Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

Affiliations.

  • 1 Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
  • 2 Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
  • PMID: 28949471
  • PMCID: PMC5627783
  • DOI: 10.15171/ijhpm.2017.40

Despite international recognition of the importance of healthcare management in the development of high-performing systems, the path by which countries may develop and sustain a professional healthcare management workforce has not been articulated. Accordingly, we sought to identify a set of common themes in the establishment of a professional workforce of healthcare managers in low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings using a descriptive case study approach. We draw on a historical analysis of the development of this profession in the United States and Ethiopia to identify five common themes in the professionalization of healthcare management: (1) a country context in which healthcare management is demanded; (2) a national framework that elevates a professional management role; (3) standards for healthcare management, and a monitoring function to promote adherence to standards; (4) a graduatelevel educational path to ensure a pipeline of well-prepared healthcare managers; and (5) professional associations to sustain and advance the field. These five components can to inform the creation of a long-term national strategy for the development of a professional cadre of heathcare managers in LMIC settings.

Keywords: Health Policy; Healthcare Management; Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs); Quality Improvement.

© 2017 The Author(s); Published by Kerman University of Medical Sciences. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

  • Developing Countries*
  • Education, Graduate / organization & administration
  • Guideline Adherence
  • Health Personnel / education*
  • Health Personnel / organization & administration*
  • Health Personnel / standards
  • Professional Role*
  • Quality Improvement / organization & administration*
  • Quality Improvement / standards
  • Societies / organization & administration

Academia.edu no longer supports Internet Explorer.

To browse Academia.edu and the wider internet faster and more securely, please take a few seconds to  upgrade your browser .

Enter the email address you signed up with and we'll email you a reset link.

  • We're Hiring!
  • Help Center

paper cover thumbnail

Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study Hypothesis

Profile image of Nikole Allen

Despite international recognition of the importance of healthcare management in the development of high-performing systems, the path by which countries may develop and sustain a professional healthcare management workforce has not been articulated. Accordingly, we sought to identify a set of common themes in the establishment of a professional workforce of healthcare managers in low-and middle-income country (LMIC) settings using a descriptive case study approach. We draw on a historical analysis of the development of this profession in the United States and Ethiopia to identify five common themes in the professionalization of healthcare management: (1) a country context in which healthcare management is demanded; (2) a national framework that elevates a professional management role; (3) standards for healthcare management, and a monitoring function to promote adherence to standards; (4) a graduate-level educational path to ensure a pipeline of well-prepared healthcare managers; and (5) professional associations to sustain and advance the field. These five components can to inform the creation of a long-term national strategy for the development of a professional cadre of heathcare managers in LMIC settings.

Related Papers

Frontiers in Public Health

Stephen Sammut

professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

International Journal for Quality in Health Care

Sosena Kebede

Human Resources for Health

Scott Fritzen

The study of the health workforce has gained in prominence in recent years, as the dynamic interconnections between human resource issues and health system effectiveness have come into sharper focus. This paper reviews lessons relating to strategic management challenges emerging from the growing literature in this area. Workforce issues are strategic: they affect overall system performance as well as the feasibility and sustainability of health reforms. Viewing workforce issues strategically forces health authorities to confront the yawning gaps between policy and implementation in many developing countries. Lessons emerge in four areas. One concerns imbalances in workforce structure, whether from a functional specialization, geographical or facility lens. These imbalances pose a strategic challenge in that authorities must attempt to steer workforce distribution over time using a limited range of policy tools. A second group of lessons concerns the difficulties of central-level steering of the health workforce, often critically weak due to the lack of proper information systems and the complexities of public sector decentralization and service commercialization trends affecting the grassroots. A third cluster examines worker capacity and motivation, often shaped in developing countries as much by the informal norms and incentives as by formal attempts to support workers or to hold them accountable. Finally, a range of reforms centering on service contracting and improvements to human resource management are emerging. Since these have as a necessary (but not sufficient) condition some flexibility in personnel practices, recent trends towards the sharing of such functions with local authorities are promising. The paper identifies a number of current lines of productive research, focusing on the relationship between health policy reforms and the local institutional environments in which the workforce, both public and private, is deployed.

