Student-led leadership training for undergraduate healthcare students
ISSN: 1751-1879
Article publication date: 25 September 2017
Issue publication date: 19 October 2017
Abstract
Purpose
Effective clinical leadership is crucial to avoid failings in the delivery of safe health care, particularly during a period of increasing scrutiny and cost-constraints for the National Health Service (NHS). However, there is a paucity of leadership training for health-care students, the future leaders of the NHS, which is due in part to overfilled curricula. The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of student-led leadership training for the benefit of fellow students.
Design/methodology/approach
To address this training gap, a group of multiprofessional students organised a series of large-group seminars and small-group workshops given by notable health-care leaders at a London university over the course of two consecutive years.
Findings
The majority of students had not previously received any formal exposure to leadership training. Feedback post-events were almost universally positive, though students expressed a preference for experiential teaching of leadership. Working with university faculty, an inaugural essay prize was founded and student members were given the opportunity to complete internships in real-life quality improvement projects.
Originality/value
Student-led teaching interventions in leadership can help to fill an unmet teaching need and help to better equip the next generation of health-care workers for future roles as leaders within the NHS.
Keywords
Citation
Sheriff, I.H.N., Ahmed, F., Jivraj, N., Wan, J.C.M., Sampford, J. and Ahmed, N. (2017), "Student-led leadership training for undergraduate healthcare students", Leadership in Health Services, Vol. 30 No. 4, pp. 428-431. https://doi.org/10.1108/LHS-03-2017-0018
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited