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Surgical leadership: the British concept

Surgical leadership: the British concept
Surgical leadership: the British concept

In the UK all surgeons need to have leadership skills as, despite the increasing importance of team management, the consultant surgeon still has overall responsibility for the patient under their care. Poor care is evident when clinical leadership fails. The UK hospital system is non-hierarchical within the consultant body. The clinical surgical manager in a hospital may not be the most senior clinician and the role will often rotate. The manager may or may not have the characteristics of a leader, and very often surgical leaders in a hospital may have no formal role. They are, however, essential to the functioning of the service. Nationally the roles in which professional leadership may reside are numerous. The country has multiple Surgical Royal Colleges and innumerable specialty associations and sub specialty associations all of which have councils and presidents and the multiple specialty and sub-specialty associations normally will have an annual meeting. In the long term this is probably unsustainable and although consolidation is desirable it is hard to achieve. In summary, good surgical leadership is found in many settings in the UK, some in formal roles within hospitals, some in the colleges and specialty associations and sometimes in individuals with no formal role but the capacity to make things happen.

2364-7485
65-67
Primrose, John N.
d85f3b28-24c6-475f-955b-ec457a3f9185
Primrose, John N.
d85f3b28-24c6-475f-955b-ec457a3f9185

Primrose, John N. (2019) Surgical leadership: the British concept. Innovative surgical sciences, 4 (2), 65-67. (doi:10.1515/iss-2019-0006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

In the UK all surgeons need to have leadership skills as, despite the increasing importance of team management, the consultant surgeon still has overall responsibility for the patient under their care. Poor care is evident when clinical leadership fails. The UK hospital system is non-hierarchical within the consultant body. The clinical surgical manager in a hospital may not be the most senior clinician and the role will often rotate. The manager may or may not have the characteristics of a leader, and very often surgical leaders in a hospital may have no formal role. They are, however, essential to the functioning of the service. Nationally the roles in which professional leadership may reside are numerous. The country has multiple Surgical Royal Colleges and innumerable specialty associations and sub specialty associations all of which have councils and presidents and the multiple specialty and sub-specialty associations normally will have an annual meeting. In the long term this is probably unsustainable and although consolidation is desirable it is hard to achieve. In summary, good surgical leadership is found in many settings in the UK, some in formal roles within hospitals, some in the colleges and specialty associations and sometimes in individuals with no formal role but the capacity to make things happen.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 24 April 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 May 2019
Published date: June 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 436125
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436125
ISSN: 2364-7485
PURE UUID: e73f8af3-d97e-44b8-a4fb-00e765c60c03
ORCID for John N. Primrose: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2069-7605

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 29 Nov 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:40

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