Hear me, value me and see the results

When I was a ward sister interviewing new recruits to my unit, I would always ask the question: ‘Who is more important, the patients or the staff?’ I always received the same reply: ‘The patients’. Without any doubt, our primary purpose is to care for patients, but I always hoped one brave soul woul...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kay Riley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Foundation of Nursing Studies 2014-11-01
Series:International Practice Development Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.fons.org/library/journal/volume4-issue2/article1
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spelling doaj-3927ca98f2cd407c9d3091f188fbe3ae2020-11-25T01:36:32ZengFoundation of Nursing StudiesInternational Practice Development Journal2046-92922014-11-01421310.19043/ipdj.42.001Hear me, value me and see the resultsKay Riley0City University, LondonWhen I was a ward sister interviewing new recruits to my unit, I would always ask the question: ‘Who is more important, the patients or the staff?’ I always received the same reply: ‘The patients’. Without any doubt, our primary purpose is to care for patients, but I always hoped one brave soul would say the staff were more important. Ever since I became a ward sister, I have strongly held the belief that if we look after our team members, a high standard of patient care, delivered with compassion, will be the result. Since that time, there has been an increasing body of evidence to support the strong link between staff satisfaction and patient outcomes and experience. Using data from the annual NHS staff survey, West (2013) showed that staff engagement was strongly associated with patient satisfaction, quality of care, financial performance, staff absenteeism and even patient mortality. Despite the strength of the evidence, we have seen a disappointing response across the NHS in terms of listening to, valuing and engaging staff. To what extent have we focused on the needs of NHS staff? Staff who, it could be argued, no longer enjoy their customary level of affection among the public or the media. Staff who find themselves under greater workload pressures than ever before. Time and time again, we find staff are reporting feeling stressed, bullied and harassed at work. The Boorman Report (2009) found that many staff do not believe their employer takes a positive interest in their health and wellbeing.https://www.fons.org/library/journal/volume4-issue2/article1staff engagement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kay Riley
spellingShingle Kay Riley
Hear me, value me and see the results
International Practice Development Journal
staff engagement
author_facet Kay Riley
author_sort Kay Riley
title Hear me, value me and see the results
title_short Hear me, value me and see the results
title_full Hear me, value me and see the results
title_fullStr Hear me, value me and see the results
title_full_unstemmed Hear me, value me and see the results
title_sort hear me, value me and see the results
publisher Foundation of Nursing Studies
series International Practice Development Journal
issn 2046-9292
publishDate 2014-11-01
description When I was a ward sister interviewing new recruits to my unit, I would always ask the question: ‘Who is more important, the patients or the staff?’ I always received the same reply: ‘The patients’. Without any doubt, our primary purpose is to care for patients, but I always hoped one brave soul would say the staff were more important. Ever since I became a ward sister, I have strongly held the belief that if we look after our team members, a high standard of patient care, delivered with compassion, will be the result. Since that time, there has been an increasing body of evidence to support the strong link between staff satisfaction and patient outcomes and experience. Using data from the annual NHS staff survey, West (2013) showed that staff engagement was strongly associated with patient satisfaction, quality of care, financial performance, staff absenteeism and even patient mortality. Despite the strength of the evidence, we have seen a disappointing response across the NHS in terms of listening to, valuing and engaging staff. To what extent have we focused on the needs of NHS staff? Staff who, it could be argued, no longer enjoy their customary level of affection among the public or the media. Staff who find themselves under greater workload pressures than ever before. Time and time again, we find staff are reporting feeling stressed, bullied and harassed at work. The Boorman Report (2009) found that many staff do not believe their employer takes a positive interest in their health and wellbeing.
topic staff engagement
url https://www.fons.org/library/journal/volume4-issue2/article1
work_keys_str_mv AT kayriley hearmevaluemeandseetheresults
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