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Strong leadership and teamwork drive culture and performance change: Ohio State University Medical Center 2000-2006.
Acad Med. 2008 Sep; 83(9):845-54.AM

Abstract

Several characteristics of academic health centers have the potential to create high levels of internal conflict and misalignment that can pose significant leadership challenges. In September 2000, the positions of Ohio State University (OSU) senior vice president for health sciences, dean of the medical school, and the newly created position of chief executive officer of the OSU Medical Center (OSUMC) were combined under a single leader to oversee the OSUMC. This mandate from the president and trustees was modeled after top institutions with similar structures. The leader who assumed the role was tasked with improving OSUMC's academic, clinical, and financial performance. To achieve this goal, the senior vice president and his team employed the service value chain model of improving performance, based on the premise that leadership behavior/culture drives employee engagement/satisfaction, leading to customer satisfaction and improved organizational performance. Implementing this approach was a seven-step process: (1) selecting the right leadership team, (2) assessing the challenges and opportunities, (3) setting expectations for performance and leadership behavior, (4) aligning structures and functions, (5) engaging constituents, (6) developing leadership skills, and (7) defining strategies and tracking goals. The OSUMC setting during this period provides an observational case study to examine how these stepwise changes, instituted by strong leadership and teamwork, were able to make and implement sound decisions that drove substantial and measurable improvements in the engagement and satisfaction of faculty and staff; the satisfaction of students and patients; and academic, clinical, and financial performance.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Ohio State University and OSU Medical Center, Columbus, Ohio, USA. fred.sanfilippo@emory.eduNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18728440

Citation

Sanfilippo, Fred, et al. "Strong Leadership and Teamwork Drive Culture and Performance Change: Ohio State University Medical Center 2000-2006." Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, vol. 83, no. 9, 2008, pp. 845-54.
Sanfilippo F, Bendapudi N, Rucci A, et al. Strong leadership and teamwork drive culture and performance change: Ohio State University Medical Center 2000-2006. Acad Med. 2008;83(9):845-54.
Sanfilippo, F., Bendapudi, N., Rucci, A., & Schlesinger, L. (2008). Strong leadership and teamwork drive culture and performance change: Ohio State University Medical Center 2000-2006. Academic Medicine : Journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, 83(9), 845-54. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0b013e318181d2e7
Sanfilippo F, et al. Strong Leadership and Teamwork Drive Culture and Performance Change: Ohio State University Medical Center 2000-2006. Acad Med. 2008;83(9):845-54. PubMed PMID: 18728440.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Strong leadership and teamwork drive culture and performance change: Ohio State University Medical Center 2000-2006. AU - Sanfilippo,Fred, AU - Bendapudi,Neeli, AU - Rucci,Anthony, AU - Schlesinger,Leonard, PY - 2008/8/30/pubmed PY - 2008/9/25/medline PY - 2008/8/30/entrez SP - 845 EP - 54 JF - Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges JO - Acad Med VL - 83 IS - 9 N2 - Several characteristics of academic health centers have the potential to create high levels of internal conflict and misalignment that can pose significant leadership challenges. In September 2000, the positions of Ohio State University (OSU) senior vice president for health sciences, dean of the medical school, and the newly created position of chief executive officer of the OSU Medical Center (OSUMC) were combined under a single leader to oversee the OSUMC. This mandate from the president and trustees was modeled after top institutions with similar structures. The leader who assumed the role was tasked with improving OSUMC's academic, clinical, and financial performance. To achieve this goal, the senior vice president and his team employed the service value chain model of improving performance, based on the premise that leadership behavior/culture drives employee engagement/satisfaction, leading to customer satisfaction and improved organizational performance. Implementing this approach was a seven-step process: (1) selecting the right leadership team, (2) assessing the challenges and opportunities, (3) setting expectations for performance and leadership behavior, (4) aligning structures and functions, (5) engaging constituents, (6) developing leadership skills, and (7) defining strategies and tracking goals. The OSUMC setting during this period provides an observational case study to examine how these stepwise changes, instituted by strong leadership and teamwork, were able to make and implement sound decisions that drove substantial and measurable improvements in the engagement and satisfaction of faculty and staff; the satisfaction of students and patients; and academic, clinical, and financial performance. SN - 1938-808X UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18728440/Strong_leadership_and_teamwork_drive_culture_and_performance_change:_Ohio_State_University_Medical_Center_2000_2006_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0b013e318181d2e7 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -