American Association for Physician Leadership

Quality and Risk

The Art and Science of Developing Physician Leaders: A Program Template with Tangible Outcomes

Mitchell Kusy, PhD | Steve Wiesner, MD

November 8, 2021


Abstract:

“As a physician leader, I never want others to learn how to lead the way I did: by being thrown into the cauldron of a leadership position with little preparation, understanding, evidence, and application.” As designers of physician leadership development programs, we heard this lament so often it became the robust fuel that led us to design a physician leadership development program that was not only strategic and operational, but also user-friendly and fun.




“As a physician leader, I never want others to learn how to lead the way I did: by being thrown into the cauldron of a leadership position with little preparation, understanding, evidence, and application.”

As designers of physician leadership development programs, we heard this lament so often it became the robust fuel that led us to design a physician leadership development program that was not only strategic and operational, but also user-friendly and fun.

Building Blocks of Change

For our large national healthcare system client, we engaged both cutting-edge and seminal research, as well as state-of-the-art-and-science practices. The primary building blocks we used to make physician learning and application as effective as possible were:

  • Emotional perspectives demonstrated by setting the stage for how the “self” needs to be grounded for effective leadership.

  • Cognitive understanding as evidenced by insights developed in the program.

  • Behavioral changes by applying researched and benchmarked practices for leading operationally and strategically.

From these building blocks, we helped our client envision three instruments of physician leadership change (self, team, and organizational) for the two primary work groups: chiefs of professional services and heads of medical departments.

Within these three domains, we identified the general learning content and the specific modules associated with this content (see Figure 1) through our client’s extensive needs assessment process. We used this needs assessment to align the content with the most cutting-edge and evidence-based research.

Figure 1. The overall plan of instruments of change, content, and methods

Learning Approaches Physician Leaders Need

Physicians have been educated primarily in a didactic mode. This is not the optimal way to teach and learn! Research on effective leadership demonstrates that when the pedagogy incorporates three contexts — one’s experiences, a variety of teaching approaches, and assessment — the application of learning to the field environment increases.

We facilitated seven 1½-day workshop modules over 14 months. Our strategy of action learning enabled physician leaders to bring their core challenges and opportunities to “class.” This is the fuel that develops critical insights and the emotional, cognitive, and behavioral contexts of learning and application.

The settings for this learning and action included:

  • Large-group problem-solving discussions.

  • Small-team collaborations to adapt learning.

  • Reflection, debriefs, and application from assessment instruments (e.g., MBTI, Campbell-Hallam Team Development Survey, 360-degree leader feedback, conflict management profiles).

  • A combination of individual coaching and team coaching.

  • Pre- and post-readings that struck a balance between research evidence and practice applications.

  • Retrospective evaluations of each module to document successes and applications.

  • A real-time, real-work simulation designed to use the experiences of physician leaders.

  • One hour “Lunch-and-Learn” sessions in which each physician leader shared their learning, challenges, and opportunities with colleagues.

  • Incorporation of key leaders from operational areas (e.g., HR, IT, finance, service and access, etc.) to partner with the co-facilitators for a better understanding of both the operational and strategic importance of these areas.

Content Driven by Needs Assessment and Benchmarked Practices

Rather than allowing subject areas to drive the content, we designed the content around nine core questions that emanated from the needs assessment. Participants appreciated this “fresh” approach to learning: answering their key questions. Below are the core questions and how they are woven into the content.

  1. Is there a best leadership style?

    • Researchers identified four main leadership styles among top-performing leaders. The most effective leaders demonstrated all four styles.(1)

    • The focus here is on when it is best to use each of these four styles. Style flexibility helps leaders avoid “over-leading” or “under-leading.”

  2. What is emotional intelligence and does it really influence performance?

    • Emotional intelligence is not about nice-to-have “soft skills.” Studies demonstrate that leaders who have high emotional intelligence outperform their counterparts by 15–20% in reaching annual targets.(2)

    • The four factors of emotional intelligence (self-awareness, self-management, social awareness, and relationship management) affect results.

  3. How do I motivate others?

    • Whether leading peers, direct reports, or a boss, motivation is something we think we know how to do, but often not to the degree we wish.

    • In a 15-year study with 26 teams in seven firms, researchers found feedback is an often-neglected motivator.(3) Feedback on progress toward a goal, known as the “progress principle,” is one of several motivators explored.

  4. How do I build trust?

    • Trust may be difficult to define, but we certainly know it when we see it.

