Economics

The Collaboration Imperative: Why Healthcare Executives Must Unite Against an Existential Threat

Peter B. Angood, MD, FRCS(C), FACS, MCCM, FAAPL(Hon), C. Ann Jordan, JD

Healthcare organizations face billions in revenue losses from Medicare cuts, halted value-based care models, and reduced federal funding. Traditional siloed leadership cannot tackle these interconnected challenges. This white paper emphasizes the critical need for integrated CEO-CFO-physician executive collaboration, offering actionable frameworks for building collaborative leadership structures. Executive partnerships and physician leadership development drive superior outcomes, financial sustainability, and competitive advantage in a transformed healthcare landscape.

Physician Leadership: More Valuable Than Ever —

A White Paper from the American Association for Physician Leadership

Influence

“Profiles in Success”: Certified Physician Executives Share the Value and ROI of their CPE Education

Peter B. Angood, MD, FRCS(C), FACS, MCCM, FAAPL(Hon)

AAPL believes physician leaders who are pursuing leadership education and training — and the organizations that are supporting their effort — should be able to clearly see the value of their time, money, and effort.

Influence

Championing Physician Leadership Development: AAPL's Five-Decade Commitment Meets Healthcare's Critical Moment

Peter B. Angood, MD, FRCS(C), FACS, MCCM, FAAPL(Hon)

From closing knowledge gaps in finance and AI to building emotional intelligence and peer communities, the future of healthcare demands bilingual leaders fluent in both medicine and strategy.

Collaborative Function

Improving the Physician Experience to Attract, Retain, and Engage Top Physician Talent — Part 2: Refocusing the Physician Leader’s Role on Engaging the Team

R. John Sawyer, II, PhD, ABPP-CN

This article explores physician leadership's evolving role and suggests strategies to enhance effectiveness, including role clarity, structured meetings, and self-leadership, to improve well-being and reduce burnout.

SoundPractice

Driving Value-Based Care by Putting Patients First with Dr. Pamela Sullivan

Pamela C. Sullivan, MD, MBA, CPE, FACP, FCUCM, PT

Discover Dr. Sullivan’s inspiring journey from emergency medicine to healthcare leadership. Learn how patient-centered care drives better outcomes, tackle healthcare inequities, and explore bold innovations like home-based care. A must-listen for shaping the future of medicine.

Healthcare Process

A Comparison of Flourishing Questions and Healthy Days in Population Health

Chiara J. Antonioli, MSPH, Anna F. Ballou, MSPH, Sierra Inks, MS, Meaghan Pilcher, MS, Houda Rabah, PhD, Naakesh Dewan, MD, CPE, DLFAPA, FASAM

This study explored whether Flourishing Questions from The Human Flourishing Program align with Healthy Days, a population health measure. Using survey data, it found moderately negative but significant correlations, suggesting both measures assess similar health aspects, with Flourishing capturing additional dimensions. Further research is needed to confirm these findings and evaluate Flourishing's advantages.

Trust and Respect

Followership and Leadership: A Symbiotic Partnership for Success

Ronald Dwinnells, MD, MBA, CPE

Followership is a vital aspect of leadership, emphasizing active engagement, critical thinking, and shared vision. Strong leader-follower partnerships rely on trust, respect, communication, and adaptability.

New Book

Career Prescription Guide: A Physician's Guide for Career Transformation or Advancement

Pamela C. Sullivan, MD, MBA, CPE, FACP, FCUCM, PT

This guide empowers physicians to navigate career transitions with confidence, align decisions with values, prevent burnout, and achieve fulfillment.

c1 Sullivan CareerPrescription

Technology Integration

To Scale AI Agents Successfully, Think of Them Like Team Members

Rahul Telang, Muhammad Zia Hydari, Raja Iqbal

Generative AI agents can reason, plan, and take actions across enterprise systems, which means deploying them is not just a software installation but a change to how work gets done. When agents gain the ability to execute tasks—updating records, issuing refunds, routing approvals—they introduce operational risks that traditional software tools do not, including unpredictable behavior and unclear responsibility when things go wrong. To use them safely and effectively, organizations must treat them like digital employees, giving each one a defined identity, limited authority, trusted sources of information, clear controls over what it can execute, and audit trails that make its decisions explainable. Companies that adopt this mindset and introduce autonomy gradually will be far more likely to capture the benefits of agentic AI without exposing themselves to costly mistakes.

Team Building

How to Manage an Insecure Leader

Jeffrey Yip, Dritjon Gruda

Insecure leaders—whether anxious or avoidant—are more common in organizations than most people acknowledge. Their behaviors can distort communication, undermine collaboration, and burden teams.

Self-Control

What Kind of Micromanager Are You?

Jill Geisler

Micromanagement isn’t inherently bad; it can be strategic, sporadic, or chronic. Effective micromanagers balance transparency, timing, tone, and team trust.

Quality Improvement

The 2026 Workflow Cliff and the Quiet Erosion of Primary Care

Ryan Nadelson, MD

Primary care is under pressure as CMS expansions, Medicare Advantage requirements, and EMR demands overwhelm workflows, eroding trust, staff stability, and patient care. Redesign is vital for recovery.

Self-Awareness

Culture and Communities of Practice in Changing Times

Peter B. Angood, MD, FRCS(C), FACS, MCCM, FAAPL(Hon)

The article examines culture and community, highlighting “communities of practice” that foster growth through shared interests. It discusses how healthcare professionals can lead cultural shifts post-pandemic.

LEADERSHIP IS LEARNED

For over 50 years.

The American Association for Physician Leadership has helped physicians develop their leadership skills through education, career development, thought leadership and community building.

The American Association for Physician Leadership (AAPL) changed its name from the American College of Physician Executives (ACPE) in 2014. We may have changed our name, but we are the same organization that has been serving physician leaders since 1975.

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