An evaluation of nursing development units
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in NT Research
- Vol. 2 (4) , 292-303
- https://doi.org/10.1177/174498719700200410
Abstract
The aims of this study, which is still in progress, are to assess the value that nursing development units add to nursing and health care and to describe the essence of an NDU. The areas investigated cover: resources and costs, research and audit activities, networking activities, staff morale, staff development and supervision, and clinical leadership. The research took a staged approach with four phases: consultation, profiling the NDUs, comparing NDUs with units without NDU status and case studies of five high-performing NDUs. This paper provides an overview of the study and findings from Phases 1-3. It was important for clinical leaders to be clinically credible, to have authority and to be free from day-to-day care provision and management. Quantitative differences between NDUs and comparison units emerged for research and dissemination activity (NDUs were more active), and sickness absence (more long-term sickness in NDUs) but not for audit and staff development activity, nor for the financial context. Data from the final phase will give a more detailed understanding of the significance of these differences and the different pathways that can be taken to achieving success as an NDU.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- An evaluation of the King's Fund Centre Nursing Development Unit Network 1989–91Journal of Clinical Nursing, 1997
- Assessing quality of nursing care.Quality and Safety in Health Care, 1993
- Audit: the third clinical science?Quality and Safety in Health Care, 1992