| Literature DB >> 29355240 |
Kjeld Harald Aij1, Sofia Rapsaniotis1.
Abstract
As health care organizations face pressures to improve quality and efficiency while reducing costs, leaders are adopting management techniques and tools used in manufacturing and other industries, especially Lean. Successful Lean leaders appear to use a coaching leadership style that shares underlying principles with servant leadership. There is little information about specific similarities and differences between Lean and servant leaderships. We systematically reviewed the literature on Lean leadership, servant leadership, and health care and performed a comparative analysis of attributes using Russell and Stone's leadership framework. We found significant overlap between the two leadership styles, although there were notable differences in origins, philosophy, characteristics and behaviors, and tools. We conclude that both Lean and servant leaderships are promising models that can contribute to the delivery of patient-centered, high-value care. Servant leadership may provide the means to engage and develop employees to become successful Lean leaders in health care organizations.Entities:
Keywords: efficiency; high-value care; leadership attributes; management; patient-centered
Year: 2017 PMID: 29355240 PMCID: PMC5774447 DOI: 10.2147/JHL.S120166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Healthc Leadersh ISSN: 1179-3201
Figure 1Servant leadership attributes model.
Note: Reprinted with permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited, originally published in Leadership & Organization Development Journal, Vol 23, Issue 3, © Emerald Group Publishing Limited 2002.23
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Article is written in the English language | Article is written in a language other than English |
| Published in a peer-reviewed journal | Gray literature, thesis, essay, book review, letter, editorial, opinion, or journalistic article |
| Article describes an empirical study or is a theoretical review | Speculative article |
| Lean leadership or servant leadership is the main topic of the article | Lean or servant leadership is not the main theme of the article |
| Lean leadership and servant leadership are described in health care or, if an organization, in a hospital or health system | Servant leadership and Lean leadership described in industries other than health care |
| Article describes one or more aspects of leadership (origin, philosophy, values, characteristics, tools, organizational culture, and organizational outcome) |
Figure 2Article selection procedure.
References reviewed by leadership style
| Leadership style | References reviewed |
|---|---|
| Lean | Abuhejleh et al, |
| Servant | Barbuto and Wheeler, |
Comparison of Lean leadership and servant leadership
| Leadership aspect | Lean | Servant |
|---|---|---|
| Origins | Based on Toyota Production System | |
| First described in 1980 by Womack and Jones | First described in 1970 by Greenleaf | |
| Roots in post-World War I training program | Roots in theological and philosophical belief systems | |
| Built upon long history of production systems | ||
| Philosophy | Remove waste to maximize value | Serve others’ needs |
| Commitment to respect | Develop a sustainable organization | |
| Focus on organization’s well being | Focus on leaders meeting the needs of others | |
| Qualification of employees | People-driven, person-oriented attitude | |
| Focus on process | Focus on people | |
| Characteristics | Employee empowerment | Communication |
| Listening | ||
| Integrity | ||
| Humility | ||
| Self-development | Empathy | |
| Development of others | Appreciation of others | |
| Modesty | Healing | |
| Listening | ||
| Openness | ||
| Trust | Awareness | |
| Visibility | ||
| Responsibility | Persuasion | |
| Influence | ||
| Motivating | Conceptualization | |
| Modeling | Modeling | |
| Respect for people | Foresight | |
| Personal observation of work | Stewardship | |
| Observe | Trust | |
| Engage | Service | |
| Improve | ||
| Create a vision | Commitment to growth of people | |
| Encouragement | ||
| Empowerment | ||
| Establish goals | Teaching | |
| Delegation | ||
| Remove barriers | Vision | |
| Building community | ||
| Pioneering | ||
| Honesty | ||
| Credibility | ||
| Competence | ||
| Values | Continuous improvement | Humility |
| Safety | ||
| Quality | ||
| Effectiveness | ||
| Efficiency | ||
| Respect for people | Respect for others | |
| Employee satisfaction | ||
| Human development | Serve the community | |
| Employee empowerment | ||
| Standardization | Quality of service | |
| Release of checklists | ||
| Tools | Kaizen events (rapid improvement events) | Personal values |
| Value stream map | Moral core | |
| A3 framework | Characteristics | |
| PDCA cycle | Humility | |
| Authenticity | ||
| Stewardship | ||
| Vision | ||
| Desire to serve others | ||
| Just in time | ||
| Kanban (inventory-control system to control the supply chain) | ||
| Intelligent automation | ||
| 5-whys | ||
| 5S | ||
| Strategy deployment | ||
| Evaluation: shop-floor walking | ||
| Ohno cycle | ||
| Organizational culture | Improvement culture | Open and trusting environment |
| No blame approaches to mistakes and errors | Collaboration | |
| Problem is opportunity | ||
| Doing the right thing | Transparency | |
| Doing more with less | ||
| Transparency | Learning environment | |
| Room to learn and to make mistakes | ||
| Employee empowerment | ||
| Teamwork | Safe psychological environment | |
| Learning culture | ||
| Organizational performance | Higher competitive advantage | Sustainable organization |
| Long term sustainability of the organization | Team effectiveness | |
| Increased teamwork | ||
| More collaboration | ||
| Tangible outputs: | Tangible outputs: | |
| Reduced error rates | High quality of care | |
| Reduction in costs | ||
| Reduced waiting times | Enhance procedural justice | |
| Increased productivity | ||
| Increased quality | ||
| Reduced costs | ||
| Reduced mortality rates | ||
| Improved patient care | ||
| Intangible outputs: | Intangible outputs: | |
| Increased employee motivation | Trust in the organization | |
| Increased patient safety | ||
| Increased employee satisfaction | Increased patient satisfaction | |
| Improved patient safety | Increased employee empowerment | |
| Improved patient satisfaction | Increased organizational commitment of employees | |
| Employee empowerment | ||
| Achieve perfection in processes | Employees become healthier, wiser, freer, and more | |
| autonomous |
Abbreviation: PDCA, plan do check act.
Ten characteristics and behaviors of servant leaders
| Characteristic | Definition |
|---|---|
| Listening | Emphasizing the importance of communication and seeking to identify the will of the people |
| Empathy | Understanding others and accepting how and what they are |
| Healing | The ability to help make whole |
| Awareness | Being awake |
| Persuasion | Seeking to influence others relying on arguments not on positional power |
| Conceptualization | Thinking beyond the present day need and stretching it into a possible future |
| Foresight | Foreseeing outcomes of situations and working with intuition |
| Stewardship | Holding something in trust and serving the needs of others |
| Commitment to the growth of people | Nurturing the personal, professional, and spiritual growth of others |
| Building community | Emphasizing that local communities are essential in a person’s life |
Note: Adapted with permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited, originally published in , Vol 17, Issue 7, © Emerald Group Publishing Limited 1996.19
Functional and accompanying characteristics of servant leadership
| Functional characteristics | Accompanying characteristics |
|---|---|
| 1. Vision | 1. Communication |
| 2. Honesty | 2. Credibility |
| 3. Integrity | 3. Competence |
| 4. Trust | 4. Stewardship |
| 5. Service | 5. Visibility |
| 6. Modeling | 6. Influence |
| 7. Pioneering | 7. Persuasion |
| 8. Appreciation of others | 8. Listening |
| 9. Empowerment | 9. Encouragement |
| 10. Teaching | |
| 11. Delegation |
Note: Adapted with permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited, originally published in , Vol 23, Issue 3, © Emerald Group Publishing Limited 2002.23