Re: Troubles as a new manager Originally Posted by Mozzie
Everything stated above is sooooo true!!! I made an unfortunate mistake of trusting my day charge nurse because I absolutely, positively had nobody to go to in order to vent. My DON was "too busy" to counsel me and I went to the nearest person that knew about the issues of the unit and what "we" were going through.
Lets just say, it was the biggest mistake in my management career thus far (just about one year into it) and I am ready to get out!!!
I am told that the first year of management is the "learning curve" that the new manager is to observe, and be counseled by their "upline". Let me just say that none of the counseling nor mentoring really happened and my DON gives me conflicting advice. I have spent this past year learning and stumbling on my own. Makes life as a new manager confusing. My year is almost up. I have learned a lot from my mistakes - however, I just don't see myself being able to lead this floor with a DON that gives conflicting advice and staff that are never satisfied. - Even though I am staffing them at a ratio of 1:5 max. I know this doesn't include acuity - however, after getting my data together (this takes time) - I was going to build that into the new budget. I have a business degree and I really wanted to help them out even more so - but at this point.....I am ready to just bail and leave it at the 1:5 ratio.
The charge nurse that I trusted turned on me and my upline and has just turned staff against me and my decisions. Lets just say that unit meetings can get painful on the day shift.
Okay, I could go on and there is a lot of fall out from this. Right now - I'm just struggling with the thought of staying in nursing at all versus just crossing industries in the business sector and be done with it versus just giving the one month notice and move on to some place that management mentoring takes place. If there is any place that supports this.....
I wish I could elaborate more - but I think it is best to just end here. ~sigh~

Do you have definitive proof that the charge nurse stabbed you in the back? If so, I would confront her since she, too, is in some position of power. Trust within a healthcare team has to flow in all directions.
Have some goals you want to achieve and stay with them. You are either working on your goals or someone else's. As far as advice from your DON, take what you need and leave the rest. If the DON feels you are doing a good job, then accept that and know you will have administration support if you need it.
Staff meetings should not be painful. If staff are being disrespectful, set limits. If staff are refusing to do what you want, charge them with insubordination. Staff ideas are great and should always be entertained, but in the end, you are in charge. You have to make decisions that are best for the patients ultimately. I used to half-joke with my staff telling them, "You understand that this is a dictatorship run by me, right?"
I always treated my staff like I treated my patients. More or less, the staff respected me because I tried to be absolutely fair. But, just like the patients, they had to do things they did not want to and got angry at me about it. I did not care if people get angry as long as they maintained their professionalism at work and respected my decision. If your decisions are patient-oriented, or for the greater good of everyone, the staff cannot argue with you. When presenting decisions or ideas to the staff, I always found it useful to explain the rationale behind them.
Some staff will not like you or respect you, ever. These are the folks that just don't like administration of any kind and will never like management. You will always have a couple. Oh well. Let them be miserable by themselves. If you stick to your guns and try to be fair, the rest of the staff will eventually start telling the nay-sayers to stop. Sometimes there is a hazing period, as well.
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