Affiliation:
1. Yale New Haven Hospital, Hamden, Connecticut.
Abstract
There is underrepresentation of nurses with racial and ethnic minority backgrounds in executive nursing leadership positions as compared with the general population. The management problem is that even when academically prepared, nurses with racial and ethnic minority backgrounds perceive that they face both singular and systemic barriers to promotional opportunities to executive nurse positions. A literature gap exists as to why this phenomenon persists. The purpose of this qualitative narrative inquiry study was to explore the personal stories and lived experiences of executive nurses with racial and ethnic minority backgrounds concerning the barriers they faced and overcame on their pathway to an executive leadership position. The conceptual framework combined the intersectionality of race and internal and external capabilities. Data collected through semistructured interviews underwent a 3-dimensional-space narrative structure and thematic analysis process. Eleven themes in 3 major categories emerged: (a) facing the challenges; (b) overcoming barriers; and (c) where my help came from. The social change implications include new knowledge for multiple stakeholders in supporting and developing nurses from racial and ethnic minority backgrounds to assist them in achieving executive nursing leadership positions, thereby increasing the number of these nurses in executive roles.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
General Medicine,Leadership and Management