Articles
We often undervalue what we inherently do well. These questions can help you achieve something that isn’t easy to do.
Physician leaders must watch for suicidal warning signs stressed-out colleagues might exhibit, while providing more awareness through education and a greater emphasis on self-care.
Leaders, take note: The move to autonomy appeals to physicians exhausted by the demands of organizational employment.
Dan Diamond, MD, developed concepts learned while leading disaster responses that can improve the lives of clinicians dealing with disengagement and personal health.
Take the needed time to thoughtfully answer some pertinent questions and begin to design the kind of leader you would like to be.
A physician leader advises: Maintain a professional and positive demeanor while in transition. Most importantly, don’t burn bridges.
Mentoring, monitoring, communicating and evaluating are some of the tasks that can help improve a physician’s approach to leadership challenges.
As physicians, we have surrendered much of our leadership role to nonmedical professionals — and we no longer can ignore that. No matter where we are in our career journey, we can do something about it.
What are some physician burnout solutions at the individual, leadership and organizational levels not being widely used?
Jon V. Thomas, MD, MBA, CPE, a member of the Physician Leadership Journal editorial board, comments on the report in the May-June 2018 issue, Burning Brightly, Not Burning Out.
It’s less of a workplace metric and more of a culture that leaders must establish. You either have it, or you don’t … but you can get closer to achieving it.
A laid off CMO is concerned about his lack of employment diversity. He should concentrate on his positive qualities.
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