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- BookCheryl Dellasega.Summary: Nursing has a not-so-secret problem. The profession is prone to--some would say thrives on--workplace conflict, incivility, bullying, and meanness. And while nurses observe and experience this conflict daily, too few have been trained in its resolution. Toxic Nursing aims to change that with strategies, tools, and techniques to help nurse leaders, managers, and administrators defuse conflict, turn around toxic situations, and create positive, healthy work environments. Written by Cheryl Dellasega--author of the groundbreaking books Surviving Ophelia and Mean Girls Grown Up--Toxic Nursing explores the reasons behind toxic behavior and its impact on not just the workplace but patient safety.
Contents:
Incivility
The newbie : mistreatment of new nurses
The know-it-all/criticism queen
Gossip and trash talk
Cliques, campaigns, and high-school drama
Competition and credit
Nurse managers as the problem
Men in white
Better than you
Generations at work
Competent and caring leaders?
Social media, electronic communication, and professionalism
Politics and CYA
Patients as victims
On the battlefield : nurses under attack
Toxic culture/environment
Conclusion
Is your management style causing conflict?
Conflict case scenario
Organizational cynicism self-assessment
When it's time to seek outside counsel
Compassion fatigue.Digital Access R2Library 2021Limited to 1 simultaneous user - ArticleCausey SC, Brown LR.J Bacteriol. 1978 Sep;135(3):1070-9.We used the sequence-specific endonucleases EcoRI, SmaI, BamHI, HsuI, and HaeIII as identification tools in following the conjugal transfer of the well-studied R plasmids Sa, R388, RP4, and R6K. Transfers were both intergeneric and intrageneric. Plasmid fingerprints were generated from both single- and combination-enzyme digests. The Sa transconjugants yielded plasmids showing consistent fingerprints for each of the respective endonucleases used, whereas the three other R-plasmid transconjugants showed fingerprint changes.