Enhancing health leadership performance using neurotherapy
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Issue Date
2018
Authors
Swingle, Paul G.
Hartney, Elizabeth
License
Subject
Neurofeedback
Leadership
Medical personnel
Leadership
Medical personnel
Abstract
The discovery of neuroplasticity means the brain can change, functionally, in response to the environment and to learning. While individuals can develop harmful patterns of brain activity in response to stressors, they can also learn to modify or control neurological conditions associated with specific behaviors. Neurotherapy is one way of changing brain functioning to modify troubling conditions which can impair leadership performance, through responding to feedback on their own brain activity, and enhancing optimal leadership functioning through learning to maximize such cognitive strengths as mental efficiency, focus, creativity, perseverance, and executive functioning. The present article outlines the application of the concept of optimal performance training to organizational leadership in a healthcare context, by describing approaches to neurotherapy and illustrating their application through a case study of a health leader learning to overcome the neurological and emotional sequelae of workplace stress and trauma.
Description
The definitive version of record of this article is available at https://doi.org/10.1177/0840470417751158.