Making Today's Dyad Models Work
American College of Healthcare Executives
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Editor’s Note: The following is excerpted from?“When Two Become One: The Dyad Model of Today .”
The dyad leadership model is widely used across healthcare, from oversight of medical practices to hospitals and health systems at the regional, service line or single site level. Dyads have obvious benefits. "You get two perspectives on all issues, whether clinical or operational," says Patrice Weiss, MD, a WittKieffer physician executive consultant who has served in various dyad roles throughout her career in academic medicine. In other words, two heads are usually better than one, especially when the two have complementary competencies and areas of expertise.
"That's when the magic happens," says Michael Michetti, JD, COO of Everside Health and another veteran of dyad roles as an operations leader working with a physician leader. "The two individuals bring different skill sets and perspectives to make the sum greater than the parts."
With the trend toward value-based care and push to incorporate evidence-based medical insight into operational and strategic decision-making, dyad leadership now makes even more sense. Here are a few reasons why:
"If done correctly, dyads can really help an organization fine-tune and balance the demands of quality, safety and physician engagement with operational excellence, metric goals and strategy alignment," says Michetti. "Without dyads there are really two parallel structures, administrative operations and physician interests. Dyads transition situations that could be sources of tension into opportunities for synergy."
Leadership Competencies and Skills for Dyad Leadership
It is typically the partners and their shared relationship that determine success. The selection of the right leaders is critical to the eventual success or failure of dyad arrangements.?
The?basics of a strong dyad relationship ?include mutual respect, a shared sense of mission, aligned values, open communication, and complementary strengths and weaknesses. As with any partnership, an imbalance or fatal flaw in any of these factors undermines the union.
In speaking with dyad leaders across healthcare—within physician practices as well as hospital and health systems—we have tapped into other personality traits that are essential in both partners if the relationship is to thrive. They include:
·??????? An embrace of servant leadership.
·??????? Comfort in a shared governance model.
·??????? High EQ.
·??????? Courage and humility.
"The two partners must be equals and respect each other," says Anthony Aquilina, DO, chief physician executive, WellSpan Health, who has also held dyad roles. "They must have a unified voice that speaks clearly and consistently to organizational values and goals."
"You have to be willing to converse and meet with others outside of your initials" (i.e., MD), notes Dr. Weiss. "You can't have a mindset that doctors are responsible for doctors and that administrators lead administrators."
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Creating the Right Organizational Infrastructure
In addition to selecting the right leaders, organizations instituting dyad models must set the stage for their success. Critical factors include:
The success of dyad leadership depends on how each arrangement is structured but also prominently on the specific individuals involved, the organizational context within which they operate and how their relationship evolves. As the partners grow together over time, the whole can certainly be greater than the sum of the two parts.
Linda Komnick ?is managing partner of WittKieffer's Physician Integration & Leadership Practice.
She will be presenting “The Next Frontier: Moving Into a Physician Leadership Role Boot Camp ” and “Identifying and Developing Physician Leaders for CEO Roles ” at the?Congress on Healthcare Leadership , March 25–28.
Shelly Carolan ?is managing partner of WittKieffer's Investor-Backed Healthcare Practice.
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Healthcare Industry Executive | Board leadership | Military Medicine | Resource Management (Personal Account)
10 个月Great article!
Regional Chief Medical Officer (CMO) | Becker’s Healthcare Hospital and Health System CMOs to Know | Academic & Community health Strategic & Operational Leader | Quality & Safety Transformation Architect | DE&I Champion
10 个月Thanks for sharing your insights. Dyads can be powerful and complementry. I enjoyed the article!
Freelance Consultant,Occupational Health & Safety,Emergency.ARAMCO , ADNOC & BP EXPERIENCED
10 个月Thanks for the information..
Managing Partner at WittKieffer
10 个月I'm thrilled to have ACHE publish an excerpt of our article with [@Linda Komnick/@Shelly Carolan] on trends in dyad leadership. Given the major changes and challenges for hospitals, health systems, and independent medical groups, dyads make more sense than ever and we see more organizations adopting them. Thanks for reading—would love to hear your feedback!
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