten staff members’ sense of competence.