Are you an incompetent nurse?

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How would we know the level of our own competency when we are prone to overlook our faults more easily than others? Would we seek further training or continue to bluff our way through it, hoping we don't screw up in a way that it will backfire? Would you eat crow to admit that you don't know something that you probably should.? Are you an incompetent nurse? Truthfully.

Interesting article I picked up on the web.

Are We Really Incompetent?(self-awareness and self-management in the health care industry)

Healthcare Review, March 19, 2001, by Margaret J. Palmer

Among the issues of conflict that pervade healthcare, one that stings considerably is the indictment of a person as incompetent. Nurses claim that physicians are incompetent and should not be practicing. Physicians claim that nurses are incompetent, a result of the shabby nursing educational systems currently in place. Both accusations are made openly and with certainty by the author. Are we really as incompetent as the accusations suggest?

Quality improvement processes have become a normative standard in healthcare systems, allowing close scrutiny of providers' clinical acumen. If there really were cause to believe that gross incompetence has overtaken our healthcare delivery systems, quality teams would find and eliminate it.

How can it be possible for such skillful effort demonstrated during a crisis to become incompetence during a lull in the activity? Is it possible that we have misdirected our responses to the changes demanded of us? Are we mature enough in our interpersonal skills that we can discriminate between real incompetence and our own underlying anger and frustration resulting from stressful work conditions?

Blaming others for errors, poor communication, or lack of perfection has been a fairly common characteristic of the healthcare culture. Claims of incompetence are a serious matter in any industry; in healthcare, incompetence implies action that can result in serious consequences.

Psychologists have named this phenomenon "horizontal violence" - the hostile action that is taken within a group of colleagues that shares a strong camaraderie. Physicians and nurses fall into this category. Because of the unique training each of these groups experiences, there is an imposed isolation that separates them from the other healthcare disciplines. A certain strength is gained by becoming a member of the nursing profession or becoming a physician, creating a strong bond surrounding the profession, giving it definition and uniqueness.

This boundary embraces like-minded and similarly trained individuals who support each other, however it also creates a barrier that prevents anger and frustration from leaving the group. Group members soon realize that the only safe forum in which to be understood is within your own professional group. Finding resolution to difficult issues outside of one's group is often met with misunderstanding and confusion. Therefore, keeping within the group is efficient and becomes the natural place to seek counsel.

As in a family, the familiarity and comfort that builds within a group encourages freedom of expression. A significant negative factor emerges, then, as your group receives the brunt of your frustration. The safety of one's professional group also supports the internally directed violence.

Nurses fight among themselves, especially across departments and between shifts. Incompetence is often sighted as the reason charts are not completed correctly. Medication errors are assigned to incompetent nurses. -

Physicians rarely describe each other as incompetent" due to its credentialing implication. But, the direction of incompetence from physician to nurse is common. Little understanding and tolerance exists between the two when situations unfold differently than expected. Many healthcare hours have been spent investigating incidents of alleged incompetence, often revealing a result quite different.

Healthcare providers are adept at reducing interpersonal issues to clinical problems. This is done so regularly that clear, honest communication is a rarity. Therefore, incompetence might really be a cover for a relationship in need of assistance.

This is not to suggest that incompetence does not exist. It does. In fact, we work diligently to remove it from all aspects of healthcare delivery. But, the common place occurrences between individuals and groups are likely to be based in weak interpersonal communication.

The Remedy

How do we shift ourselves from the willingness to write off others as incompetent to accepting responsibility for our professional behavior? The answer is simple, but the shift may require large doses of temperance, understanding, and introspection. A true willingness to become self-aware precedes any attempt we might make to behave more professionally. That which we so easily assign to others is likely to be the same issue that we present and, in fact, dislike about ourselves. Are we strong enough to do that introspection?

Next issue: Self-Awareness-The Precursor to Self-Management.

Margaret Palmer, PhD, is president of the Healthcare Management Consulting Group, a firm specializing in consultation with physician executives and managers regarding management issues, and with hospital administration regarding leadership development and problem-solving. Her practice includes e-consulting to physician executives and managers.

COPYRIGHT 2001 Healthcare Review

COPYRIGHT 2001 Gale Group

http://www.findarticles.com/cf_dls/m0HSV/3_14/79788231/p1/article.jhtml?term=

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.
Originally posted by bluesky

Nursing excellence on the other hand is never achievable as there is always new knowledge to improve our practice.

.

wrong..EXCELLENCE in nursing (and in other areas) is achieved everyday by ordinary hard-working competent beings...... perfection, on the other hand, is not achieved by humans. EXCELLENCE is achievable and something to STRIVE for always. I tell the people I precept this all the time. I consider myself an excellent nurse, thru ordinary hard work and maintaining currency in my field. It is achievable, if you want it enough.

Incompetent....no...not since I've been using Depends

Specializes in ICU.
Originally posted by Wolfpax

Incompetent....no...not since I've been using Depends

:rotfl::rotfl::rotfl:

On the subject of self assessment of competence there was this research paper.....

PSYCHOLOGY

David Dunning of Cornell University and Justin Kreuger of the University of Illinois, for their modest report, "Unskilled and Unaware of It: How Difficulties in Recognizing One's Own Incompetence Lead to Inflated Self-Assessments." [Published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, vol. 77, no. 6, December 1999, pp. 1121-34.]

It was a winner of the 2000 Ig nobel prize for "research that sould not be repeated

:roll

http://www.apa.org/journals/psp/psp7761121.html

Specializes in 5 yrs OR, ASU Pre-Op 2 yr. ER.
Originally posted by Wolfpax

Incompetent....no...not since I've been using Depends

:roll :roll :roll

I needed a laugh!

Specializes in Hemodialysis, Home Health.
Originally posted by Wolfpax

Incompetent....no...not since I've been using Depends

lol-schild.gif EXCELLENT !!!

Specializes in ER, PACU.

I must be an incompetant nurse...I didnt get the patient and his 3 family members a blanket and a tray of food at 2 am right when they demanded it, oh my, I had forgotten!!

:rolleyes: :rolleyes:

Originally posted by imagin916

I must be an incompetant nurse...I didnt get the patient and his 3 family members a blanket and a tray of food at 2 am right when they demanded it, oh my, I had forgotten!!

:rolleyes: :rolleyes:

Yep. A sure indicator of incompetence if I ever saw one.:kiss

If we fail to make everyone happy we are incompetent....

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.
Originally posted by mattsmom81

If we fail to make everyone happy we are incompetent....

yes and POOR customer servants.......we are all imcompetent. you are right, mattsmom.

there was a cake from our manager when I got to work yesterday. We rarely see her but get scathing email communications and directives frequently from her so I DO know she is around. ;)

Anyway back to the cake...Big smily face on it...'keep up the good work' it said. On customer service scores. :(

I passed on the cake.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

OMG talk about an insult, Mattsmom! UGH!

Specializes in Surgical, PACU.

:balloons: :biggringi

A VERY MERRY CHRISTMAS EVERYONE!!!!!!

Pouring with rain here....just as well its summer

I don't think I'm an incompetent nurse, but I sure am human and thankfully just a little insane - it really helps.

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