Title: Kay Young
1Developing Leadership in NHSS
- Kay Young
- Leadership Consultant
- Scottish Government
- Health Directorates
- Kay.Young_at_scotland.gsi.gov.uk
2Outline of the session
- Leadership in general
- NHS service change agenda
- New, emerging models of leadership
- NHSS Leadership Framework, Qualities Behaviours
3Global focus on leadership
4Leadership defined
- Becoming a leader is synonymous
- with becoming yourself. Everything
- a leader does reflects who he or she is
- Bennis, 2003
- Leadership is a performing art
- a collection of practices and
- behaviours rather than a position
- Kouzes and Posner, 1997
5Leading with passion, purpose, people
6Leadingbut to what end?
- To change organisations and the systems within
them - To empower others and create cultures that
support this alteration in stance - To work with, in and through teams in de-layered
and increasingly technological environments - To change peoples mindsets and to give them
clarity of purpose by managing the meaning of
situations - To drive forward adventurous and visionary
strategies Van Maurik, 2001
7Change, complexity and ambiguity
- It is not the strongest of the species that
survive, nor the most intelligent but the one
most responsive to change - Charles Darwin
8Leadership synonymous with change
-
- Resisting change is as futile as resisting
weather, and change -relentless change - is our
weather now. It is that constant and that
unpredictable. Leaders live it and so do
organisations. - Bennis, 2003
9NHS Change Agenda
-
- The NHS in Scotland needs to change. Not
because it is in a crisis as some would have us
believe it is not but because Scotlands
health care needs are changing and we need to act
now to ensure we are ready to meet the future
challenges - Prof. David Kerr, 2005, p 3
10The shifting carpet
11New ways of delivering care
- Current view
- Geared towards acute conditions
- Hospital centred
- Doctor dependent
- Episodic care
- Disjointed care
- Reactive care
- Patient as passive recipient
- Self care infrequent
- Carers undervalued
- Low tech
- Evolving model
- Geared towards long term conditions
- Embedded in communities
- Team based
- Continuous care
- Integrated care
- Preventative care
- Patient as partner
- Self care encouraged
- Carers supported as partners
- High tech
12A way to go
13And not only thatleadership is changing
- Findings from UK research
- Heroic leadership has had its day
- New model of engaging leadership
- Leader as servant and partner leadership as a
social process - The soft stuff is the hard stuff
14The real impact of poor leadership in the NHS
15So what is leadership really about, now?
- Engaging the human spirit
- Building shared visions
- Recognising everyones strengths, contributions,
aspirations - Bringing humanity and humility in through the
front door - Being open minded and curious
- Being transparent and open
- Believing that people are not the problem.but
part of the solution! - Delivering service and health improvements
through leadership passion, purpose, people,
performance.
16Part of the NHSS leadership journey so far..
17NHSScotland Leadership Development Framework
- Scope
- Strategic coherence local space
- Strategic and distributed leadership
- Clinical and non-clinical leadership
- Team and individual
- Health and wider public sector
- Leadership and management development
- National 360 feedback tool
18LEADERSHIP QUALITIES SUMMARY
19LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT FRAMEWORK OVERVIEW
Strategic Team Development
Leadership Capacity
Front-line Leadership
Succession Planning
Future Focus
CHP Development
Personal Qualities
Service Excellence
Top Leaders Careers
Single-system development
Leadership Capability
Career Development
Culture and Behaviours
Leadership in Managed Clinical / Care Networks
Clinical Executives Development
Local Career Management
20What about clinical leadership?
21Defining clinical leadership
- Driving service improvement and the effective
management of teams to provide excellence in
patient / client care - Scottish Executive, 2005, p4
22Clinical Leaders-key role
-
- We are committed to finding better ways of
recognising the key leadership role of clinicians
from all professional backgrounds - Partnership for Care, 2003
23Key Clinical Leadership Challenges
- provide strong clinical leadership across
professional and organisational boundaries - think creatively and work collaboratively to
overcome obstacles to the service change and
health improvement - exhibit leadership behaviours that are consistent
with the leadership qualities and create an
enabling culture for managing complex change
24The dilemma leading change, whilst hold the
balance - yes..and
- Be innovative and manage risk
- Think long term and deliver results now
- Cut costs and improve staff morale
- Reduce staff numbers and develop team work
- Be flexible and respect the rules
- Collaborate and compete
- Decentralise and retain control
- Specialise and be opportunistic
- Provide low cost and deliver high quality
25Why bother?So that.
- Instead of seeing the rug being pulled from
under us, we can learn to dance on a shifting
carpet - Thomas Crum, 1987