Servant Leadership and the Chief Medical Officer: Ethos Made Operational
Mark D. Olszyk, MD, MBA, CPE, FACEP, FACHE
May 10, 2026
Physician Leadership Journal
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 21-23
Abstract
Chief medical officers and other physician executives lead in environments defined by clinical complexity, competing aims, and oftentimes limited formal authority over the sections of the organization that most influence quality and safety. Servant leadership offers a disciplined, evidence-informed approach to physician leadership that strengthens moral authority, psychological safety, and workforce engagement while sustaining high standards and accountability. This article frames servant leadership as an operational ethos rather than a personality trait or a learned skill and describes mechanisms where servant leadership supports organizational performance. It also proposes practical behaviors for CMOs, including structured listening, persuasion, deliberate leader development, response to adverse events, and an application of Greenleaf’s “best test” to decisions. Servant leadership is presented as clinical infrastructure that promotes truth-telling, learning, and shared ownership, and as a framework for aligning physicians, administrators, and frontline teams around the mission of safe, high-quality care.
Topics
Team Building
Trust and Respect
Resilience
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