Doctors are frequently the head of healthcare teams,Reference Tooke1 with leadership an emergent theme within the skills, knowledge and behaviours required of our future doctors.2 Leadership is the most influential factor in shaping organisational culture.Reference West, Armit, Loewenthal, Eckert, West and Lee3 It must be compassionate to stimulate improvement and innovation,Reference West, Eckert, Collins and Chowla4 and is the hallmark of high-quality care.5
Leadership can be conceptualised as ‘a process that occurs in a group context, involving the influence of others towards the attainment of a common goal’.Reference Northouse6 Yet leadership is better conceptualised as a ‘triad’, whereby leadership, management and followership are distinct, but inextricably linked skills, and hereafter are considered as one.Reference Swanwick7,Reference McKimm and Vogan8
Leadership has been formally recognised as a responsibility for all doctors since 2012,9 and is gradually being integrated into both undergraduate10 and postgraduate medical curricula.11 To help guide trainees’ development within these domains, the Faculty of Medical Leadership and Management (FMLM) have produced standards for medical professionals12 that clearly outline four key domains for doctors:
(1) A doctor's ability to know and understand themselves and their impact on others.
(2) A doctor's ability to know when to lead and follow, and how to establish and lead teams.
(3) A doctor's ability to understand and positively contribute to the strategic direction and operational delivery of their organisation.
(4) A doctor's ability to understand and positively contribute to the healthcare system.
Despite this initiative, the relevance and importance of leadership development is yet to be fully embraced by the medical profession. It is often still perceived as an ‘optional extra’ within medical training,Reference Clark13 and an unpopular, unrewarding and risky ‘add-on’.Reference Powell and Davies14 This lack of external validation, and outdated traditional view of medical professionalism, compromises the development of so-called ‘willing hybrids’, and the integration of leadership and managerialism as a legitimate and essential aspect of medical professionalism.Reference Creed, Dejordy and Lok15,Reference McGivern, Currie, Ferlie, Fitzgerald and Waring16
The argument for strong medical leadership within healthcare organisations is well defined.Reference Goodall and Stoller17,Reference Sarto and Veronesi18 Mental health services face unprecedented challenges on an almost daily basis. Doctors must be engaged in leadershipReference Dickinson and Ham19 and with their organisations as a whole.Reference Spurgeon, Mazelan and Barwell20 They must be capable of understanding and overcoming the volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguousReference Bennett and Lemoine21 nature of providing not only health, but also social care, within an increasingly integrated systems-based approach.
Leadership development, therefore, is crucial, yet far less well explored. There is little robust evidence for the effectiveness of specific leadership development programmes, with a proliferation of diverse interventions throughout medical training and healthcare as a whole.Reference West, Armit, Loewenthal, Eckert, West and Lee3
It is clear, however, that the systematic integration of basic leadership development for all doctors needs to be embedded throughout postgraduate medical training, supplemented by enhanced and advanced opportunities for aspiring medical leaders, and that trainees themselves need to realise and accept leadership responsibility.
This article is for psychiatric trainees, trainers and mental health organisations. It builds on the already established position highlighting the positive impact of psychiatrists on leadership and management.Reference Perry and Mason22 It provides an introduction to the importance of leadership development within postgraduate medical training, the theory that should underpin its delivery, and the opportunities for both informal and formal leadership development available to psychiatric trainees within postgraduate medical training throughout the UK.
