| Literature DB >> 34236416 |
Jaason M Geerts1,2, Donna Kinnair3, Paul Taheri4, Ajit Abraham5,6, Joonmo Ahn7, Rifat Atun8, Lorena Barberia9,10, Nigel J Best11, Rakhi Dandona12,13, Adeel Abbas Dhahri14, Louise Emilsson15,16,17,18, Julian R Free19, Michael Gardam20,21, William H Geerts22, Chikwe Ihekweazu23, Shanthi Johnson24, Allison Kooijman25,26, Alika T Lafontaine27,28, Eyal Leshem29,30, Caroline Lidstone-Jones31, Erwin Loh32,33, Oscar Lyons34, Khalid Ali Fouda Neel35, Peter S Nyasulu36, Oliver Razum37, Hélène Sabourin38,39, Jackie Schleifer Taylor40,41, Hamid Sharifi42, Vicky Stergiopoulos43,44, Brett Sutton45,46, Zunyou Wu47,48,49, Marc Bilodeau50.
Abstract
Importance: The COVID-19 pandemic is the greatest global test of health leadership of our generation. There is an urgent need to provide guidance for leaders at all levels during the unprecedented preresolution recovery stage. Objective: To create an evidence- and expertise-informed framework of leadership imperatives to serve as a resource to guide health and public health leaders during the postemergency stage of the pandemic. Evidence Review: A literature search in PubMed, MEDLINE, and Embase revealed 10 910 articles published between 2000 and 2021 that included the terms leadership and variations of emergency, crisis, disaster, pandemic, COVID-19, or public health. Using the Standards for Quality Improvement Reporting Excellence reporting guideline for consensus statement development, this assessment adopted a 6-round modified Delphi approach involving 32 expert coauthors from 17 countries who participated in creating and validating a framework outlining essential leadership imperatives. Findings: The 10 imperatives in the framework are: (1) acknowledge staff and celebrate successes; (2) provide support for staff well-being; (3) develop a clear understanding of the current local and global context, along with informed projections; (4) prepare for future emergencies (personnel, resources, protocols, contingency plans, coalitions, and training); (5) reassess priorities explicitly and regularly and provide purpose, meaning, and direction; (6) maximize team, organizational, and system performance and discuss enhancements; (7) manage the backlog of paused services and consider improvements while avoiding burnout and moral distress; (8) sustain learning, innovations, and collaborations, and imagine future possibilities; (9) provide regular communication and engender trust; and (10) in consultation with public health and fellow leaders, provide safety information and recommendations to government, other organizations, staff, and the community to improve equitable and integrated care and emergency preparedness systemwide. Conclusions and Relevance: Leaders who most effectively implement these imperatives are ideally positioned to address urgent needs and inequalities in health systems and to cocreate with their organizations a future that best serves stakeholders and communities.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34236416 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.20295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805