Abstract
Leadership is all about others on your team and in your organization. Surgical professionals are most likely to follow leaders they trust to care about their professional and personal well-being, and are aligned with their values, while setting and implementing organizational strategy. Ironically, in order to lead others well, it is best and most effective if leaders are humble, vulnerable, and willing to learn more about themselves: specifically their behavioral tendencies when they both are at their best and when they are under duress. For us as leaders, this includes understanding our own predominant leadership style(s); and learning how to expand our leadership preferred tendencies to other styles that may be more effective in certain situations. The POSNA leadership program (PLP) enables participants and faculty to study effective leadership principles and theories; evaluate published examples of exceptional and disastrous leadership in volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous (VUCA) real life situations; and have in-depth dialogue on how pediatric orthopaedic surgery leaders can learn from and positively model exemplary leadership characteristics and behaviors. Although our operating rooms, clinics, research and administrative areas are not battlefields, and we are healers not warriors, we and the teams we lead do face uncertain, ambiguous, complex and even volatile situations often enough to require implementation of those refined, high-level skills. Key Concepts(1)Like all leaders, surgeons have preferred leadership styles. Learning about, expanding, and adapting leadership style(s) to specific situations is important and impactful.(2)The most effective leaders are humble, have high integrity, think strategically, are decisive decision makers after input from their trusted professional teams.(3)Trust is the essential ingredient of leading successful teams and organizations. Building trust requires empathy, high task competency, the ability to actively listen and engage in dialogue before and during implementation of plan(s).(4)Volatile, Uncertain, Complex, and Ambiguous (VUCA) dilemmas and challenges occur. Leaders and teams who can manage stress, mobilize necessary resources, and respond in a timely fashion to each VUCA situation are most effective.(5)Disruptive behaviors in our profession are more common than ideal. Responding to unprofessional acts, managing perceptions, and redirection to acceptable behavior lessens safety risk for patients and improves team performance and professional well-being.
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More From: Journal of the Pediatric Orthopaedic Society of North America
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