Leadership development theory
Healthcare, like many other industries, often falls victim to the ‘great training robbery’.Reference Beer, Finnstrom and Schrader23 Organisations frequently support and encourage individuals to undertake externally provided leadership development programmes, and yet often fail to provide appropriate conditions on their return for them to contextualise and apply their learning within their clinical environment. Although this can be successful in developing their knowledge, skills and competencies, it effectively sets them up to fail, and leads to the continuation of entrenched and established ways of working.Reference Edmondson, Woolley, Easterby-Smith and Lyles24
If exclusively developed within the ‘classroom’, development will largely remain ‘horizontal’,Reference Petrie25 and leaders will fail to learn how to change and adapt to ever-changing circumstances.Reference Beer, Finnstrom and Schrader23 Alternatively, an ‘in vivo’ approach, with the right conditions coordinated throughout a programme, can harness ‘vertical’ leadership development through the delivery of ‘heat experiences’, ‘colliding perspectives’ and ‘elevated sense-making’.Reference Petrie26
Heat experiences involve organisations taking calculated risks, and exposing leaders, who themselves must take a risk, to complex uncomfortable first-time challenges. Here, they are forced to grow, not just because they want to, but because there is a chance of failure, people are watching, and results matter. They are ‘the what’ that compels leaders to disrupt and disorient their traditional thinking styles, to discover new and better ways to make sense of the challenges they face. Caution must be excised, however, to get the ‘temperature right’, and control the heat within a safe space, with the right support, available at the right time, to help the individual stay within that learning ‘sweet spot’. Importantly, there also needs to be an appropriate level of both individual and organisational tolerance of failure.Reference Waltz27
Colliding perspectives expand the number of lenses through which a leader can analyse complexity and challenge their existing mental models.Reference Isles and Sutherland28 Individuals are encouraged to view the world through the eyes of different stakeholders, including that of patients, carers and other members of the multidisciplinary team, and by standing in their shoes, learn to identify and manage conflicting paradigms. Ideally combined with peer coaching, partnered with different disciplines, these colliding perspectives provide ‘the who’ that is inclusive and embraces a range of diverse thought.Reference Diaz-Uda, Medina and Schill29
Elevated sense-making is the final piece, ‘the how’, that leads to transformational change.Reference Rooke and Torbert30 Not only must structured reflection (through reflective practice groups or action learning sets) be facilitated to allow leaders to reflect on their development over time and integrate their experiences with new found perspectives, but their development should be guided by experienced coaches or mentors.
It is vital that these three conditions are provided within postgraduate medical training, whether through activities embedded informally within the work environment, or formally via a targeted approach within leadership development programmes. Although value can still be extracted from opportunities that do not provide these conditions, leadership talent will remain untapped and dormant within healthcare organisations unless these are met.Reference Rafferty and Till31
Informal leadership development
The common perception of leadership as an optional extra remains pervasive throughout the medical workforce. Combined with a ‘curriculum lag’, whereby there is a delay in implementing and adopting the latest evidence into training, the development of leadership competencies remains somewhat tokenistic.Reference Till, Anandaram, Dapaah, Ibrahim, Kansagra and Prasad32 The stars are aligning, however, and the importance of leadership development in both undergraduate and postgraduate medical curricula is slowly being realised.Reference Till, McKimm and Swanwick33
The message is clear. Leadership development does not begin or end at any particular stage of training. Leadership is for all doctors, at every stage, and should not be postponed until doctors are formally appointed to a leadership or management position. Leadership is rather a developmental process on a lifelong continuum, with individuals nurtured to help recognise and fulfil leadership roles, especially in the earliest of stages of their careers.Reference Swanwick34
Everyday leadership experiences are commonplace within psychiatric clinical settings, where decision-making is complex and ethical tensions arise through divergent views, roles and responsibilities within teams.Reference Silva, Till and Adshead35 Although often undervalued, these present opportune leadership development experiences where, among a range of other activities, leadership can be developed through acute crisis situations, multidisciplinary meetings, mentoring junior colleagues, medical education, clinical governance and quality improvement projects. It is important to recognise, name and make sense of these everyday leadership experiences within training, through supervision, and allow trainees to recognise the value of ‘little l’ leadership within their teams.Reference Bohmer36
More formal opportunities also exist through representative roles available locally, regionally and nationally, that can all lead on to providing more enhanced leadership experiences and the three primary conditions of vertical leadership development in their own right. Likewise, voluntary and additional professional activities can provide excellent leadership experience. For example, roles available within Royal Colleges, special interest groups, trade unions, healthcare regulators, the General Medical Council, or as a governor for healthcare and affiliated organisations.