Sunil Maheshwari

Meeting the health care needs of population goes beyond mere budget allocations. The organisation of programmes and commitment of people working in the health sector has significant bearing on sector performance and its reform process. The reform process, among other things, intrinsically makes some fundamental assumptions: high organisational commitment of health care providers, high professional commitment of health care providers

Health Care Analysis

Nathan Gerard

This paper critically examines efforts to "professionalize" the field of healthcare management and its corresponding costs. Drawing upon the scholarly critiques of professionalization in medicine and the broader field of management, this paper seeks to explore the symbolic role professionalization might play in the psyche of its constituents, and specifically its function as a defense against uncertainty and anxiety. This psychodynamic heuristic is then deployed to put forth the hypothesis that an ongoing crisis of professional identity continues to both propel and impede pro-fessionalization efforts in healthcare management, giving rise to a litany of standardization pressures that ultimately limit the field's potential. To mitigate these pressures, the call is made for rekindling healthcare management's moral, political, and existential aspects. Specifically, this entails engaging with the deeper themes that flow through the field: the experience of illness and what it means to suffer, the experience of life and what it means to have hope, and the experience of death and dying. It also entails squarely confronting questions of power, poverty and disease, and the pursuit of justice.

BMC Health Services Research

Anna-Britt Coe

Journal of obstetrics and gynaecology Canada : JOGC = Journal d'obstétrique et gynécologie du Canada : JOGC

André Lalonde , Vladimir Larsen

Over the last decade, the Société haïtienne d'obstétrique et de gynécologie (SHOG) has positioned itself as a key player in the maternal and neonatal health agenda in the country. This transformation arose from the association's commitment to strengthening its organizational capacities in order to enhance its operations and consolidate its contribution to the national efforts to reduce maternal and infant mortality. The SHOG benefited from the SOGC's technical assistance to reinforce its organizational capacities, support that it received as part of the SOGC Partnership Program from professional associations working in low-income countries. We describe the results of the SHOG's organizational assessments in 2008 (in the middle of the five-year cycle) and in 2006, according to the organizational capacity development approach promoted by the SOGC. A comparison of the 2008 and the 2006 assessment results shows that the SHOG progressed substantially during that period, s...

Tabish S. A.

Josephat Nyagero

RELATED PAPERS

Alaa Hassan

Scott Robison

Gayle Mitchell

Editorial Biblos, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Liliana Shulman

Jean-Marie DONEGANI

Rural and Remote Health

Paul Worley

Wolfgang Coy

Grosir lipcream Terpercaya

SEISENSE Journal of Management

Muhammad Zarar

ChemistrySelect

Huisarts en wetenschap

Bart Thoonen

Revista Brasileira de Políticas Públicas

Doglas Cesar Lucas

The Open Public Health Journal

Sileshi Fanta Melesse

Revista Insignare Scientia - RIS

Vilmar Pereira

Tetrahedron Letters

My Hoang Ha Nguyen

khalil wehbe

SIAM Journal on Computing

Diabetologia

Marco Songini

Revista Tefros

Pilar Perez

The Journal of General and Applied Microbiology

Anis Mahsunah

IFAC Proceedings Volumes

Janko Petrovčič

Training and Education in Professional Psychology

Kevin Larkin

Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences

Serena Calabrò

See More Documents Like This

RELATED TOPICS

  •   We're Hiring!
  •   Help Center
  • Find new research papers in:
  • Health Sciences
  • Earth Sciences
  • Cognitive Science
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Academia ©2024

NextGenU.org

  • About Us About Us FAQs The Frank Foundation Board Members Publications Quality Assurance
  • Guests Learners Mentors Universities
  • Courses All Courses Medicine Courses Public Health Courses Community Health Courses Professional Development Courses Nursing Courses Health Sciences Sciences
  • Programs Addiction Training for Health Professionals Public Health U - MPH Primary Education STEPS Humanitarian U
  • Connect Contact Us Volunteer Careers Join Our Network sign up for our newsletter

Health Policy and Management

Professionalizing healthcare management: a descriptive case study.

