April 18, 2012
Back to Basics: What Are the Leadership Qualities We Need in Nephrology??
I recently had a chance to round on some in-center dialysis patients at my facility at UCLA. It was incredibly heartwarming to see so many of my former patients still doing so well. It was a real homecoming for me. As I made rounds with Fellows and the entire interdisciplinary team, I started to reflect on what it meant to be a leader in a complex healthcare-delivery setting. There is no setting in medicine that better reflects the need for leadership than care in the dialysis facility. So what are the components of a true leader—things we never learned in medical school, but that are so critically important for our patients as we serve as leaders in dialysis facilities? Each person needs to determine what he or she truly believes struck a chord. Our leadership is based on our belief in truth, grace, growth and freedom. Beliefs determine behavior that defines performance as a leader.
Truth involves standards, honesty, discipline, integrity and clear expectations; grace is not a religious reference but includes showing others that you are on their side, that you have empathy, compassion and understanding; growth is characterized by demanding feedback, being self-aware, understanding others, and having humility and discipline; freedom means being encouraging and secure, and forgiving and empowering others—it leads to serving others, and true power comes from giving power to others.
You need to define what you believe as a leader, but these are right on for me. To be true to yourself, evaluate your leadership: 1) The gap: how far are you from where you want to be?; 2) The fit: how do I fit my role?; 3) Feedback: what do others say?; 4) Parallel context: how are others in similar roles doing?
Sound like a business-school exercise? Sound irrelevant to the day-to-day grind of a nephrologist/Medical Director? Think again. Leadership is demanded of nephrologists, and such leaders will not only have great dialysis facilities with incredible patient outcomes, but will also have successful practices and fulfilling lives.
One of the great things about DaVita is the incorporation of core values into everything that is done in the organization. As I made rounds I had a true epiphany—the way I conduct myself is exactly the articulation of the DaVita core values! I first and foremost am committed to enable high quality of care by serving my patients and delivering service excellence. To be a true leader and be trusted by colleagues and patients and their families, this service excellence must be delivered with the greatest integrity; we say what we believe and we do what we say. Delivering credible, excellent care cannot be done by one individual, but requires a team working together with a common vision to improve the lives of patients with kidney disease. We must, of course, never be satisfied with where we are, but rather must always strive for continuous improvement. We also must be humble and understand that none of us is always right, and we must be willing to ensure that accountability for one’s own actions is something we insist upon from our colleagues and our patients. If we can drive excellent service, in a transparent way with full integrity, working with a team, continuously improving and holding ourselves accountable, then we can experience true fulfillment while still having fun in the process. Is this an achievable vision? I would submit yes—I am living it!
So, stepping up and being a leader, while always anchored by fundamental core values, is for me the way to do the best I can for my patients and to live the most fulfilling life possible. Are you a leader? What are your core values? Take some time to answer those questions. It might just be the most valuable time you have spent in your hectic life as a nephrologist.
Remember what the great management guru Peter Drucker said:
“The leaders who work most effectively, it seems to me, never say ‘I.’ And that’s not because they have trained themselves not to say ‘I.’ They don’t think ‘I.’ They think ‘we’; they think ‘team.’ They understand their job to be to make the team function. They accept responsibility and don’t sidestep it, but ‘we’ gets the credit…. This is what creates trust, what enables you to get the task done.”
I look forward to your comments, until next time.
Striving to bring quality to life,
Allen R. Nissenson, MD
To make sure you receive a notification when a new blog is posted, click here!
To comment on this post click here!
Plastic Nephrology said,
April 19, 2012 @ 12:04 pm
I’m suprised how everybody takes care of dialysis patients while only a few have a deep understanding of dialysis.