Irrespective of the particular opportunity, whether formal or informal, obtaining feedback is critical for gaining insight into the trainees’ own perception of their leadership capabilities, and the perceptions held by others of their behaviours and performance.
Integral tools within psychiatric training for facilitating such structured feedback are the Mini-Peer Assessment Tool and Direct Observation of Non-Clinical Skills (DONCS) workplace-based assessments. These are used across the General Medical Council-approved curricula for both core and specialty psychiatric training within the UK, to assess a trainees performance and allow trainees to demonstrate their leadership capabilities.37,38
Originally founded on The CanMEDS 2005 Physician Competency framework,Reference Frank39 DONCS are applicable to a range of diverse non-clinical skills, and structuring feedback on leadership experiences around the seven domains can at times feel convoluted and ambiguous.
Table 1 has been conceptualised from the evidence base to help suggest key competencies for psychiatric leaders within a DONCS assessment, and aims to support both trainees and trainers attaining and delivering feedback.Reference Frank39–42
DONCS, Direct Observation of Non-Clinical Skills.
Formal leadership development
There are a plethora of leadership development programmes, schemes and other opportunities available throughout the UK. This can be confusing for both trainees and trainers alike, occurring both in and out of training programmes, with a diverse range of requirements, levels of involvement and financial commitment.
Attempting to provide a brief description of these opportunities, Table 2 outlines a sample of the variety of leadership and management training that is currently available to psychiatric trainees within the UK. It is important to remember, however, that there is an almost constantly evolving stream of new opportunities depending on interests and geography, and that this table is likely to be quickly outdated.
NIMDTA, Northern Ireland Medical & Dental Training Agency; NHS, National Health Service; PGCert, Postgraduate Certificate; MBA, Master of Business Administration; MSc, Master of Science; PGDip, Postgraduate Diploma.
a. Predominantly non-clinical (although some do allow limited ongoing clinical activity), and therefore often require an extension to training via out-of-programme experience approval.
Such formal leadership development could be conceptualised through a tiered approach (Fig. 1). Firstly, basic generic professional capabilities are provided in leadership for all doctors via an integrated approach within local training programmes. A second tier then provides enhanced local and regional leadership development offers for future service and divisional leaders. Then finally, at the upper tier, nationally coordinated, advanced programmes and fellowships, are delivered for aspiring organisational- and system-level leaders.
Discussion
It is important to note that leadership development does not suit a one-size-fits-all approach, and that the evidence does not suggest that any particular activity should be completed before another.Reference West, Armit, Loewenthal, Eckert, West and Lee3
Up to 90% of learning occurs informally, through often spontaneous, unstructured activities embedded within the work environment.Reference Rabin62 As revealed through the developmental journeys of medical, clinical and managerial National Health Service chief executives,Reference Till and McGivern63 although formal leadership development can be transformational for some, it is insufficient in isolation.
Leadership development can often be better attributed to engagement with inspirational role models, and through the opportunistic experiences that emerging leaders seized because they could, and because they were motivated to make a difference.
For this very reason, it is vital that we overcome the shortage of role models with protected characteristics. Those in medical leadership positions must reflect the wider workforce and communities we serve.Reference Cornwall and Osborne64 It is not permissible to allow ourselves to fall victim to a complex range of social, cultural, political, economic and historical factors, whether unconsciously or otherwise, that marginalise and disempower aspiring leaders from diverse backgrounds.
Equality and diversity should be a top priority for all individuals and organisations. We must counteract the deeply embedded prejudice and discrimination that have become endemic within modern society.65 No matter what the characteristic, whether it be gender, sexual orientation, race, religion or any other characteristic that differs from the majority of leaders, these individuals do not easily fit within a structure that is coded towards the ‘snowy white peaks of the NHS’,Reference Kline66 and this must be overcome.