Read the entire article.   (22  minutes)

NCBI -  2017

  • My resources

Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

  • Elizabeth H. Bradley Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA | Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
  • Erika L. Linnander Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA | Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
  • Ingrid M. Nembhard Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA | Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
  • Jeannie M. Mantopoulos Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA | Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA
  • Nikole Allen Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA | Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA

Despite international recognition of the importance of healthcare management in the development of high-performing systems, the path by which countries may develop and sustain a professional healthcare management workforce has not been articulated. Accordingly, we sought to identify a set of common themes in the establishment of a professional workforce of healthcare managers in low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings using a descriptive case study approach. We draw on a historical analysis of the development of this profession in the United States and Ethiopia to identify five common themes in the professionalization of healthcare management: (1) a country context in which healthcare management is demanded; (2) a national framework that elevates a professional management role; (3) standards for healthcare management, and a monitoring function to promote adherence to standards; (4) a graduatelevel educational path to ensure a pipeline of well-prepared healthcare managers; and (5) professional associations to sustain and advance the field. These five components can to inform the creation of a long-term national strategy for the development of a professional cadre of heathcare managers in LMIC settings.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Management in Healthcare System: A Case Study

The aim of this work is to investigate the efficiency level of healthcare system in Apulia. This is a study design; in fact, peculiar and objective efficiency index is built with ISTAT data from most of territorial healthcare structures (public, non-profit and private). This coefficient is calculated to compare with more generic and traditional indexes. Moreover, a forward analysis is conducted...

Healthcare waste management and practices: A case study in Kodagu District, Karnataka, India

Inappropriate handling and disposal practices of healthcare waste (HCW) at healthcare centers are significantly increasing health and environmental hazards. This paper summarizes the existing situation of HCW handling and management practices at healthcare facilities in Kodagu district (India). This study was conducted for a period of six months using well-designed checklists along with field o...

Critical thinking skills among Healthcare Management college students: a case study in Iran: a study conducted in 2016

Introduction: One of the essential skills which helps healthcare management students succeed in leadership is development of critical thinking skills during their education. Our study objective was to assess critical thinking skills among healthcare management students of Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences in 2016. Methods: A descriptive, cross-sectional study was conducted among 9...

Security Risk Management in Healthcare: A Case Study

A study on construction of iranian life tables: the case study of modified brass logit system.

چکیده ندارد.

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

{@ msg_add @}

Journal title

  • International Journal of Health Policy and Management

volume 6  issue 10

pages  555- 560

publication date 2017-10-01

  • Terms of service
  • Privacy statement
  • premium membership

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

  • Share on Twitter
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share by email

Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

About this attention score.

  • Good Attention Score compared to outputs of the same age (68th percentile)
  • Good Attention Score compared to outputs of the same age and source (74th percentile)

Mentioned by

X demographics, geographical breakdown, demographic breakdown, mendeley readers, attention score in context.

This page is provided by Altmetric .

Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study (Q42280416)

Identifiers, wikipedia (0 entries), wikibooks (0 entries), wikinews (0 entries), wikiquote (0 entries), wikisource (0 entries), wikiversity (0 entries), wikivoyage (0 entries), wiktionary (0 entries), multilingual sites (0 entries).

professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

Navigation menu

Europe PMC requires Javascript to function effectively.

Either your web browser doesn't support Javascript or it is currently turned off. In the latter case, please turn on Javascript support in your web browser and reload this page.

Search life-sciences literature (43,865,470 articles, preprints and more)

  • Free full text
  • Citations & impact
  • Similar Articles

Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study.

Author information, affiliations.

  • Linnander EL 1
  • Mantopoulos JM 1
  • Nembhard IM 1
  • Bradley EH 1

ORCIDs linked to this article

  • Linnander EL | 0000-0002-3417-1049

International Journal of Health Policy and Management , 01 Oct 2017 , 6(10): 555-560 https://doi.org/10.15171/ijhpm.2017.40   PMID: 28949471  PMCID: PMC5627783

Abstract 

Free full text , professionalizing healthcare management: a descriptive case study, erika l. linnander.

1 Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.

2 Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.

