Abstract

This study seeks to improve the understanding of physician leaders' leadership work challenges. The subjects of the empirical study were physician leaders (n=23) in the largest central hospital in Finland. A total of five largely identity-related, partially paradoxical dilemmas appeared regarding why working as "just a leader" is challenging for physician leaders. First, the dilemma of identity ambiguity between being a physician and a leader. Second, the dilemma of balancing the expected commitment to clinical patient work by various stakeholders and that of physician leadership work. Third, the dilemma of being able to compensate for leadership skill shortcomings by excelling in clinical skills, encouraging physician leaders to commit to patient work. Fourth, the dilemma of "medic discourse", that is, downplaying leadership work as "non-patient work", making it inferior to patient work. Fifth, the dilemma of a perceived ethical obligation to commit to patient work even if the physician leadership work would be a full-time job. The first two issues support the findings of earlier research, while the remaining three emerging from the authors' analysis are novel. The authors list some of the practical implications that follow from this study and which could help solve some of the challenges. This study explores physician leaders' leadership work challenges using authentic physician leader data in a context where no prior empirical research has been carried out.

Highlights

  • Healthcare sector resources have been globally pushed to near breaking point by the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic

  • To answer the first part of our research question about the kinds of challenges physician leaders face in their leadership work, we will analyse them in more detail

  • There appears to be a widely spread undervaluation of the leadership aspect of what physician leaders do in the healthcare organization in comparison to patient work, which does not fit the definitions of leadership theories of general leadership

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Summary

Introduction

Healthcare sector resources have been globally pushed to near breaking point by the Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. In such crises, good management and leadership throughout the healthcare system are of crucial importance to facilitate the best use of available resources, to save lives and achieve the ultimate goal of bettering the health of citizens The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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