Dare To Do Nursing Differently
Nurses are often promoted into leadership because they are clinically strong. But being a great clinician and being a great leader are not the same skill set. That gap matters. Because when nurses step into leadership without coaching, mentorship, or communication tools, they are expected to manage conflict, emotions, staffing pressure, accountability, morale, and culture almost overnight. Then we wonder why nurse leaders burn out. We wonder why teams feel unsupported. We wonder why toxic cultures keep repeating themselves. Angie Gray said something in this conversation that every healthcare organization needs to hear: Coaching should not be saved for when someone is “in trouble.” It should be offered the moment a nurse is promoted. Leadership in nursing is relational. It requires self-awareness, emotional intelligence, communication, humility, and the ability to grow through imperfection. Those are not soft skills. They are survival skills. And if we want to keep nurses, protect new grads, and build healthier units, we have to stop pretending nurse leaders should figure it out alone. This episode of Dare to Do Nursing Differently is a must-watch for nurses, nurse leaders, educators, and organizations ready to build nursing culture from the inside out. Watch the conversation with Angie Gray. #NursingEducation #NurseEntrepreneur #PassiveIncomeForNurses #NursingCE #NursingContinuingEducation
126 episodios
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