The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician success

Leadership is increasingly recognized as important in medicine. Physician leadership impacts healthcare delivery and quality. Little work has been done to determine how physician leadership in practice aligns with established models in leadership theory. We conducted 40 semi-structured, 50-minute i...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: R. Thomas Collins II, Neha J. Purkey, Meenu Singh, Alan D. DeSantis, Rania A. Sanford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2024-09-01
Series:Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pagepressjournals.org/qrmh/article/view/11519
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850058582691676160
author R. Thomas Collins II
Neha J. Purkey
Meenu Singh
Alan D. DeSantis
Rania A. Sanford
author_facet R. Thomas Collins II
Neha J. Purkey
Meenu Singh
Alan D. DeSantis
Rania A. Sanford
author_sort R. Thomas Collins II
collection DOAJ
description Leadership is increasingly recognized as important in medicine. Physician leadership impacts healthcare delivery and quality. Little work has been done to determine how physician leadership in practice aligns with established models in leadership theory. We conducted 40 semi-structured, 50-minute interviews of physicians who had achieved the rank of professor in our school of medicine and were serving, or had served, in leadership positions. We used an inductive content analysis approach to identify content categories, with leadership emerging as one such category. Subsequently, for the present study, we performed a secondary analysis of the data. To do this, we reviewed all transcripts, seeking to identify if and how participants discussed leadership in relation to success in academic medicine. Following identification of subcategories related to leadership, we performed qualitative content analysis. We then used a deductive content analysis approach to determine how participants’ discussions of leadership aligned with major leadership theories. Then, the principal investigator conducted a secondary inductive content analysis revealing leadership themes that were synthesized into a new model of physician leadership. Twenty-nine participants spontaneously discussed leadership and leadership-related topics as important to their own academic success and comprised the present study cohort. Participants identified contributors to leadership success that aligned with multiple major leadership theories, including leadership traits, skills, behaviors styles, and situational leadership. None of the leadership theories aligned completely with our physician leaders’ discussions, suggesting an alternate leadership framework was operating. Further analysis revealed a new model of leadership comprised of the “Four Cs of Physician Leadership”: character, competence, caring, and communication. Our participant group of academic physicians identified leadership capabilities as being important in their academic success. While they discussed leadership in ways that fit to varying degrees with the major leadership theories, their discussions revealed a novel, more holistic leadership framework. Further work will be beneficial to determine if this model of leadership is specific to physicians or is more generalizable.
format Article
id doaj-art-ee4a745fd69e43fb8887fd4379d9d01b
institution DOAJ
issn 2532-2044
language English
publishDate 2024-09-01
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
record_format Article
series Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
spelling doaj-art-ee4a745fd69e43fb8887fd4379d9d01b2025-08-20T02:51:06ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare2532-20442024-09-018210.4081/qrmh.2024.11519The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician successR. Thomas Collins II0Neha J. Purkey1Meenu Singh2Alan D. DeSantis3Rania A. Sanford4Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Department of Pediatrics, University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, KYDivision of Pediatric Cardiology, Department of Pediatrics, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA; Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford, Palo Alto, CA; Stanford Cardiovascular Institute, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CAGraduate School of Education, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo AltoDepartment of Communication, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KYOffice of Academic Affairs, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA Leadership is increasingly recognized as important in medicine. Physician leadership impacts healthcare delivery and quality. Little work has been done to determine how physician leadership in practice aligns with established models in leadership theory. We conducted 40 semi-structured, 50-minute interviews of physicians who had achieved the rank of professor in our school of medicine and were serving, or had served, in leadership positions. We used an inductive content analysis approach to identify content categories, with leadership emerging as one such category. Subsequently, for the present study, we performed a secondary analysis of the data. To do this, we reviewed all transcripts, seeking to identify if and how participants discussed leadership in relation to success in academic medicine. Following identification of subcategories related to leadership, we performed qualitative content analysis. We then used a deductive content analysis approach to determine how participants’ discussions of leadership aligned with major leadership theories. Then, the principal investigator conducted a secondary inductive content analysis revealing leadership themes that were synthesized into a new model of physician leadership. Twenty-nine participants spontaneously discussed leadership and leadership-related topics as important to their own academic success and comprised the present study cohort. Participants identified contributors to leadership success that aligned with multiple major leadership theories, including leadership traits, skills, behaviors styles, and situational leadership. None of the leadership theories aligned completely with our physician leaders’ discussions, suggesting an alternate leadership framework was operating. Further analysis revealed a new model of leadership comprised of the “Four Cs of Physician Leadership”: character, competence, caring, and communication. Our participant group of academic physicians identified leadership capabilities as being important in their academic success. While they discussed leadership in ways that fit to varying degrees with the major leadership theories, their discussions revealed a novel, more holistic leadership framework. Further work will be beneficial to determine if this model of leadership is specific to physicians or is more generalizable. https://www.pagepressjournals.org/qrmh/article/view/11519PhysicianleadershipMedical careersdevelopmentsuccessqualitative
spellingShingle R. Thomas Collins II
Neha J. Purkey
Meenu Singh
Alan D. DeSantis
Rania A. Sanford
The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician success
Qualitative Research in Medicine & Healthcare
Physician
leadership
Medical careers
development
success
qualitative
title The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician success
title_full The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician success
title_fullStr The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician success
title_full_unstemmed The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician success
title_short The four Cs of physician leadership: A key to academic physician success
title_sort four cs of physician leadership a key to academic physician success
topic Physician
leadership
Medical careers
development
success
qualitative
url https://www.pagepressjournals.org/qrmh/article/view/11519
work_keys_str_mv AT rthomascollinsii thefourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT nehajpurkey thefourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT meenusingh thefourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT alanddesantis thefourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT raniaasanford thefourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT rthomascollinsii fourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT nehajpurkey fourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT meenusingh fourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT alanddesantis fourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess
AT raniaasanford fourcsofphysicianleadershipakeytoacademicphysiciansuccess