To build this diversity into our psychiatric leadership, and that we need within our mental health services, we must embrace the ‘lived experience’ of talented leaders regardless of demographic differences, and adopt an inclusive leadership approach.Reference Kline67,Reference Bolden, Adelaine, Warren, Gulati, Conley and Jarvis68 After all, organisations with greater inclusion, rather than merely diversity, are proven to perform better, with greater improvement and innovation, higher levels of morale, and new insights that maximise the potential of employees.Reference Bolden, Adelaine, Warren, Gulati, Conley and Jarvis68,Reference West, Kaur and Dawson69
As Vernā Myers puts it ‘Diversity is being invited to the party; inclusion is being asked to dance’.Reference Myers70
Multiple strategies can be employed to improve diversity and develop an inclusive approach,65–72 but it is no easy task. Fundamentally, it is a cultural change. All doctors, and particularly existing leaders, must engage with these groups, create a psychologically safe space, listen to their stories, confront the hard truths laid bare by their experiences, and challenge the status quo, making diversity and inclusion a personal priority. Allies from non-disadvantaged or less discriminated against groups can confront and have a powerful impact on the behaviour of others. They must not just question what privileges they have been afforded that others might not, but question and reflect on the absence of challenges and barriers that they have not had to overcome but others might. Crucially, they must then act, working within the organisation and system to counteract and mitigate these for others.
Individuals should not feel like ‘outsiders’. We should rather recognise an individual's need to belong and proactively seek role models with greater diversity, to make the inclusion of leaders with protected characteristics explicit and visible. This allows those from marginalised groups to identify with the existing leadership, see themselves as leaders and, crucially, feel empowered to seize those opportunistic leadership experiences that are so crucial for their development. In combination, active career sponsorship will be crucial to retain and advance their leadership talent, with mentorship being a powerful mechanism for both the individual and the organisation.Reference Bolden, Adelaine, Warren, Gulati, Conley and Jarvis68,Reference Thomas73
It truly is an inclusive leadership approach that is required. Demographic diversity in isolation, is insufficient. Active role-modelling and the support of key allies in existing leadership positions is essential to provide equitable access to formal and informal leadership development.
Just as we would expect within clinical practice, trainees of all backgrounds must be supported by experienced trainers who expose them to increasingly uncomfortable challenges, yet who provide them with the psychological safety net to take risks, experiment and develop ‘on the job’.
Conclusions
Mental health services face unprecedented challenges on an almost daily basis. To survive in this world, and lead quality improvement towards more preventative, holistic and personalised care, doctors must develop a deep understanding of leadership and effectively demonstrate the core values and behaviours expected of medical professionals.
Greater attention must be paid towards medical leadership development and an inclusive approach, whereby all doctors, from every background, are supported to advance. This has never been more important. The view of leadership development being an optional extra within medicine, or a skill set to be developed later in a medical professional's career, is outdated.
No matter which one of the many diverse interventions are pursued, doctors must engage with, and be supported in, both informal and formal leadership development. This is a collective responsibility, and much more must be done to ensure equity of access to leadership development for all, from the earliest of stages in a doctor's career.
About the authors
Dr Alex Till (MBChB, MRCPsych, MSc, MBA) is a Specialty Registrar in Forensic Psychiatry with Health Education England – North West, UK. Dr Radhika Sen (BSc, MBChB, MRCPsych) is a Consultant Psychiatrist in General Adult and Old Age Psychiatry with Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust, UK; and a Leadership and Management Fellow (2019/20) with the Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK. Dr Helen Crimlisk (FRCPsych, MSc, FAcadMEd) is Deputy Medical Director of Sheffield Health and Social Care NHS Foundation Trust, UK; an Associate Registrar for Leadership and Management with the Royal College of Psychiatrists, UK; and a Generation Q Fellow with The Health Foundation, UK.
Author contributions
We confirm that all authors meet the four ICMJE criteria for authorship, being equally involved in the design, drafting and revision of the article.
Declaration of interest
None.
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