Group of diverse businesspeople and medical professionals in meeting room

Boosting Your Health Care Career With Leadership and Business Skills

The world of health care is always in need of good, caring leaders. Enhance your postgrad career by developing leadership and business skills in college.

Health care is an honorable field to pursue that provides a wide range of career opportunities focused on helping people. As a high school or undergraduate student, you may be considering various paths in the industry, but your career track may shift after college due to a provider’s changing needs or your choice to try a new area of health care.

To make yourself more adaptable and employable for the future, gaining leadership and business skills while pursuing your health care degree is a wise move. Along with putting you in a position for more career opportunities, leadership qualities, and business acumen will equip you to be more impactful on the teams and patients you work with. Here are some of the main benefits of learning about leadership and business when pursuing a health care degree.

Leadership impacts all levels of health care

Leadership matters at all levels of health care because it can set the tone of a work environment, particularly for small health care teams. Even if you don’t think of yourself as a leader or plan to become one in the field, understanding what makes an effective leader who people want to work for will help you navigate different teams. You’ll likely gain experience working for a boss you really admire, and you may also encounter a boss who makes the workplace less desirable.

Developing your leadership skills through assessment

Your experiences in the health care field will stimulate your professional growth and desire to make a difference—and maybe even motivate you to ascend to a leadership role. Leadership skills can be learned and improved upon. The first step is to recognize that you can be a leader and seek to self-assess, gather feedback, and learn how to lead more effectively. Even if your academic institution doesn’t emphasize leadership development for health care majors, self-directed learning can be a powerful tool to improve your ability to lead health care teams in the future.

Related: 8 Leadership Qualities All Students Should Have

Business administration skills strengthen efficiency in health care

Business knowledge is a key aspect of successful leadership in any field. It empowers leaders to be more invested and helps everyone focus on best business practices that result in a functioning and profitable organization. Developing administrative skills such as human resource management, health care finance, or strategic thinking can help future workers understand what makes health care businesses successful and how to collaborate with team members. For aspiring physicians who lack specific leadership and business training in medical school, spending time studying these areas on your own can create a career mindset and better prepare you for independent practice. You’ll also learn to better understand and appreciate team members who handle the non-clinical aspects of a practice.

Building business skills to avoid burnout

Doctors today are overwhelmed by bureaucratic demands, facing increased burdens in meeting insurance-related and regulatory requirements. All of this can lead to burnout. One solution is for physicians to gain more expertise and confidence in the administrative aspects of the job so they feel like empowered participants. Historically, there has been tension between physicians and hospital management due to their differing backgrounds in clinical knowledge and administrative training. This divide has not served the health care world well. Structured, progressive leadership development for physicians and structured clinical experiences for health care administrators can increase empathy and understanding to improve relations between clinical staff and hospital executives​.

Related: Stress, Burnout, and Emotion Management Tips for Health Care Students

How formal leadership training leads to better outcomes

Leadership influences the environment of care, physician performance, and the patient experience. All members of a health care team influence behavior, and we all want the same thing in health care: better patient health outcomes. While physicians have a significant impact on the leadership climate of every health care team, they certainly aren’t the only ones contributing to the professional and social environment. In that complex milieu, physicians can find it challenging to lead due to a lack of formal training.

Enhanced patient care

Improved leadership skills can directly enhance patient care. When physicians are better leaders, their health care teams perform better, leading to improved health outcomes for patients. Positive patient experiences and improved satisfaction are associated with increased profitability. Effective leadership contributes to better teamwork, higher morale, and improved decision-making within health care delivery systems.

When a health care worker feels cared for by leadership, they’ll be more motivated to care for teammates and their leader in return. A good health care team cherishes the camaraderie and sense of mission they share and are often more willing to make sacrifices for teammates. Many of us saw this, day in and day out, during the height of COVID-19.

Increased staff retention

It’s no wonder, then, that good leadership is key to staff retention. From the operating room to the front desk of the doctor’s office, the impact of good leadership is obvious in the form of consistent and high-performing teams who take care of one another. They want to be together, do the things they do well, and provide the best care to their patients. Under good leadership, people are engaged and motivated to see their work through to the end. Often, they’ll even strive to go above and beyond. High employee retention results in improved team performance and financial savings for health care organizations due to reduced recruitment and training costs for hiring new staff.

Related: A Day in the Life of a Health Care Team

Leadership education complemented with business learning can only benefit college students aspiring to be health care professionals. This increased knowledge base will result in a stronger pool of job candidates built for the long haul of health care—with all the challenges and changes the industry inevitably poses. It will benefit the future of health care workers, organizations, and, most of all, the patients you’ll come to serve.

If you’re considering pursuing health care education and haven’t found your college yet, explore great schools and programs across the country with our featured health college lists

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About Dr. Leon Moores

Dr. Leon Moores

Author of All Physicians Lead: Redefining Physician Leadership for Better Patient Outcomes, Dr. Leon E. Moores is a United States Military Academy graduate and former commissioned infantry officer in the 82nd Airborne Division. Moores earned his MD from the Uniformed Services University (USU) School of Medicine and his Doctor of Science in Health Care Leadership from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He has served as Chief of Surgery at Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Deputy Commander (SVP) at National Naval Medical Center Bethesda, Commander (CEO) at Fort Meade Medical System, and CEO of Pediatric Specialists of Virginia.

A practicing professor of pediatric neurosurgery, Moores most recently served as the CEO and President of the largest medical group in northern Virginia. A sought-after speaker and consultant in physician leadership, he has been designated “Top Doctor” by Washingtonian and Virginia magazines and has been awarded citations from the governors of Maryland and Virginia.

 

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