By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
  • Health
    • Mental Health
    Health
    Healthcare organizations are operating on slimmer profit margins than ever. One report in August showed that they are even lower than the beginning of the…
    Show More
    Top News
    physical health
    5 Ways Playing Games Can Improve Neural and Physical Health
    September 9, 2022
    Reasons For Hair Loss and Its Treatment
    Reasons For Hair Loss and Its Treatment
    February 16, 2022
    healthcare organization
    5 Actionable Strategies For Healthcare Organizations
    August 15, 2022
    Latest News
    7 Most Common Healthcare Accreditation Programs: Which Should You Use?
    August 20, 2025
    Hospital Pest Control and the Fight Against Superbugs
    August 20, 2025
    Hygiene Beyond The Clinic: Attention To Overlooked Non-Clinical Spaces
    August 13, 2025
    5 Steps to a Promising Career as a Healthcare Administrator
    August 3, 2025
  • Policy and Law
    • Global Healthcare
    • Medical Ethics
    Policy and Law
    Get the latest updates about Insurance policies and Laws in the Healthcare industry for different geographical locations.
    Show More
    Top News
    4 Reasons Chris Cornell’s Death Raises Medical Ethics Questions
    December 19, 2018
    What If You Could Sell Your Vote?
    August 24, 2017
    The Sleepy American
    September 12, 2017
    Latest News
    How Social Security Disability Shapes Access to Care and Everyday Health
    August 22, 2025
    How a DUI Lawyer Can Help When Your Future Health Feels Uncertain
    August 22, 2025
    How One Fall Can Lead to a Long Road of Medical Complications
    August 22, 2025
    How IT and Marketing Teams Can Collaborate to Protect Patient Trust
    July 17, 2025
  • Medical Innovations
  • News
  • Wellness
  • Tech
Search
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Who Leads Whom?
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
Font ResizerAa
Search
Follow US
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Health Works Collective > Policy & Law > Health Reform > Who Leads Whom?
BusinessHealth ReformHospital AdministrationMedical EducationMedical InnovationsPolicy & Law

Who Leads Whom?

etwilson
etwilson
Share
6 Min Read
SHARE

Government is seldom an instrument of change.


Government is seldom an instrument of change.


More Read

Surgery Trumps Intensive Medical Therapy for Obese Diabetics
Is Medicaid Cheaper and Better than Private Insurance?
20 Hospitals Using Twitter to Attract, Engage and Retain Patients
Reconstructive Surgery Is Increasingly Aesthetic
What Will Machine Learning Do With Healthcare In 2020?

State institutions tend to lag behind society in recognizing and addressing disruptive issues. Rather than leading, the federal government tends to be a bandwagon trailing society, from the grassroots up.

All the biggest, most important historical developments tend to follow a pattern: society slowly begins to adopt a new way of thinking, behaving, or organizing, until “new” becomes “standard” and the change is gradually accepted. Then, well after the majority have embraced the transition, the government gets on board and makes it official.

American medicine, remarkably, defies this pattern, and government mandates are seemingly necessary to usher in what, in all other industries and facets of society, are seen as inevitable changes.


How can a profession so deeply integrated with academics and progress be so resistant to change?


On the surface it can seem like the academic and clinical settings are closely linked: internships help students bring theory into practice under professional supervision; training hospitals partner with schools and programs to invest in young doctors and nurses and ensure an exchange between generations of clinicians; continuing education opportunities proliferate, with everything from conferences to online courses promising caregivers access and instruction in the latest medical knowledge and best practices.


Yet the culture of change-resistance continues to thrive in healthcare. While technology, society, and modern market forces cope with disruption, medical breakthroughs mask a broader tendency for change to come slowly, if at all.


It would seem that initial certification provides a foundation for developing clinical habits, and obligatory continuing education (CE) helps sustain them. CE with an eye to advancement is optional, and only for those practitioners who want the change of title and responsibility. This is a problem, because it can conceal stagnation under a mirage of professional development.

Attending annual CE events is not sufficient to instill a progressive, entrepreneurial mindset in healthcare professionals looking to sustain their clinical careers. Clearly, too many clinics are reacting to change instead of leading it, and national standards are doing more to disrupt entropy than to ensure best practices and new standards are truly uniform and universal. Meaningful Use stirred the pot, but the ultimate goal of interoperability remains distant and conflicted; in an environment where medical leadership embraces change and is prepared to integrate technology and new habits, Meaningful Use might have been helped align disparate integration instead of initiating first-time adoption of EHR.

But there it is: authentic leadership is almost as rare in medicine as it is in politics. Instead of leading, they are reacting to change, or else resisting it entirely until outside forces make it inescapable. There is simply not enough being done to prepare nurses and physicians to engage with medicine not just as caregivers, but as entrepreneurial leaders.


Clinicians are ill-equipped to benefit from a fully interoperable EHR network if the culture in which they operate is not responsive to change. Dr. Victoria Wangia of the University of Cincinnati calls informatics, “…the balance between health information, information technology, and patient care.”

Balance is precisely what is lacking—specifically, the leadership talent and vision to help healthcare institutions embrace both the technology powering informatics, and the data their employment generates. It isn’t just informatics; patient care and institutional risk-exposure require strong leadership to achieve balance. Quality and efficiency of care require balance, and clinical leadership must be nimble and determined to realize it.

The relationship between the schools training physicians and nurses, and the clinics in which they operate, has yet to fully achieve any such balance. Swelling demand for caregivers places emphasis on getting more clinicians, but without necessarily equipping them to lead, manage, and innovate within their organizations. Technology drives skill gaps, yet clinics reluctant to adopt and engage negate the benefit of CE programs that might otherwise begin to fill the void. The culture, in short, is lacking vision.


If medicine is to truly transition into the new century and beyond, its students require more instruction in the business of healthcare. Entrepreneurs, not just caregivers, are needed. More than anything, leaders who manage change—not politicians who slowly follow it—are a key ingredient in bringing balance to American medicine. Federal programs have prodded healthcare, but true leadership must come from within its ranks.

 

 

 

Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link Print
Share

Stay Connected

1.5kFollowersLike
4.5kFollowersFollow
2.8kFollowersPin
136kSubscribersSubscribe

Latest News

travel nurse in north carolina
Balancing Speed and Scope: Choosing the Nursing Degree That Fits Your Goals
Nursing
September 1, 2025
intimacy
How to Keep Intimacy Comfortable as You Age
Relationship and Lifestyle Senior Care
September 1, 2025
engineer fitting prosthetic arm
How Social Security Disability Shapes Access to Care and Everyday Health
Health care
August 20, 2025
a woman explaining the document
How a DUI Lawyer Can Help When Your Future Health Feels Uncertain
Public Health
August 20, 2025

You Might also Like

Business

Choosing a medical courier: 5 things you must consider

June 14, 2018

A Marxist Turned Libertarian on The Health Train

July 9, 2011
hexoskin
eHealthMedical InnovationsMobile HealthTechnology

Hexoskin: A Second Skin for the Quantified Athlete and Maybe Even You!

September 3, 2013
Medical Homes
Health ReformHome HealthPublic Health

The Difference Between Patient-Centered Medical Homes and Medicaid Health Homes (In Plain English)

April 30, 2013
Subscribe
Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
Follow US
© 2008-2025 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?