scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Enabling relational leadership in primary healthcare settings: lessons from the DIALHS collaboration.

TLDR
Insight is provided into how leadership is currently practiced and lessons are highlighted about whether and how the approach to LD enabled a strengthening of leadership within this setting, of a system struggling to shift from a hierarchical to a more relational understanding of how to enable improvements in performance.
Abstract
Strong management and leadership competencies have been identified as critical in enhancing health system performance. While the need for strong health system leadership has been raised, an important undertaking for health policy and systems researchers is to generate lessons about how to support leadership development (LD), particularly within the crisis-prone, resource poor contexts that are characteristic of Low- and Middle-Income health systems. As part of the broader DIALHS (District Innovation and Action Learning for Health Systems Development) collaboration, this article reflects on 5 years of action learning and engagement around leadership and LD within primary healthcare (PHC) services. Working in one sub-district in Cape Town, we co-created LD processes with managers from nine PHC facilities and with the six members of the sub-district management team. Within this article, we seek to provide insights into how leadership is currently practiced and to highlight lessons about whether and how our approach to LD enabled a strengthening of leadership within this setting. Findings suggest that the sub-district is located within a hierarchical governance context, with performance monitored through the use of multiple accountability mechanisms including standard operating procedures, facility audits and target setting processes. This context presents an important constraint to the development of a more distributed, relational leadership. While our data suggest that gains in leadership were emerging, our experience is of a system struggling to shift from a hierarchical to a more relational understanding of how to enable improvements in performance, and to implement these changes in practice.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Strengthening health system leadership for better governance: what does it take?

TL;DR: Together the papers provide evidence of leadership in public hospital settings and of initiatives to strengthen leadership development, and provide some evidence of the positive potential of new forms of participatory leadership.
Journal ArticleDOI

Shocks, stress and everyday health system resilience: experiences from the Kenyan coast.

TL;DR: Examining the challenges experienced by the health system at a sub-national level in Kenya, a country that has recently undergone rapid devolution, using an ‘everyday resilience’ lens, everyday resilience seemed to emerge from strategies enacted by managers drawing on a varying combination of organizational capacities depending on the stressor and context.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organizational change and everyday health system resilience: Lessons from Cape Town, South Africa

TL;DR: A study from Cape Town, South Africa is reported that tested an existing framework of everyday health system resilience (EHSR) in examining how a local health system responded to the chronic stress of large-scale organizational change.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emergency online teaching in economic and management sciences necessitated by the covid-19 pandemic: The need for healthy relations in a rural schooling context

TL;DR: In this article, a focus group was created to facilitate focus group discussions on the adoption of emergency online teaching (EOT) in rural schools, with an emphasis on constructing positive relationships to forge sustainable learning conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interventions to strengthen the leadership capabilities of health professionals in Sub-Saharan Africa: a scoping review.

TL;DR: The findings support the need for LDPs to be accredited, better integrated into existing systems and to put greater emphasis on institutionalization and financial sustainability from their early development.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The reflective practitioner: How professionals think in action

R.J. Bogumil
TL;DR: In this article, the reflective practitioner how professionals think in action arena, searching the book that you love to read first or find an interesting book that will make you want to read.
Journal Article

Enhancing the quality and credibility of qualitative analysis.

TL;DR: This overview examines ways of enhancing the quality and credibility of qualitative analysis by dealing with three distinct but related inquiry concerns: rigorous techniques and methods for gathering and analyzing qualitative data; the credibility, competence, and perceived trustworthiness of the qualitative researcher; and the philosophical beliefs of evaluation users about such paradigm-based preferences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leadership development:: A review in context

TL;DR: A recent review examines the field of leadership development through three contextual lenses: (1) understanding the difference between leader development and leadership development ( conceptual context); (2) reviewing how state-of-the-art development is being conducted in the context of ongoing organizational work ( practice context); and (3) summarizing previous research that has implications for leadership development as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reflection and reflective practice in health professions education: a systematic review

TL;DR: A literature review was designed to evaluate the existing evidence about reflection and reflective practice and their utility in health professional education, to understand the key variables influencing this educational process, identify gaps in the evidence, and explore any implications for educational practice and research.
Related Papers (5)