Putting Traits Associated with Effective Medical Leadership into Action: Support for a Faculty Development Strategy

Leadership development is essential to the well-being of medical organizations, but leadership concepts do not easily translate into skills or actions. The Mayo Leadership Behavior Index © (Leader Index), a validated instrument describing eight leadership traits associated with constituent well-bein...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical psychology in medical settings 2024-12, Vol.31 (4), p.669-674
Hauptverfasser: Tung, Judy, Nahid, Musarrat, Rajan, Mangala, Bogdewic, Stephen, Mancuso, Carol A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Leadership development is essential to the well-being of medical organizations, but leadership concepts do not easily translate into skills or actions. The Mayo Leadership Behavior Index © (Leader Index), a validated instrument describing eight leadership traits associated with constituent well-being, can serve as a guide. The authors analyzed narratives from a qualitative study of senior medical leaders describing successful leadership behaviors to see how the tenets of the Leader Index can be applied. Current/emeritus chairs of major academic departments/divisions from a single institution were asked to describe anecdotes of actions used by leaders in actual settings. Narratives from interviews were analyzed for behaviors that map to the eight traits in the Leader Index. Eleven senior leaders volunteered multiple scenarios of effective and ineffective leadership with illustrative examples. The behaviors they identified mapped to all eight traits of the Leader Index, specifically career conversations, empowerment to do the job, encouragement of ideas, treatment with respect and dignity, provision of job performance feedback and coaching, recognition of well-done work, information about organizational changes, and development of talents and skills. These findings provide faculty development experts and psychologists tangible behaviors and actions they can teach to enhance leadership skills.
ISSN:1068-9583
1573-3572
1573-3572
DOI:10.1007/s10880-024-10031-7