Journal of Emergency Nursing
Volume 34, Issue 5 , Pages 403-409, October 2008

The Impact of ED Nurse Manager Leadership Style on Staff Nurse Turnover and Patient Satisfaction in Academic Health Center Hospitals

  • Glenn H. Raup, PhD, MSN, RN, CNA-BC

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationFor correspondence, write: Glenn H. Raup, PhD, MSN, RN, CNA-BC, John Peter Smith Hospital, JPS Health Network, 1500 S Main St, Fort Worth, TX 76104

Fort Worth, Tex

published online 13 June 2008.

Introduction

Nurse managers with effective leadership skills are an essential component to the solution for ending the nursing shortage. Empirical studies of existing ED nurse manager leadership styles and their impact on key nurse management outcomes sush as staff nurse turnover and patient satisfaction have not been performed. The specific aims of this study were to determine what types of leadership styles were used by ED nurse managers in academic health center hospitals and examine their influence on staff nurse turnover and patient satisfaction.

Method

ED nurse managers were asked to complete the Multifactor Leadership Questionnaire and a 10-item researcher defined nurse manager role and practice demographics survey. Completed surveys (15 managers and 30 staff nurses) representing 15 out of 98 possible U.S. academic health centers were obtained.

Results

Fisher’s exact test with 95% confidence intervals were used to analyze the data. The sample percentage of managers who exhibited Transformational leadership styles and demographic findings of nurse manager age, total years experience and length of time in current position matched current reports in the literature. A trend of lower staff nurse turnover with Transformational leadership style compared to non-Trasformational leadership styles was identified. However, the type of leadership style did not appear to have an effect on patient satisfaction.

Discussion

The ED is an ever-changing, highly regulated, critical-care environment. Effective ED nurse manager leadership strategies are vital to maintaining the standards of professional emergency nursing practice to create an environment that can produce management outcomes of decreased staff nurse turnover, thereby enhancing staff nurse retention and potentially impacting patient satisfaction.

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 Supported by a grant from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Committee for the Allocation of Graduate Student Research Funds.

 Earn Up to 10 CE Hours. See page 496.

PII: S0099-1767(07)00468-0

doi:10.1016/j.jen.2007.08.020

Journal of Emergency Nursing
Volume 34, Issue 5 , Pages 403-409, October 2008