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Laying the foundations for implementing magnet principles in hospitals in Europe: a qualitative analysis

Laying the foundations for implementing magnet principles in hospitals in Europe: a qualitative analysis
Laying the foundations for implementing magnet principles in hospitals in Europe: a qualitative analysis
Background: magnet hospitals, a concept developed in the U.S., have been associated with improved nurse recruitment and retention, and better patient outcomes. Magnet principles may be useful to address workforce challenges in European hospitals, but they have not been implemented or evaluated on a large scale in the European hospital context.

Objective: this study aims to explore the initial phase of implementing Magnet principles in 11 acute care hospitals in six European countries. The specific objectives of the study were to investigate the type of work that characterises the early phase of implementation and how implementation leaders engage with their context.

Methods: a multinational qualitative study was conducted, with data from 23 semi-structured, one-to-one interviews with implementation leaders in 11 acute care hospitals in six European countries. Thematic analyses guided the analysis of data.

Findings: three themes of core work processes during the early phase of implementing Magnet principles in European hospitals were identified. The first theme, ‘Creating space for Magnet’, describes how work was directed towards creating both political and organisational space for the project. The second theme, ‘Framing to fit: understanding and interpreting Magnet principles’, describes the translational work to understand what the Magnet model entails and how it relates to the local hospital context. Finally, the third theme, ‘Calibrating speed and dose’, describes the strategic work of considering internal and external factors to adjust the process of implementation.

Conclusions: the first phase of implementation was characterised by conceptual and relational work; translating the Magnet concepts, considering the fit into existing structures and practices and making space for Magnet in the local context. Understanding the local context played an important role in shaping and guiding the navigation of professional and organisational tensions. Hospitals employed diverse strategies to either emphasise or downplay the role of nurses and nursing to facilitate progress in the implementation.
Hospitals, Leadership, Magnet4Europe, Organisational innovation, Professional, Qualitative study, Workforce
0020-7489
Svensson, Ingrid
232c3ed0-45c8-47a5-93c9-2c2750126d75
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd
Ellis, Jaimie
eb60a3a4-281b-4895-9583-4d5cf1e65b4d
Brady, Noeleen
6c107dc2-e528-40ca-9f33-1c08589f5954
Dello, Simon
c13fc622-8c66-4547-bae9-182ad3f20818
Hooft, Jonathan
53c4d61c-623d-4088-8cda-4b87bf0806ea
Kleine, Joan
5f85f171-86ea-4c57-a086-cc64fe37fab2
Kohnen, Dorothea
78f1adc2-bb19-4c63-bf24-90272ba2b0c6
Lehane, Elaine
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Lindqvist, Rikard
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Maier, Claudia B.
c4ddcab8-3cae-42a5-9163-547d17c76c36
Mc Carthy, Vera J.C.
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Sjetne, Ingeborg Strømseng
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Eriksson, Lars e.
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Alenius, Lisa Smeds
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et al.
Magnet4Europe Consortium
Svensson, Ingrid
232c3ed0-45c8-47a5-93c9-2c2750126d75
Bridges, Jackie
57e80ebe-ee5f-4219-9bbc-43215e8363cd
Ellis, Jaimie
eb60a3a4-281b-4895-9583-4d5cf1e65b4d
Brady, Noeleen
6c107dc2-e528-40ca-9f33-1c08589f5954
Dello, Simon
c13fc622-8c66-4547-bae9-182ad3f20818
Hooft, Jonathan
53c4d61c-623d-4088-8cda-4b87bf0806ea
Kleine, Joan
5f85f171-86ea-4c57-a086-cc64fe37fab2
Kohnen, Dorothea
78f1adc2-bb19-4c63-bf24-90272ba2b0c6
Lehane, Elaine
48bb968c-eea8-4cab-a38b-464dfbf02c01
Lindqvist, Rikard
23451573-1677-473e-8f1a-326c3b72c9ef
Maier, Claudia B.
c4ddcab8-3cae-42a5-9163-547d17c76c36
Mc Carthy, Vera J.C.
543fcbe9-1f5f-4612-8ffe-d56833c15059
Sjetne, Ingeborg Strømseng
712c4661-5647-4636-90b5-9462d5052ce7
Eriksson, Lars e.
58c948f8-9d46-43c5-888c-02c40e28f86a
Alenius, Lisa Smeds
2ba39776-2e70-4a07-a8d3-75b5badaa4cc

Svensson, Ingrid, Bridges, Jackie and Ellis, Jaimie , et al. and Magnet4Europe Consortium (2024) Laying the foundations for implementing magnet principles in hospitals in Europe: a qualitative analysis. International Journal of Nursing Studies, 154, [104754]. (doi:10.1016/j.ijnurstu.2024.104754).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: magnet hospitals, a concept developed in the U.S., have been associated with improved nurse recruitment and retention, and better patient outcomes. Magnet principles may be useful to address workforce challenges in European hospitals, but they have not been implemented or evaluated on a large scale in the European hospital context.

Objective: this study aims to explore the initial phase of implementing Magnet principles in 11 acute care hospitals in six European countries. The specific objectives of the study were to investigate the type of work that characterises the early phase of implementation and how implementation leaders engage with their context.

Methods: a multinational qualitative study was conducted, with data from 23 semi-structured, one-to-one interviews with implementation leaders in 11 acute care hospitals in six European countries. Thematic analyses guided the analysis of data.

Findings: three themes of core work processes during the early phase of implementing Magnet principles in European hospitals were identified. The first theme, ‘Creating space for Magnet’, describes how work was directed towards creating both political and organisational space for the project. The second theme, ‘Framing to fit: understanding and interpreting Magnet principles’, describes the translational work to understand what the Magnet model entails and how it relates to the local hospital context. Finally, the third theme, ‘Calibrating speed and dose’, describes the strategic work of considering internal and external factors to adjust the process of implementation.

Conclusions: the first phase of implementation was characterised by conceptual and relational work; translating the Magnet concepts, considering the fit into existing structures and practices and making space for Magnet in the local context. Understanding the local context played an important role in shaping and guiding the navigation of professional and organisational tensions. Hospitals employed diverse strategies to either emphasise or downplay the role of nurses and nursing to facilitate progress in the implementation.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 8 March 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 March 2024
Published date: June 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Author(s)
Keywords: Hospitals, Leadership, Magnet4Europe, Organisational innovation, Professional, Qualitative study, Workforce

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488431
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488431
ISSN: 0020-7489
PURE UUID: 8c24d0c4-c2c1-4f1b-9275-ab499795d9b0
ORCID for Jackie Bridges: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6776-736X
ORCID for Jaimie Ellis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0068-3318

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 22 Mar 2024 17:39
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:50

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Contributors

Author: Ingrid Svensson
Author: Jackie Bridges ORCID iD
Author: Jaimie Ellis ORCID iD
Author: Noeleen Brady
Author: Simon Dello
Author: Jonathan Hooft
Author: Joan Kleine
Author: Dorothea Kohnen
Author: Elaine Lehane
Author: Rikard Lindqvist
Author: Claudia B. Maier
Author: Vera J.C. Mc Carthy
Author: Ingeborg Strømseng Sjetne
Author: Lars e. Eriksson
Author: Lisa Smeds Alenius
Corporate Author: et al.
Corporate Author: Magnet4Europe Consortium

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