    • In a study of 90 organizations — 60 for-profit and 30 non-profit — researchers found that the main determinant of trust is reliability.(4) You always know where the leader stands and where they are “coming from.”

    • Leaders learn to gain the confidence of their organization’s professionals through trust-building.

  5. What are the “best” decision-making styles?

    • The five most effective decision-making styles and the context that works best for each style are explored.

    • The focus is on identifying situations that work best for each style.

  6. How do I build the best high-performing teams possible?

    • Many factors influence team success; one of the most overlooked strategies is establishing and maintaining a clear and elevating goal.

    • In one research study of 75 teams across the United States, including cardiovascular surgery teams, the IBM PC team, the 1966 Notre Dame championship football team, the team from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the McDonald´s Chicken McNuggets team, the investigators found one common characteristic: a clear and elevating goal.(5)

    • This debriefing discusses how to form and maintain commitment to this elevating goal, along with other factors that influence team success.

  7. Does respect impact performance?

    • In dozens of studies, including our own, “everyday civility” and respectful engagement in the workplace significantly affect performance.(6)

    • Studies demonstrate that more civil work environments have less absenteeism, less turnover, increased financial results, greater employee satisfaction, increased customer satisfaction, and improved organizational culture.

    • Other researchers have discovered that between 12%(7) and 30%(8) of targets of incivility quit — and these often are your highest producers.

    • Our study demonstrated that 94% of 400 leaders work with toxic people; the best way to deal with them is through the 3-point systems approach that is discussed in this debriefing.(9)

    • This session helps identify critical systems perspectives that support “everyday civility” and reduce the power of toxic behaviors.

  8. How do leaders improve their negotiation savvy and conflict management skills?

    • Leaders negotiate and manage conflict every day. Unfortunately, we often rely on the “same old ways” that keep us from being as successful as possible during negotiations and conflict resolution.

    • Effective negotiation includes such factors as a best alternative to a negotiated agreement, understanding irrational escalations, mutual interests, and trade-offs. Additionally, it helps us recognize the costs and benefits of different conflict management styles.

    • One of the most significant communication areas involves managing difficult conversations — a focus area from content and practice perspectives.

  9. How can I best manage performance?

    • Of all the things leaders do, managing performance is often the most dreaded and least frequent leadership activity.

    • This debriefing shares how to conduct three types of performance conversations: (1) the poor performer conversation; (2) the courageous conversation regarding toxic behaviors; and (3) the star performer conversation (yes, they need feedback, too).

It’s Not Our Program — It’s Theirs!

It was important to have an advisory board that consisted of key physician leader stakeholders who collaboratively designed the entire program with the facilitators. In addition, this advisory board supported formative changes every quarter, so the program addressed all challenges and opportunities. With the advisory board, we integrated the needs assessment previously conducted, the evidence-based literature, our experiences based on benchmarked work with physician leaders, and methods to develop insights that translate into successful practice.

We discovered that without senior leadership’s consistent interest, support, and suggestions throughout the physician leadership development program, this program would not have been nearly as successful. And this was not just lip service; they provided time, resources, funding, and outstanding participants to make this program hum to the tune of success.

Results Every Step Along the Way

We engaged two unique types of evaluation methods to assess the learning and application throughout the program using the retrospective evaluation and the capstone real-time work simulation.

The retrospective evaluation is based on the research of Preziosi and Legg,(10) who demonstrated that in traditional pre-post assessments of learning, participants often don’t know how much they don’t know — until after they have completed their training. Therefore, after each 1½-day workshop module, we asked participants to rate their learning pre- and post- at the “post” stage in a retrospective kind of way. Figure 2 provides a rich example of this module.

Figure 2. A sample retrospective evaluation

This retrospective evaluation is a method that almost 100% of our clients find appealing, user-friendly, and most meaningful. Figure 3 demonstrates results from one of the modules.

Figure 3. Retrospective evaluation results from one of the workshop modules

The second aspect of uniqueness here was that we shared the results at the beginning of each new module approximately 45 days later. This reinforced their learning and, more importantly, provided a vehicle for discussion. We recall quite vividly that participants shared not only their successes in engaging this learning over the previous 45 days, but also the obstacles they experienced in trying to apply the content. These conversations about the obstacles experienced provided further fuel for team learning and application.

