Now more than ever, the U.S. healthcare industry realizes that public scrutiny, payer analysis, and heightened government oversight are shining a laser-beam focus on patient outcomes that result from clinical quality and patient safety activities. Payer mandates make headlines when they announce payers will no longer reimburse hospitals or doctors for “never events”—medical errors that should never happen. These changes in payment rules have heightened the urgency to find better approaches to quality improvement.

The missing link that will create real change and better outcomes for hospitals and patients is the need for active nursing leadership at the bedside to drive them. The pressure has never been greater, and I’ve come to appreciate how hard this work really is.

I’d like to propose a few thoughts to help connect leadership at the bedside to improvement:

Getting smart: Preparing for the challenge

Ensuring that staff have the knowledge and skills to deal with improvement issues poses a challenge. When leaders admit they don’t know but are learning, they’re creating a safe haven for others to say, “I don’t know, but I will find out.” Showing strategic humility at all levels goes a long way toward creating a culture of continuous improvement.

Here are some questions that can get the dialogue going:

The bottom line when it comes to nurses and improvement strategy: It takes both to succeed.

Lillee Gelinas, MSN, RN, FAAN
Editor-in-Chief