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At Wockhardt’s Bangalore hospital, Dr. Arshanapalai Malathi works with nurse managers.

HMI and Wockhardt team to develop network-wide nursing leadership program

Wockhardt Hospitals has an aggressive growth strategy that is designed to take the health care network into new territory. Geographical expansion, new hospital development, and the implementation of new clinical programs and technology top the agenda for the longtime HMI partner. Wockhardt’s leadership team, however, is working with HMI to ensure that a key component of its ambitious plans does not go overlooked.

“Key to delivering high-quality patient care in an environment of such growth and development is a well structured, mature nursing service, which is nursing in its total state: leadership, education, clinical care, and research,” says Elizabeth Brown, MSN, RN, MBA, HMI Director of Clinical Services. “The senior administrative team of Wockhardt rightly recognize that an integral driver of a premier and comprehensive nursing service is a strong nursing leadership team.”

Brown is working with senior administrative and clinical leaders throughout the Wockhardt network on a year-long initiative designed to enhance nursing leadership. Wockhardt has instituted a four-part certification program that will provide a core group of nurse leaders with the skills necessary to become strategic decision-makers capable of building and nurturing effective clinical teams.

The certification program grew out of a pair of successful nursing leadership workshops held last year. Those workshops, held in both Bangalore and Mulund, were designed to bring a community of nursing leaders together to work towards developing a nurse manager competency model for the entire network. The model took shape in the ensuing months, with nursing leaders working closely with top administrators in human resources and HMI to craft the curriculum to support the model and the certification program. The program consists of four six-day sessions co-directed by HMI faculty and members of the Wockhardt team.

Bangalore was the setting for the first session, in March. Twenty-two nursing leaders from hospitals throughout the Wockhardt network gathered for a series of interactive case discussions and group activities. Brown facilitated workshops on developing individuals and team-building. Wockhardt team members led the group through activities focused on quality issues, customer service, human resource management, and other issues central to the nursing leader’s role.

This core group of nursing leaders will participate in each session over the next year, and the location will rotate, with workshops potentially being held in Mumbai, Rajkot, and Goa. Each participant has committed to identifying a leadership project to pursue over the next year. she would work on over the next year to improve her leadership capacity.

“The Wockhardt Team has developed an incredible initial foundational curriculum for the year long nursing leadership program,” said Brown.

Patricia Folcarelli, RN, PhD and Joanne Ayoub, both of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, will co-facilitate programs with Brown moving forward in this initiative. Both have been frequent contributors to HMI programs, including the successful nursing leadership initiative at Acibadem Healthcare Group.

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Nurses from throughout the Wockhardt network exchanged insight into day-to-day leadership and management challenges.

HMI World welcomes comments from readers. Please write to let us know what you think of this article.

 

 

Visits to HMS-affiliated centers of excellence give Wockhardt leader strategies to guide growth
Wockhardt Hospitals CEO Vishal Bali came to Boston in March for a series of discussions with clinical and administrative leaders at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC), Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), and Massachu-setts Eye & Ear Infirmary. The program was designed to give Wockhardt insight into best practices and successful approaches to new clinical program planning, staff retention, and organizational and professional development.

Ryan Wildes, HMI Regional Manager, said, “As Mr. Bali and his senior leadership chart Wockhardt’s aggressive growth strategy, they are paying special attention to recruitment and retention efforts, particularly in the area of nursing staff.”

At MGH, human resources director Steve Taranto discussed some of the strategies that have given MGH a great track record of nurse retention. Taranto’s team employs creative compensation and flexible scheduling and provides MGH’s nurses with avenues for professional development and continuing education.

At BIDMC, Bali met with Joanne Ayoub, the hospital’s director of organizational development. Ayoub said that BIDMC is transitioning away from the traditional notion of “employee satisfaction” and working to assess and understand “employee commitment.” She explained that BIDMC views employee commitment and satisfaction in direct correlation with patient satisfaction.

 
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