Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://ruomo.lib.uom.gr/handle/7000/197
Title: The relationship between leadership and physician well-being: a scoping review
Authors: Montgomery, Anthony
Type: Article
Subjects: FRASCATI::Social sciences::Psychology
Keywords: burnout
healthcare
leadership
patient safety
physician well being
quality of care
Issue Date: 2016
Source: Journal of healthcare leadership
Volume: 8
First Page: 71
Last Page: 80
Abstract: To date, research has established the individual and organizational factors that impair well-being. Thus, we are aware of the organizational "cogs and wheels" that drive well-being, and there is a sense that we can potentially utilize effective leadership to push and pull these in the appropriate directions. However, reviews of leadership in health care point to the lack of academic rigor and difficulty in reaching solid conclusions. Conversely, there is an accepted belief that the most important determinant of the development and maintenance of cultures is current - and future - leadership. Thus, leadership is assumed to be an important element of organizational functioning without the requisite evidence base. Medicine is a unique organizational environment in which the health of physicians may be a significant risk factor for inadequate patient safety and suboptimal care. Globally, physicians are reporting increasing levels of job burnout, especially among younger physicians in training. Not surprisingly, higher levels of physician burnout are associated with suboptimal care for patients and medical error, as well as maladaptive coping strategies among physicians that serve to exacerbate the former. This review is a scoping analysis of the existing literature to address the central question: is there a relationship between organizational leadership and physician well-being? The objectives of the review are as follows: 1) identify the degree to which physician health is under threat; 2) evaluate the evidence linking leadership with physician well-being; 3) identify alternative ways to approach the problem; and 4) outline avenues for future research. Finally, enhancing progress in the field is discussed in the contexts of theory, methodology, and impact.
URI: https://doi.org/10.2147/JHL.S93896
https://ruomo.lib.uom.gr/handle/7000/197
ISSN: 1179-3201
Other Identifiers: 10.2147/JHL.S93896
Appears in Collections:Department of Educational & Social Policy

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