Jeannie M. Mantopoulos

Nikole allen, ingrid m. nembhard, elizabeth h. bradley.

Despite international recognition of the importance of healthcare management in the development of high-performing systems, the path by which countries may develop and sustain a professional healthcare management workforce has not been articulated. Accordingly, we sought to identify a set of common themes in the establishment of a professional workforce of healthcare managers in low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings using a descriptive case study approach. We draw on a historical analysis of the development of this profession in the United States and Ethiopia to identify five common themes in the professionalization of healthcare management: (1) a country context in which healthcare management is demanded; (2) a national framework that elevates a professional management role; (3) standards for healthcare management, and a monitoring function to promote adherence to standards; (4) a graduatelevel educational path to ensure a pipeline of well-prepared healthcare managers; and (5) professional associations to sustain and advance the field. These five components can to inform the creation of a long-term national strategy for the development of a professional cadre of heathcare managers in LMIC settings.

Effective healthcare management is essential for the creation of a high performing healthcare delivery system. 1 - 3 A number of studies have demonstrated the link between management capacity and health systems performance, 4 - 11 and the lack of managerial capacity at all levels has been cited as a key constraint in the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals and other global health targets. 12 Healthcare management – defined as the process of achieving healthcare objectives through human, financial, and technical resources 13 – includes strategic and operational management activities such as supply chain management, human resources management, performance management and improvement, financial management, and governance, without which resources cannot be effectively deployed to maximize health outcomes. 14

Healthcare management is particularly critical in the public sector of low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) where resources are inadequate and efficiency in their deployment is essential to meet the national and global targets for health outcomes. In many LMIC settings, physicians are called upon to fill healthcare management roles because of their level of education, respected status in society, and clinical/technical expertise related to the services being offered. 15 , 16 However, physicians typically lack previous management-related training, mentorship, and professional development 15 that would prepare them for these roles. Clinicians in managerial roles are often asked to simultaneously continue their clinical practice, a dual role associated with low job satisfaction, burnout, and attrition from the workforce. 17 , 18

Despite international recognition of the importance of healthcare management in the development of high-performing systems, 1 - 3 and the positive association between managerial training programs and healthcare quality, 19 - 22 the path by which countries may develop and sustain a professional healthcare management workforce has not been articulated. Accordingly, we sought to identify a set of common themes for establishing and sustaining a professional workforce of healthcare managers in LMIC settings using a descriptive case study approach. This paper can catalyze reflection on broader efforts to build health care management capacity, and guide LMICs as they consider alternative strategies for health management workforce development as a critical component of health systems strengthening.

Over the past 10 years, Ethiopia has achieved significant progress toward global health targets, and is credited with ambitious investment in both hospital quality and access to primary care. 23 - 25 To promote these improvements, the Ministry of Health prioritized the development of management capacity, with initial emphasis on hospital management. 26 This 10-year arc of national reforms provide an ideal context in which to study the emergence of a professional cadre of health care managers in an LMIC setting.

Using a descriptive case study approach, 27 , 28 we sought to compare the path of the development of the profession of healthcare management in Ethiopia with experiences in the professionalization of healthcare management in the United States. We selected these two countries as paradigmatic cases 29 through which to identify convergent and divergent experiences between country settings, resulting in a set of themes for future testing.

To understand the history of healthcare management in the United States, we conducted a semi-structured review of the peer-reviewed and grey literature, with emphasis on historical descriptions from healthcare management textbooks and published historical syntheses provided by relevant professional associations. To describe the more recent history of healthcare management in Ethiopia, we drew on a decade of our experience implementing and evaluating efforts to build management capacity in Ethiopia. 5 , 7 , 30 - 32 We supplemented this experience with study of the peer-reviewed literature, starting with country-specific searches for “health management” and “healthcare management,” reviewing abstracts to identify relevant resources, and following up on references as appropriate.

  • Common Themes in Professionalization

Many prominent development organizations, including the World Health Organization (WHO), the World Bank, and numerous others, have attempted to address gaps in healthcare management capacity through in-service training and mentoring programs. 15 , 19 While short-courses and applied training programs can be a helpful stopgap for the healthcare professionals who find themselves in managerial roles, we envision a broader, more strategic set of common themes in the transition toward a comprehensively prepared, professional workforce of health managers ( Box 1 ).

Box 1. Common Themes in the Professionalization of Healthcare Management

A country context in which healthcare management is demanded

A national framework that elevates a professional management role

Standards for healthcare management, and a monitoring function to promote adherence to standards

A graduate-level educational path to ensure a pipeline of well-prepared healthcare managers

Professional associations to sustain and advance the field

Theme 1: A Country Context in Which Management Expertise Is Demanded

The first common theme in the professionalization of healthcare management in the United States and Ethiopia was a shift in country context toward increased demand for the expertise of a cadre of health managers . In the United States, calls for the professionalization of healthcare management began in the early 1900s as medical discoveries (eg, the advent of antisepsis and anesthesia, the development of modern surgery, and the discovery of antibiotics) attracted patients to seek medical care in hospitals as opposed to being treated at home. 33 , 34 During this time, the hospital industry in the United States grew from 4 hospitals and 780 beds per million people in 1875 to about 60 hospitals and 7400 beds per million people in 1925. 33 , 35

The severe economic constraints of the Great Depression in the late 1920s and early 1930s accentuated the need for healthcare administrators who could apply business acumen in the large and growing hospital sector. In 1932, The Committee on the Costs of Medical Care highlighted this evolving need for more sophisticated management of medical care 33 :

“ Hospitals and clinics are not only medical institutions, they are also social and business enterprises, sometimes very large ones. It is important, therefore, that they be directed by administrators who are trained for their responsibilities and can understand and integrate the various professional, economic, and social factors involved. ”

Academics took up the challenge as Michael Davis from the University of Chicago published Hospital Administration, A Career: The Need for Trained Executives for a Billion Dollar Business, and How They May Be Trained in 1929. 33 The hospital industry trade journals followed suit, underscoring the increasing pressure to manage dwindling resources. As Malcom Meacher wrote in 1932 in the Bulletin of the American Hospital Association (AHA):

“Stock crashes, bank failures, frozen assets, depreciated earnings, diminished benefactions, together with lessened payment by patients and decreasing departmental earnings and all that comes in the wake of these, have depleted the hospital treasury. Hospital trustees and executives are staggering under the valiant attempt to maintain adequate standards in order to insure safe and efficient care of their patients.” 36

In Ethiopia, the demand for the expertise in healthcare management was driven by several factors. First, having met basic standards for access to primary care, the Ministry of Health shifted its focus to promoting the quality of medical care, particularly as a growing middle class demanded better healthcare services. Increasing demand for management expertise has also resulted from Ethiopia’s efforts to decentralize governance and control of finances to the hospital and district health office level improve healthcare system responsiveness and efficiency. 37 , 38 Additionally, the increasing complexity of the health sector (eg, the introduction of third party financing, quality monitoring, and growing regulatory efforts) required more nuanced managerial approaches to successfully navigate. Taken together, these contextual factors generated demand for managerial competencies and set the stage for a movement toward professionalization—a movement supported by investment in the next four thematic areas.

Theme 2: A National Framework That Elevates a Professional Management Role

The second common theme in the professionalization of healthcare management in the United States and Ethiopia was a national framework or set of supporting policies that elevated the professional management role to attract, empower, and reward management expertise. As in many LMIC settings today, most hospitals in the United States in the 1920s and 1930s were led by clinicians who acquired administrative responsibilities with no formal training or experience in administration. 33 This later evolved into the esteemed Chief Executive Officer (CEO) position, a highly selective role with authority to lead and affect change in the organization.

