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EFFECTIVE LEADERSHIP IN HEALTHCARE ORGANIZATIONS

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Title: EFFECTIVE LEADERSHIP IN HEALTHCARE ORGANIZATIONS


1
EFFECTIVE LEADERSHIP IN HEALTHCARE ORGANIZATIONS
  • BY
  • Dr. Naila H. Amer
  • Professor of Health Administration and Planning

2
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
  • Define leadership.
  • Describe leadership approaches.
  • Discuss the most important leadership traits and
    skills as well as functions of effective
    leadership.
  • Determine sources of leaders power importance
    of influence.

3
  • Explain leadership development.
  • Differentiate between transactional
    transformational leadership.
  • Discuss the role of emotional intelligence in
    relation to successful leadership.
  • Describe the different leadership styles.

4
Introduction
  • Effective leadership is essential if a health
    services organization (HSO) is to provide
    high-quality care and succeed financially. All
    managers at all levels of the organization, who
    depend on other people for efficient and
    effective work performance, require leadership
    ability.
  • The quality of leadership is crucial to how work
    gets done.

5
Definition
  • Leadership is a very complex multidimensional
    concept and has been defined in a number of
    different ways.
  • A common definition is

The process by which one person designates what
is to be done and influences the efforts of
others in order to accomplish specific purposes.
6
Another important definition is that
  • Leaders are agents of change, persons whose acts
    affect other people more than other peoples acts
    affect them.

7
Leadership Approach
  • Leaders following the proactive approach take
    responsible initiatives to change situations and
    attitudes through people. This approach is the
    essence of modern leadership,it contrasts with
    the
  • Reactive approach where a leader responds only to
    events and instructions from outside.

8
EXERCISE (1)
  • From your experience, try to describe a leader
    you worked with or had contact with whom you
    consider a role model of a successful leader
    why.
  • What in your opinion are the main traits ,skills
    behaviours of a successful leader?

9
Leader Traits, Skills and Behaviour
  • Although none of the hundreds of studies
    conducted in search of universal leader traits
    were successful yet, certain traits are known to
    be associated with leader effectiveness. Table 1
    is a list of traits and skills that most
    frequently characterise successful leaders.

10
Table1 Traits and skills found most
frequently to be characteristic of successful
leaders
  • Traits
  • Adaptable to situations
  • Alert to social environment
  • Ambitious and achievement-oriented.
  • Assertive
  • Cooperative
  • Decisive
  • Dependable
  • Dominant(desire to influence others)
  • Energetic (high activity level)
  • Persistent
  • Self-confident
  • Tolerant of stress
  • Willing to assume responsibility
  • Skills
  • Clever(intelligent)
  • Conceptually skilled
  • Creative
  • Diplomatic and tactful
  • Fluent in speaking
  • Knowledgeable about group task
  • Organized (administrative ability)
  • Persuasive
  • Socially skilled

11
Leaders Power and Influence
  • Influence is important to the leadership process
    because it is the means by which leaders
    successfully persuade others to follow their
    advice, suggestion or order. The essence of
    leadership is the ability to influence others. To
    have influence, however, one also must have power.

12
  • Sources of Power
  • 1.Legitimate Power This is the power a leader
    has as a result of his / her position in the
    organization.
  • 2. Coercive Power Is the power to punish or
    control.
  • 3. Reward Power Is the power of giving positive
    benefits or rewards whether financial or
    otherwise.

13
  • 4. Expert Power Influence thats based on
    expertise, special skills or knowledge.
  • 5. Referent Power Arises because of a persons
    personal traits or desirable resources, e.g.
    admiration of another a desire to be like that
    person, in this case that person has referent
    power over you.
  • Most effective leaders rely on several different
    forms of power e.g. giving orders (legitimate),
    praising (reward), disciplining (coercive).

14
  • Also power must be used wisely to influence
    people e.g. abuse of coercive power may lead to
    weakening or loss of referent power.
  • Effective leaders understand the costs, risks,
    and benefits of using each kind of power and are
    able to recognize which to draw on in different
    situations and with different people.

15
  • Leadership Behaviour
  • In the 1950s, the study of leadership and
    leaders shifted from traits to behaviour. This
    raised the exciting possibility that if leader
    behaviour explained leadership effectiveness,
    then leadership could be taught since behaviour
    can be learned and programs can be designed to
    develop effective leaders.
  • The trait theories maintained that leaders are
    born Either you have it or you dont. The
    behaviour theories believed that leaders are
    made!

16
Leadership Development
  • Leadership development means the improvement
    and strengthening of abilities and effectiveness
    of both current and prospective leaders.
  • Some of the functions to be developed for
    effective leadership are demonstrated in table 2

17
  • Table 2 Functions of Effective Leadership
  • The provision of a vision that influences all
    who work in the organization.
  • Confidence in ones vision and oneself.
  • Projecting / communicating the vision.
  • Initiating / guiding change.
  • Mobilizing commitment and support for
    change.
  • Resolving conflict.
  • Building of trust.
  • Building sustainability
  • Developing others.

18
Transformational And Transactional Leadership
  • Among the contemporary approaches to leadership
    is that leadership in organizations is of two
    types transformational and transactional.
    Transactional leaders are those who guide
    motivate their followers towards established
    goals clarify role task requirements.

