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Examining clinical leadership in Kenyan public hospitals through the distributed leadership lens.

TLDR
Examining how middle-level leadership is practised and affected by context in Kenyan county hospitals, provides insights relevant to health care in other LMICs, and demonstrates the utility of using distributed leadership as a lens for analysing leadership in LIMC health care contexts.
Abstract
Clinical leadership is recognized as a crucial element in health system strengthening and health policy globally yet it has received relatively little attention in low and middle income countries (LMICs). Moreover, analyses of clinical leadership tend to focus on senior-level individual leaders, overlooking a wider constellation of middle-level leaders delivering health care in practice in a way affected by their health care context. Using the theoretical lens of ‘distributed leadership’, this article examines how middle-level leadership is practised and affected by context in Kenyan county hospitals, providing insights relevant to health care in other LMICs. The article is based on empirical qualitative case studies of clinical departmental leadership in two Kenyan public hospitals, drawing on data gathered through ethnographic observation, interviews and focus groups. We inductively and iteratively coded, analysed and theorized our findings. We found the distributed leadership lens useful for the purpose of analysing middle-level leadership in Kenyan hospitals, although clinical departmental leadership was understood locally in more individualized terms. Our distributed lens revealed medical and nursing leadership occurring in parallel and how only doctors in leadership roles were able to directly influence behaviour among their medical colleagues, using inter-personal skills, power and professional expertize. Finally, we found that Kenyan hospital contexts were characterized by cultures, norms and structures that constrained the way leadership was practiced. We make a theoretical contribution by demonstrating the utility of using distributed leadership as a lens for analysing leadership in LIMC health care contexts, revealing how context, power and inter-professional relationships moderate individual leaders’ ability to bring about change. Our findings, have important implications for how leadership is conceptualized and the way leadership development and training are provided in LMICs health systems.

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Citations
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Developing soft skills: exploring the feasibility of an Australian well-being program for health managers and leaders in Timor-Leste

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References
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define a leadership event as a perceived segment of action whose meaning is created by the interactions of actors involved in producing it, and present a set of innovative methods for capturing and analyzing these contextually driven processes.
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Distributed leadership as a unit of analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a taxonomy of distributed leadership is presented, in which a key defining criterion is conjoint agency, and a review of examples in the literature is provided. But the taxonomy is limited to three varieties of distributed action: concertive action, collaborative action, and collaborative action.
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