Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature

Kjeld Harald Aij, Sofia Rapsaniotis VU University Medical Center, Division Acute Care and Surgery, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Abstract: As health care organizations face pressures to improve quality and efficiency while reducing costs, leaders are adopting management techniques and tools used in man...

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Main Authors: Aij KH, Rapsaniotis S
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2017-01-01
Series:Journal of Healthcare Leadership
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/leadership-requirements-for-lean-versus-servant-leadership-in-health-c-peer-reviewed-article-JHL
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spelling doaj-16eaac75a7f64001b5d66ff88a60b87c2020-11-24T23:33:05ZengDove Medical PressJournal of Healthcare Leadership1179-32012017-01-01Volume 911430916Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literatureAij KHRapsaniotis SKjeld Harald Aij, Sofia Rapsaniotis VU University Medical Center, Division Acute Care and Surgery, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Abstract: As health care organizations face pressures to improve quality and efficiency while reducing costs, leaders are adopting management techniques and tools used in manufacturing and other industries, especially Lean. Successful Lean leaders appear to use a coaching leadership style that shares underlying principles with servant leadership. There is little information about specific similarities and differences between Lean and servant leaderships. We systematically reviewed the literature on Lean leadership, servant leadership, and health care and performed a comparative analysis of attributes using Russell and Stone’s leadership framework. We found significant overlap between the two leadership styles, although there were notable differences in origins, philosophy, characteristics and behaviors, and tools. We conclude that both Lean and servant leaderships are promising models that can contribute to the delivery of patient-centered, high-value care. Servant leadership may provide the means to engage and develop employees to become successful Lean leaders in health care organizations. Keywords: management, leadership attributes, efficiency, patient-centered, high-value carehttps://www.dovepress.com/leadership-requirements-for-lean-versus-servant-leadership-in-health-c-peer-reviewed-article-JHLLeanleadershiphealthcare
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aij KH
Rapsaniotis S
spellingShingle Aij KH
Rapsaniotis S
Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature
Journal of Healthcare Leadership
Lean
leadership
healthcare
author_facet Aij KH
Rapsaniotis S
author_sort Aij KH
title Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature
title_short Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature
title_full Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature
title_fullStr Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature
title_full_unstemmed Leadership requirements for Lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature
title_sort leadership requirements for lean versus servant leadership in health care: a systematic review of the literature
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Journal of Healthcare Leadership
issn 1179-3201
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Kjeld Harald Aij, Sofia Rapsaniotis VU University Medical Center, Division Acute Care and Surgery, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Abstract: As health care organizations face pressures to improve quality and efficiency while reducing costs, leaders are adopting management techniques and tools used in manufacturing and other industries, especially Lean. Successful Lean leaders appear to use a coaching leadership style that shares underlying principles with servant leadership. There is little information about specific similarities and differences between Lean and servant leaderships. We systematically reviewed the literature on Lean leadership, servant leadership, and health care and performed a comparative analysis of attributes using Russell and Stone’s leadership framework. We found significant overlap between the two leadership styles, although there were notable differences in origins, philosophy, characteristics and behaviors, and tools. We conclude that both Lean and servant leaderships are promising models that can contribute to the delivery of patient-centered, high-value care. Servant leadership may provide the means to engage and develop employees to become successful Lean leaders in health care organizations. Keywords: management, leadership attributes, efficiency, patient-centered, high-value care
topic Lean
leadership
healthcare
url https://www.dovepress.com/leadership-requirements-for-lean-versus-servant-leadership-in-health-c-peer-reviewed-article-JHL
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