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The NYS nurse practice Act governs all the engagements of nurses, patients and nurse leaders. Acting outside the Act would mean defiance, and this would call for punishment or, worse still, suspension and cancellation of one’s license. The leadership components of the registered nurses as provided in the Act include but are not limited to critical thinking, integrity, decision making, action and advocacy (Grossman, 2020). As a servant leader, my leader at work would have to think critically before making any decision because there is a presumption that whatever the leader does, the people being led will emulate it. The servant mode also ensures that the leader is full of integrity. Someone whose integrity is questionable is not good enough to lead because then, the pace would be that which lacks integrity standards. To sum this up, the servant theory complies with what the Nursing Act requires in a leader.
Servant style of leadership will enhance my inter-professional practice in several ways. The most significant of all, this style prepares me for even greater tasks ahead of me. In my profession, I will learn from what pace my leader would have set and how to communicate with my colleagues in dispensing duties; if we need to change shifts, we communicate beforehand. As a servant leader, I must learn how to deal with professionals from other fields because they would not have much knowledge in my field; I would offer them the best services, right from consultation to treatment. The last and most critical group will be the family and relatives of the patients and the patients themselves (Johnson, 2009). This group needs tender love and care. The servant leadership model will enable me to have the know-how of handling sad news in my line of duty as a nurse. This is to say; the servant leadership style will go a long way in shaping my inter-professional practice.
References
Aryonen, J. (2012). Change, Production and Employees. Leadership Models. Department of Psychology, Stockholm University.
Grossman, S. (2020).The new leadership challenge: Creating the future of nursing. FA Davis.Johnson, L. (2009). Workplace bullying: Concerns for nurse leaders. JONA: The Journal of Nursing Administration 39 (2), 84-90. Leadership Style for Nursing Graduate Discussion Paper