Unchosen nursing mobility discussed from the perspective of the junior health care manager’s managerial activities
Brignon, Béatrice
Unchosen nursing mobility discussed from the perspective of the junior health care manager’s managerial activities - 2022.
44
Introduction: At the beginning of 2020, a state of health emergency was declared in France following the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic.Context: Entrepreneurial management of health institutions requires internal nursing mobility to compensate for unexpected absenteeism.Reference framework: Based on the clinic of activity, the aim of this study was to analyze the reality of early-career health managers’ work in order to understand how, in a constrained environment, they are able to manage this mobility when not chosen by the substitute caregiver.Method: An indirect qualitative method—“instructions to the double”—combined two successive co-analysis sessions with four junior health managers: an individual session with the researcher and a collective session with the peers who participated in the study.Results: Data triangulation revealed three axes: the issues at stake for these managers; their compromises made to transform compulsory nursing mobility into voluntary mobility; the development of their power to act.Discussion: These results raise various issues related to the psychological and social resources of the occupational health of junior health managers as well as to the organization of work.
Unchosen nursing mobility discussed from the perspective of the junior health care manager’s managerial activities - 2022.
44
Introduction: At the beginning of 2020, a state of health emergency was declared in France following the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic.Context: Entrepreneurial management of health institutions requires internal nursing mobility to compensate for unexpected absenteeism.Reference framework: Based on the clinic of activity, the aim of this study was to analyze the reality of early-career health managers’ work in order to understand how, in a constrained environment, they are able to manage this mobility when not chosen by the substitute caregiver.Method: An indirect qualitative method—“instructions to the double”—combined two successive co-analysis sessions with four junior health managers: an individual session with the researcher and a collective session with the peers who participated in the study.Results: Data triangulation revealed three axes: the issues at stake for these managers; their compromises made to transform compulsory nursing mobility into voluntary mobility; the development of their power to act.Discussion: These results raise various issues related to the psychological and social resources of the occupational health of junior health managers as well as to the organization of work.
Réseaux sociaux