A STUDY OF NURSING ADMINISTATOR LEADERSHIP AMONG MULTIGENERATION PROFESSIONAL NURSES, PRIVATE HOSPITAL

ภาวะผู้นำ, หลากหลายรุ่นอายุ, โรงพยาบาลเอกชน

Authors

  • Sirinthip Wichitkultana Chulalongkorn Uneversity
  • Gunyadar Prachusilpa

Keywords:

ภาวะผู้นำ, หลากหลายรุ่นอายุ, โรงพยาบาลเอกชน

Abstract

The purpose of this qualitative research was to study leadership of nursing administrator among multigenerational professional nurses, in a private hospital. The subjects were  expert group of 21 nursing administrators, human resources planner, and professional working in organization, private hospitals, academic institutions and instructor who teach in nursing administration.            The Delphi technique consisted of 3 steps. Step 1, The experts were interviewed about the leadership of administrator among multigenerational in the workplace. Step 2, Using the content analysis of the initial data to develop the questionnaire and rating scales. Step 3, This data was analyzed by using median and interquartile range to develop a new version of the questionnaire. The new questionnaire was sent to same experts to confirm that the content of the new  questionnaire was viable. Changes were made, so the questionnaire was analyzed again by median and interquartile range. The final questionnaire was administered and the results  summarized.

        The results had 2 components as follows: 1.The characteristics of leadership. And this consists of three component; Personality characteristics, Emotional Intellectual and ethical. 2.The behavior of leader consists of two components: Team building and motivation.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2018-12-27

How to Cite

Wichitkultana, S., & Prachusilpa, G. (2018). A STUDY OF NURSING ADMINISTATOR LEADERSHIP AMONG MULTIGENERATION PROFESSIONAL NURSES, PRIVATE HOSPITAL: ภาวะผู้นำ, หลากหลายรุ่นอายุ, โรงพยาบาลเอกชน. JOURNAL OF THE POLICE NURSES, 10(2), 262–267. Retrieved from https://he01.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/policenurse/article/view/35007

Issue

Section

Research Articles