Louisville Medicine Volume 62, Issue 2 | Page 40

Doctors’ Lounge Managers are not Leaders Larry P. Griffin, MD I recently was given the opportunity to participate in a wonderful educational program sponsored by Norton Healthcare, my employer, and the American College of Physician Executives. Over a 14-15 month period, excellent speakers were brought in, on-line participation in well-vetted educational programs was engaged, and a final project was developed and discussed in an effort to develop a cadre of more fully informed physicians in regard to budgeting, strategic planning, marketing, and many of the facets of administration of health care organizations, in addition to the concepts of performance measurement, practice variances, etc. This was a very time consuming, but extremely valuable experience for me, and I greatly appreciate and applaud Norton for providing the opportunity to me. I learned a great deal, even though I spent a number of years as an administrator, practicing and developing many of those skills and knowl- edge sets over that time period. What I also learned, however, which was of some concern to me, was that the participants were all to think of themselves as “physician leaders,” though it could be physician “leaders.” This may seem to be of no distinction, but when the term is a noun, it implies one thing, when it is an adjective, the term means something entirely different. “Physician leaders” use their knowledge, professionalism, and experience, as well as their innate ability to lead, based on the respect they have earned from their peers, the perception that they are still a physician, and have not simply traded their MD for an MBA. These individuals lead from the front. Physician “leaders,” on the other hand, are simply managers with an MD degree who attempt to use that degree as a way to say “I am one of you” while really trying to manage or herd physicians as if they are sheep. They are not leaders…they are managers. They don’t lead, they herd. A leader is recognized by those he leads as such. A manager is also recognized by those whom he is attempting to manage. Those whom are led or managed clearly can tell the difference. The interesting thing to me is that a true leader, including a “physician leader,” really knows he is a leader, and lives up to the challenge in all respects. A leader recognizes the difference. A physician “leader” rarely sees the distinction, and mistakenly believes he or she is a leader when all too clearly, he or she is not anything but a manager with an advanced degree. I simply say to those physicians in administrative positions, which are you? Physicians respond to leadership, but not to herding. LM Note: Dr. Griffin practices Obstetrics and Gynecology with Women’s Care Physicians of Louisville. A New Issue of Vital Signs The GLMS Publication for Patients Is Now Available Subscriptions to Vital Signs are available as a benefit to all active and associate members at no cost. To receive Vital Signs at your practice contact Membership Coordinator Jennifer Howard at jennifer.howard@glms. org or 502-736-6362. 38 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE