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Summary. Why this topic ?Wider impact of 21 century health reformsEmergence of new organisational formsChanging job of doctors in primary health careChanging relationshipsWhat does this mean for personal qualities and management skills required of GPs?Some conclusions. Why this topic?. Role
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1. Doctors managing in primary care Naomi Chambers
Professor of Health Management
Manchester Business School
16 September 2008
Naomi.chambers@mbs.ac.uk
2. Summary Why this topic ?
Wider impact of 21 century health reforms
Emergence of new organisational forms
Changing job of doctors in primary health care
Changing relationships
What does this mean for personal qualities and management skills required of GPs?
Some conclusions
3. Why this topic? Role of doctors as leaders and as led in public sector
Significance of obtaining engaged followership with this group
Importance of understanding how this group is affected by reform as leaders and as deliverers
4. Six impacts of 21 century reforms on primary care [from Modernising Government: OECD, 2005] Open government…eg Freedom Of Information
Enhancing public sector performance….eg outcome-based contracts
Modernising accountability and control….eg growth of regulation & risk management
Reallocation and restructuring…eg commissioning/provision
The use of market-style mechanisms to provide government services…outsourcing, contestability
Organising and motivating public servants….performance management, revalidation & reward systems
5. New organisational forms in primary health care 1. Single handed practice/solo family medical practitioner
2. Group medical practice/partnership
3. Nurse-led practice
4. Government health centre with salaried family doctors
5. Commercial provider with salaried doctors
6. Urgent care centre
6. Change and stability : Six roles of GPs First point of contact care
Continuous person and family focussed care
Care for all common health needs
Referral and coordination of specialist care
Pro-active management of chronic disease
Care of the health of the population as well as the individual
From: Chambers and Colin-Thome (2008 forthcoming) Doctors Managing in Primary Care: An International Focus Journal of Management and Marketing in Healthcare Vol2 No1
7. Change and Stability in Professional Relationships Patients/families/carers
Community services
Hospitals
Health service funders
8. Tripartite schema(from Darzi, DH 2008) Doctor as practitioner (expert care for individuals)
Doctor as partner (stewardship of resources)
Doctor as leader (changing the system where it benefits patients)
9. Ergo….. desirable personal qualities of GPs Enjoy teamworking and relationship building
Preference for working in networks rather than hierarchies
Clinical and managerial entrepreneurial spirit
Tolerant of ambiguity and uncertainty
Inherently optimistic
Personally resilient
Ability to see both the 'big picture' and to be concerned with detail
10. Ergo….desirable management skills of GPs Finance management
Staff management
Infrastructure management ( eg IT and estates)
Business planning
Performance monitoring
Influencing and negotiating skills
Resource investigation
Public health knowledge
Understanding how health services in their country are organised
Insight into the health policy development process
11. Relevance of leadership theories Charismatic
Transactional
Transformational
Situational
Performative
Collaborative
Orchestrative
12. Some conclusions Personal preferences/orientations becoming more important
Clinical/professional leadership means recognising the beliefs of peers
Job becoming harder not easier ( 3 levels: individual, team and system)
Calls for collaborative and orchestrative leadership in addition to traditional skills