The dyad leadership model : defining a new physician/nurse relationship

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Turpin, Carmel

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2019-08-13

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dyad leadership model , gender , health care , leadership , nurse role , physician role

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Health care systems across Canada continue to be challenged to meet the growing health care demands of the population. These challenges are set against the backdrop of fiscal realities that demand strong leadership that strikes a balance between providing quality and safe care and obtaining financial sustainability in the taxpayer-funded system. A leadership model that is emerging in health organizations is the dyad model that often partners a physician and a nurse administrative leader as a leadership team to have accountability and responsibility for large, complex portfolios. In an effort to determine whether the physician-nurse dyad leadership model provides for a successful leadership partnership, this study examined whether the historical social relationship between male physicians and female nurses has an impact on that leadership partnership. A qualitative research approach was taken in this study using interpretative phenomenological analysis to frame the data collection and analysis. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with six key informants which included three male physician leaders and three female nurse leaders. The findings demonstrate that the physician and nurse leaders have the ability to develop relationships when there is respect for the skills and knowledge that each brings to the partnership and where each one acknowledges there are instances and circumstances where there is a need to have confidence and trust in the ability of the partner to take the lead. The support exists for the dyad relationship and that it is an effective model in health care as it allows administrators and clinicians to draw on the other’s knowledge, skills and experience to form an interdependent leadership partnership. Keywords: Leadership, health care, physician role, nurse role, dyad leadership model, gender

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