An exemplar of this type of reform comes from Ethiopia, where a 10-year investment in hospital management was grounded in reform of civil service regulations to achieve the following: (1) creation of a full-time CEO role with clear and comprehensive job responsibilities, as well as selection and performance review criteria, 26 , 30 , 39 (2) establishment of governing boards to manage CEO performance and hold the position accountable to both the government and the community, 32 and (3) creation of locally-controlled revenue streams to reward good management and entrepreneurialism (eg, the endorsement of private wings in Ethiopia’s public hospitals and policies to allow for local retention of revenue for future health system investment). 40 - 43 This CEO role, shown to be fulfilled successfully by physicians or non-physicians, 44 presumes full-time dedication to management and leadership functions, involving both internal problem solving and strategic management of external community environments. 26 , 30 , 32 , 36 , 39 - 44

Theme 3: Standards for Healthcare Management, and a Monitoring Function to Promote Adherence to Standards

As professions emerge, a set of technical, ethical, and/or performance standards are used to define expectations for the profession. 45 In the United States, the earliest performance standards for healthcare management were codified at the organizational level (hospital accreditation), rather than the individual level (licensure). Professional healthcare managers were expected to create and maintain hospital management systems in compliance with accreditation standards.

Hospital accreditation was first established in the United States by the American College of Surgeons (ACS) in 1917. 46 The ACS’s “Minimum Standard for Hospitals” began as a single page of requirements, and evolved to become today’s Joint Commission, an independent accrediting body which authorizes over 21 000 healthcare organizations and programs in the United States. 47 Since the early 1990s, accreditation has been adopted in a number of LMICs as a strategy to improve basic health service quality. 48 Some of these accreditation programs have been launched as part of larger “pay for performance” financing reforms 49 - 54 ; others have emerged as government-led efforts to directly quantify and improve management capacity in meaningful ways.

In Ethiopia, the first set of hospital management standards (referred to as “the Blueprint”) were derived directly from government hospitals through the collaborative experiences of foreign healthcare management mentors and their local counterparts as part of the “Ethiopian Hospital Management Initiative,” a multi-year collaboration between the Federal Ministry of Health, the Clinton Health Access Initiative, and Yale University to improve hospital quality. 30 These management standards were subsequently endorsed by the Ministry of Health as the “Ethiopian Hospital Reform Implementation Guidelines” (EHRIG). Adherence to the EHRIG standards is now incorporated into Ethiopia’s hospital performance monitoring system as the first of 36 key performance indicators on which hospitals are evaluated by Ministry of Health officials. 55 - 57

Theme 4: A Graduate-Level Educational Path to Sustain a Pipeline of Well-Prepared Healthcare Managers

The fourth common theme in the United States and Ethiopia was the establishment of a well-respected, graduate-level educational path to attract, equip, and sustain a high-level professional cadre . The educational path should provide both didactic and practical preparation. Such a combination of classroom studies and fieldwork was used in the earliest healthcare administration programs in the United States, and continues today. The first bachelors-level program was established at Marquette University in 1926, but the professional status of the field was elevated when, in 1934, the University of Chicago developed the first graduate program in hospital administration based on the model of one year of coursework followed by one year of practical experience called an administrative residency. Other universities replicated this model, and the number of graduate programs in healthcare administration grew from 9 programs in the 1940s to 18 programs by the 1950s and 33 programs by the 1960s. 58 In 1968, the Accrediting Commission on Graduate Education for Hospital Administration, known today as the Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Management Education, was incorporated as the accrediting agency for graduate programs in health administration. Today, the United States has 88 accredited graduate programs in healthcare management and administration. 59

In many LMICs, graduate-level educational programs in healthcare management are few in number. 19 - 21 , 60 As a cornerstone of their hospital reform efforts, and with initial focus on the newly-created CEOs described above, Ethiopia established its first Masters in Healthcare Administration (MHA) at Jimma University in 2009. By 2016, MHA programs were offered by five public universities across the country. 7 , 22 , 39 These curricula combined didactic education and mentored independent fieldwork, and engaged well-respected national and international academic institutions. As a signal of political commitment to the profession and the individual participants, the Ministry of Health covered the costs of participation in early student cohorts.

