1
WHAT DO WE MEAN BY LEADERSHIP?
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
When you have completed this chapter you should be able to:
1.1 Describe what is meant by the term āleadershipā
1.2 Discuss the importance of leadership in the world of health and social care today
1.3 Recognise the different forms that leadership can take
1.4 Identify what makes a positive leadership experience.
WHAT DOES THE TERM āLEADERSHIPā MEAN TO YOU?
The fact that you are reading this book suggests that you are interested in leadership and want to know more about being a leader. You may be a student who is about to qualify or be early in your career in health and social care but whatever the reason, this book will help you understand some of the key concepts and knowledge that will help you unleash your potential for leadership.
ACTIVITY 1.1
Identify a situation recently where you took the lead. This could be in your personal life or at work. What things did you do or say in order to āleadā?
You may already be a leader, perhaps as captain of a sports team or youth club leader, or you may be a course representative at university or teach a class at your local sports centre. You may have taken on the role of organising a social event at work or leading a Continuing Professional Development (CPD) session as part of staff development. In any of these situations you will have enabled people to move forward together towards the same goal, not because you are forcing them to do so but because they want to. That is leadership.
Leadership skills are like any other skills; they need to be practised and refined in order to develop. Experience will shape not only the leadership skills themselves but the ways in which you use them. It will also allow you to recognise opportunities where you can take on a leadership role.
SO WHAT IS LEADERSHIP?
There are many different ways in which leadership can be, and has been, defined. What is widely recognised, however, in the simplest terms, is that in order to be a leader you have to have followers.
Rost and Barker (2000) provide us with a definition which includes influence, intention, responsibility and change, as well as the creation of a shared purpose: āLeadership is an influence relationship among leaders and followers who intend real changes and outcomes that reflect their shared purposeā. This definition fits well with leadership in health and social care environments today.
ACTIVITY 1.2
Reflect on the place where you work or study and identify who you consider to be leaders. Write down why you think they are leaders and which part of the organisation they work in.
It is a common misconception that leaders are primarily in the top layers of an organisation; leaders can exist at all levels within organisations and society. In addition, leadership is not confined just to people working in identified leadership positions. Anyone can take the lead at some point. Jones and Jenkins (2006) identify that leadership can relate to small actions that impact on just those closest to them or much larger actions that impact on a wide range of people across, or even beyond, an organisation.
ACTIVITY 1.3
Think about what you have been doing over the past month, in your personal life or at work. Identify as many opportunities as you can where you either took the lead or had the opportunity to do so.
You may well have been surprised by the number of opportunities you identified in Activity 1.3, particularly by including your personal life as well as your work life. It is important to remember that many leadership skills are transferable between these two contexts.
Every experience of leadership can be different because it depends on the context as well as the skills of the person in the leadership role. However, it is very valuable for you to reflect on what makes a positive or negative experience, as this can influence how you utilise and develop your own leadership skills to ensure you are effective as a leader.
From the number of texts and articles available it is evident that leadership continues to be a source of interest to many people and it is still evolving as a discipline.
WHY IS LEADERSHIP SO IMPORTANT IN HEALTH AND SOCIAL CARE TODAY?
Health and social care has always experienced change over the years; however, the pace of change and increasing complexity of the services being delivered mean that effective leadership is more important than ever. With globalisation, society has much more social, cultural and racial diversity today and there is an increasingly ageing population who require more intervention, because long-term conditions often have more complications (Freshwater et al., 2009).
Technology is becoming more advanced and affordable, and care is shifting away from institutional settings to care closer to home ā for example the increasing use of telemedicine to avoid travelling to hospital. In addition, the size, shape and number of organisations involved in delivering care in the public, private and voluntary sectors has increased, such as the emergence of social enterprises and more condition-specific charities.
As a result of these changes, the approaches to care are evolving and an increasing number of different roles and functions have emerged in health and social care, such as assistant practitioner, family case worker or extended scope practitioner. This has also meant the approach to leadership has had to change, because there is a need for more leaders at all levels in order to ensure that patients and clients receive the best possible care. Instead of the strict hierarchy of previous decades, the current health and care services are less about the position or authority of an individual within an organisation and more about a leadership approach which enables effective change and enables staff to think and behave differently to bring about improvements for service users and carers. The current challenge within health and care services is to enable each individual member of staff to be actively engaged in recognising when and where they can make a leadership contribution (Jones & Jenkins, 2006).
Chapter 7 broadly considers the context in which you are, or will be, working; an understanding of which is important in order to lead effectively. It outlines the current macrostructure and functions of the National Health Service (NHS) and care services and explores how changes in government policies and the financial environment have led to new roles and ways of working within the NHS and local authorities. However, different systems and processes are in place in the four regions which make up the United Kingdom due to the devolution process, and a brief explanation of these is included. It is important to note, however, that the focus of control is moving away from the people who work in health and social care organisations to the service users who benefit from their services. For example, the Secretary of State for Health explicitly stated in 2011 that there would be āno decision about me, without meā and this philosophy underpinned the government White Paper, Equity and Excellence: Liberating the NHS (Department of Health, 2010a), which proposed wide-ranging changes for both health and social care in England.
Another important factor to recognise when taking on the lead in health and social care is the increasing expectations that the public have of the health and care services. Access to the plethora of information available through the internet, including the NHS Choices website, means that people are now more informed than ever before. Service users and their carers also now expect to be treated as customers in the same way they would if they were buying a product or service in a shop or online.
ACTIVITY 1.4
Write down what you think from your experience are the pros and cons of the publicās expectations of customer service from the NHS or local authorities. How might an understanding of these enable you to be a better leader?
The increasing awareness of the public in respect of health and social care issues suggests an increasing interest in their own health and wellbeing, which is really positive. However, it also creates additional challenges to those undertaking a leadership role as it changes the context in which you are working beyond the traditional boundaries of care.
INFORMAL AND FORMAL LEADERSHIP
Leadership can take many different forms, as will be discussed as you progress through this book. However, it is important to recognise that it can be both informal and formal, and that there are many different leadership styles. These will be explored in detail in Chapter 2.
ACTIVITY 1.5
Think about your past week and identify when you experienced either informal or formal leadership. What made these experiences different, or were they the same?
Formal leadership usually occurs in relation to a job role or position within an organisation. It may be that you are a designated team leader or key worker. These people are leaders because they are in a leadership position rather than because they necessarily have excellent leadership skills. Informal leadership tends to happen on an ad hoc basis; it may be short term, ...