19
  • Transformational leaders on the other hand, are
    mainly concerned with change, the needs of
    followers, and helping followers look at old
    problems in new ways. They are able to excite
    ,arouse and inspire followers to put an extra
    effort and transcend their own self interest to
    achieve group goals.

20
  • Transformational and transactional leadership
    should not be viewed as opposing approaches.
    Transformational leadership is built on top of
    transactional leadership producing performance
    that goes beyond what would occur with
    transactional approach alone.
  • There is evidence that transformational
    leadership is more strongly correlated with lower
    turnover rates, higher productivity, higher
    employee satisfaction.

21
  • Some authors state that transformational
    leadership is more likely to be practiced by
    senior managers who focus on creating system -
    wide change in relation to organizations
    missions, values, culture, strategiesetc. This
    group maintains that transactional leaders are
    those who usually have a direct
    supervisor-subordinate relationship with their
    followers.

22
Emotional Intelligence
  • As a result of many researches, Goleman (1998)
    concluded that although successful leaders vary
    in many ways, yet the most effective ones are
    alike in one crucial way

23
  • They all have a high degree of what has come to
    be known as emotional intelligence. Its not
    that IQ and technical skills are irrelevant.
    They do matter, but mainly as threshold
    capabilities or entry-level requirements for
    executive positions.

24
  • Recent studies clearly show that without
    emotional intelligence a person can have the best
    training and a brilliant analytical mind but
    still wont make a great leader.

25
Table 3 The Five Components Of Emotional
Intelligence At Work
Component Self-awareness Self-regulation
  • Definition
  • The ability to recognize and understand your
    moods, emotions, and drives, as well as their
    effect on others.
  • The ability to control or redirect disruptive
    impulses and moods.
  • The propensity to suspend judgment.
  • Hallmarks
  • self-confidence
  • Realistic self-assessment
  • Self-deprecating sense of humor
  • Trustworthiness and integrity
  • Comfort with ambiguity.
  • Openness to change.

26
Table 3 (continued)
  • A passion to work for reasons that go beyond
    money or status.
  • A propensity to pursue goals with energy and
    persistence.
  • The ability to understand the emotional makeup of
    other people.
  • Skill in treating people according to their
    emotional reactions.
  • Proficiency in managing relationships and
    building networks.
  • An ability to find common ground and build
    rapport.

Motivation Empathy Social skills
  • Strong drive to achieve.
  • Optimism, even in the face of failure.
  • Organizational commitment.
  • Expertise in building and retaining talent.
  • Cross-cultural sensitivity.
  • Service to clients and customers..
  • Effectiveness in leading change.
  • Persuasiveness.
  • Expertise in building and leading teams.

27
  • I suppose that leadership at one time meant
    muscle but today it means getting along with
    people.
  • Indira Ghandi

28
EXERCISE (2)
  • ??????? ?????? ???????

29
Styles of Leadership
  • Leadership style is how you behave when you are
    trying to influence the performance of others.
  • (A) Tannenbaum and Schmids Continuum of Leader
    Behaviour
  • This relates to the decision making authority
    dimension of leader behaviour, and can be
    displayed on a continuum from autocratic to
    laissez-faire as shown in figure 1.

30
Continuum of leader decision-making authority
Use of authority by the manager
Area of freedom for subordinates
Manager sells decision.
Manager presents ideas and invites questions
Manager presents tentative decisions subject to
change
Manager defines limits, asks group to make
decisions.
Manager presents problem, gets suggestions, makes
decisions
Manager makes decision and announces it
Manager permits subordinates to function within
limits defined by superior.
(6) DEMOCRATIC
(7) LAISSEZ-FAIRE
(4) (5) PARTICIPATIVE
(1) AUTOCRATIC
(2) (3) CONSULTATIVE
31
(No Transcript)
32
  • NO ONE STYLE IS APPROPRIATE AT ALL TIMES
  • CONTINGENCY THEORY

33
Factors affecting styles
  • 1- Urgency and time factor
  • 2- The type of work
  • 3- Subordinates characteristics
  • 4- Personal characteristics of the leader

34
(B) Situational Leadership Model
  • In this model leadership style is a combination
    of task and relationship behaviours.

35
TASK BEHAVIOUR
  • Involves Extent to which leaders organize and
    define roles of followers through clearly telling
    them what to do, how to do it, where to do it,
    and when to do it, and then closely supervising
    their performance.

RELATIONSHIP BEHAVIOUR
Involves Maintaining personal relations with
followers, listening to them, providing support
and encouragement for their efforts, and then
facilitating their involvement and sharing in
problem-solving and decision-making.
36
  • There are four leadership styles
  • Telling, Selling, Participating and Delegating
  • BUT
  • THERE IS NO ONE BEST LEADERSHIP STYLE.

37
  • According to Hersey and Blanchard (1996),
    effective leadership is an interplay among
  • 1)The leaders task behaviour
  • 2)The leaders relationship behaviour
  • 3)The followers readiness level to take
    responsibility to perform a task or function.

38
Situational Leadership
39
  • SITUATIONAL LEADERSHIP IS NOT
  • SOMETHING YOU DO TO PEOPLE
  • BUT
  • SOMETHING YOU DO WITH PEOPLE

40
Thank You
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