The capstone real-time work simulation further cemented the learning and application by engaging the content from the entire 14-month program into a day-long session. Here, participants gathered in workshop teams of four to collectively problem-solve 35 case scenarios designed to mimic the real work they were doing as physician leaders.

Because of the complex nature of the scenarios, none had just one resolution to the case dilemmas. Instead, we identified from the evidence-based literature, the most effective ways each dilemma could be resolved. After each of the teams identified solutions to each case scenario, we then shared what experts identified as top solutions. Comparing their paths to resolution with the experts was profound to say the least. Many participants wanted to share this exercise with their own teams.

Beyond these retrospective and real-time evaluations of learning, what delighted leaders of participants in the program was that participants engaged them early on, asking for their help and guidance, rather than waiting when issues became significant challenges. Leaders discovered that these early interventions often turned these challenges into opportunities for both professional growth and organization development.

To Be a Leader Is to Teach

We discovered the power of teaching physician leaders how to extend their reach with this learning-to-learn model. Through content and exercises that promoted their application and using this application to teach others, they learned how to do it better.

Think of it this way: When we teach someone something, we often enhance our own abilities and applications. That is precisely what happened in this physician leadership development program. They reported being significantly better leaders when encouraged to be transparent about what they were learning and applying. So, we encouraged all physician leaders to teach others what they were learning and experiencing from the physician leadership program.

We created a safe and confidential environment for the participants, allowing them to share both positive and negative experiences based on observations of the behaviors and actions of physician leaders with whom they had interacted.

A significant learning was what “not to do” as a result of the negative experiences the attendees had observed among some of their physician leaders. Some examples of what they observed included leaders shutting down those with different viewpoints, using coercion to obtain buy-in and results, and an inability to share their vision, especially the reason change was necessary. Positive experiences and learnings included being transparent at team meetings, sharing a new strategy that was just learned, and applying practices now, and welcoming feedback from those they lead.

This physician leadership development program resulted in successful performance practices that were evidence-based and extended throughout the organization by the physician leaders themselves. They engaged the mantra: To be a leader is to teach. If you’re not teaching, you’re not leading!

The authors wish to thank Dr. Elizabeth Holloway for her engagement in this program.

References

  1. Hersey and Blanchard Situational Leadership Model: Adapting the Leadership Style to the Follower. Business-to-you.com March 28, 2020. www.business-to-you.com/hersey-blanchard-situational-leadership-model .

  2. Goleman D. Leadership That Gets Results. Harvard Business Review. March-April 2000. https://hbr.org/2000/03/leadership-that-gets-results .

  3. Amabile T and Kramer S. The Progress Principle: Using Small Wins to Ignite Joy, Engagement, and Creativity at Work. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business Review Press; 2011.

  4. Bennis W. On Becoming a Leader. Philadelphia: Basic Books; 2009.

  5. Larson CE and LaFasto FM. Teamwork: What Must Go Right / What Can Go Wrong. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications; 1989.

  6. Kusy M, Holloway E. Toxic Workplace: Managing Toxic Personalities and Their Systems of Power. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. 2009.

  7. Pearson C and Porath C. The Cost of Bad Behavior: How Incivility Is Damaging Your Business and What To Do About It. New York: Penguin Group; 2009.

  8. Rosenstein A and O’Daniel M. (2005, January). Disruptive Behaviors and Clinical Outcomes: Perceptions of Nurses and Physicians. Am J Nurs. 2005 Jan;105(1):54–64.

  9. Kusy M. (2017). Why I Don’t Work Here Anymore: A Leader’s Guide To Offset the Financial and Emotional Costs of Toxic Employees. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press; 2017.

  10. Preziosi RC and Legg LM. (2013). Add ‘Then’ Testing To Prove Training’s Effectiveness. AGRIS. 20(5):48–49.

Mitchell Kusy, PhD

Corporate Psychologist, Kusy Consulting; and Professor, Graduate School of Leadership & Change, Antioch University, Minneapolis, Minnesota, and Palm Springs, California


Steve Wiesner, MD

Steve Wiesner, MD, is a medical advisor for PeerWell and a consultant with the Colorado Permanente Medical Group supporting their disability management program. He was the assistant physician-in-chief of the Kaiser Permanente East Bay Medical Center, Physician Human Resource Department and was the chief of the East Bay Occupational Health Departments in Oakland and Richmond, California. He also served as physician advisor for the Kaiser Permanente National Integrated Disability Management (IDM) Program. sfsqjd@gmail.com

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