I can almost guarantee that someone will give you a conflict resolution question at your interview and ask you how you would resolve this conflict. It is not the situation that is important. It is your answer to any conflict – which it goes through the “Chain of Command.” Know this chain of command for your interview. Every hospital, indeed, nearly every organization, has a chain of command. In most cases, this chain of command is delineated with a chart, often referred to as an organizational chart. The chain of command in its simplest definition is the line of authority and responsibility along which orders are passed within the nursing department, the hospital, and between different units. Nurses who ignore the chain of command may lose their jobs, and in some cases their licenses. I will never forget a patient of mine who was deteriorating. I reminded the physician to give me parameters for his patient for me to follow if the patient clinically deteriorated. At 2 a.m. the patient began to deteriorate and I tried several times to reach the physician to no avail. I was scrambling to care for the patient, while at the same time get a physician to return my call. In exasperation, I called the ER physician and pleaded for him to come and assess my patient. He was too busy and did not respond. In the end the patient died and I received a stern reprimand. Not only did I not follow the chain of command, but I didn’t act as a patient advocate. I thought I did follow the chain of command – but I missed one “chain” and that was the charge nurse. She could have been a great help in managing and pulling strings to get someone to listen to the nurse (which was me). I was also reprimanded for not being the patient advocate. “I thought I did act in the patient’s best interest,” I said. The nurse manager asked me if I would have done anything more if that was my father lying in that bed. I had to admit, I would have done more.
There is, of course, a possible downside to using the chain of command, which can occur where there are weak, insecure, poorly trained or bad managers. When a nurse seeks help through the chain of command and encounters resistance, apathy, or even incompetence, then he or she needs to document the steps taken to advocate for the patient. The nurse should also rely on the hospital’s policy and procedures regarding appropriate reporting protocols. We may never truly discover why an experienced triage nurse or the other hospital employees seemed to ignore the cries of a patient in pain. If they felt helpless to offer assistance, did any of them seek out the next person in their chain of command? Doing this is not easy, as it requires effort and commitment. However nurses who are in precarious situations should never overlook the power of the chain of command and the positive results that can result from its implementation. |