AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study developed and validated the Crisis Leadership and Staff Outcomes (CLSO) Survey to assess leadership behaviors during the transition to virtual healthcare due to the COVID-19 pandemic and their impact on staff outcomes.
  • - The survey was completed by 78 staff and 21 leaders from four Community Health Centres in Ontario, showing strong reliability and identifying two key leadership behaviors: task-oriented and person-oriented leadership.
  • - Results indicated that both types of leadership behaviors positively influenced staff commitment to change and self-evaluation of performance, highlighting the importance of multifaceted leadership during crises.

Article Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic triggered an unprecedented transition from in-person to virtual delivery of primary health care services. Leaders were at the helm of the rapid changes required to make this happen, yet outcomes of leaders' behaviours were largely unexplored. This study (1) develops and validates the Crisis Leadership and Staff Outcomes (CLSO) Survey and (2) investigates the leadership behaviours exhibited during the transition to virtual care and their influence on select staff outcomes in primary care.

Methods: We tested the CLSO Survey amongst leaders and staff from four Community Health Centres in Ontario, Canada. The CLSO Survey measures a range of crisis leadership behaviors, such as showing empathy and promoting learning and psychological safety, as well as perceived staff outcomes in four areas: innovation, teamwork, feedback, and commitment to change. We conducted an exploratory factor analysis to investigate factor structure and construct validity. We report on the scale's internal consistency through Cronbach's alpha, and associations between leadership scales and staff outcomes through odds ratios.

Results: There were 78 staff and 21 middle and senior leaders who completed the survey. A 4-factor model emerged, comprised of the leadership behaviors of (1) "task-oriented leadership" and (2) "person-oriented leadership", and select staff outcomes of (3) "commitment to sustaining change" and (4) "performance self-evaluation". Scales exhibited strong construct and internal validity. Task- and person-oriented leadership behaviours positively related to the two staff outcomes.

Conclusion: The CLSO Survey is a reliable measure of leadership behaviours and select staff outcomes. Our results suggest that crisis leadership is multifaceted and both person-oriented and task-oriented leadership behaviours are critical during a crisis to improve perceived staff performance and commitment to change.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11075262PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-11061-5DOI Listing

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