Theme 5: Professional Associations to Sustain and Advance the Field

Professional associations provide both the networking and career development opportunities required for a new cadre of professional health managers to continue to elevate, advocate for, and sustain their roles within countries. In the United States, the first professional association in hospital administration dates back to 1899, when hospital superintendents, predecessors to the CEO role, came together to understand and navigate their increasingly complex US healthcare landscape. Even before the creation of the first graduate program in hospital administration in the United States, a group of practicing administrators founded the American College of Hospital Administrators in 1933 (now the American College of Healthcare Executives [ACHE]), with an emphasis on non-clinical administrators. 58 Today, ACHE boasts almost 50 000 members across 79 chapters, offers board certification for healthcare executives, and convenes members for continuing education, networking, and mentoring through both an annual Congress and regional chapter events, all in service to the holistic development of the profession. 61 , 62

In contrast, investments in healthcare management in the Ethiopian context have been driven primarily by the Ministry of Health and development partners. MHA program alumni have come together to form the country’s first Ethiopian Society of Healthcare Administrators to advocate for the profession, influence supporting policy, and promote continuing professional development opportunities. Professional associations like this one may help to promote the continued growth and evolution of the newly-established profession as it gains a foothold, but this potential impact is yet to be demonstrated.

This paper outlines five components that can inform the creation of a long-term national strategy for the development of a professional cadre of healthcare managers in LMIC settings. The five common themes – a demand for management expertise, elevation of the management role, standards for healthcare management systems, a graduate-level educational path, and professional associations – are synergistic. This type of holistic strategy, currently exemplified in Ethiopia, is unlikely to emerge without exceptional country leadership to align health policy reform, development partner investment, and university engagement. Commitment at all levels is critical, as large-scale shifts in professional trajectories take time, and investments in healthcare management capacity challenge the status quo on multiple levels 1 as empowered managers begin to advocate more proactively with government officials and clinical professional groups.

At the same time, it is important to consider the potential for unintended effects of professionalization. A more empowered cadre of healthcare executives has the potential to overpower the community voice in healthcare reform. 63 , 64 That said, community and client engagement is at the heart of effective management practices, and approaches to amplify the perspectives of community members (eg, the use of community scorecards and creation of community member seats on governing boards) are commonly promoted in management education and professional standards. Professionalization may also result in fragmentation in the authority for management and clinical objectives. 65 Accordingly, management education and career development programs must equip healthcare managers to work effectively across boundaries between management and clinical professionals. In high-income countries, healthcare organizations include clinicians and non-clinicians in both senior management and governing board roles, and quality improvement projects and approaches commonly bridge professional and organizational boundaries to address complex challenges in pursuit of more effective healthcare. Ultimately, professionalization requires devolution of managerial authority, a power that could be corrupted. Our hope is that by establishing a national-level strategy, alignment can be found between regulatory, financing, education, and service delivery systems to create checks and balances across functions.

Our findings should be interpreted in light of the limitations of the study design. First, we highlighted a set of common themes rather than a causal explanation of how healthcare management becomes professionalized. Future prospective studies may be useful to assessing causal inferences. Nevertheless, the patterns identified provide useful insights about the professionalizing of healthcare management, and our findings are consistent with sociological study of professionalization in other technical fields, which emphasizes specialized training and expertise, authority and autonomy, regulation, and creation of group identity. 66 - 68 Second, our results are based on historical analysis and implementation experiences in two country settings, and results may differ in other country contexts. We anticipate that the specific design and timing of various components of professionalization must be tailored to the unique context of each country. 23 For example, in the United States, hospital standards generated by the ACS, as well as the establishment of the AHA and ACHE were early drivers of professionalization for healthcare managers. In other country contexts in which professional lobbies are not well developed or even discouraged, reform will likely start through centrally-driven initiatives. Additional implementation science research is required to understand the extent to which these themes are consistent with experiences in other LMIC country settings, and to evaluate the potentially synergistic impact of investment in some or all of these thematic areas. 69

The five interrelated themes presented here, identified through historical analysis and implementation experience across two very different country settings, may serve as guideposts as LMICs seek to move from discrete investments in management capacity toward a more strategic, sustainable plan for the development of a professional healthcare management workforce. A professional cadre of healthcare managers, able to effectively balance broader regulatory, financial, and service delivery reforms, is a solid foundation on which to build better health systems and, ultimately, improved health outcomes.

  • Ethical issues

Not applicable.

  • Competing interests

Authors declare that they have no competing interests.

  • Authors’ contributions

ELL and EHB conceived of the manuscript; all authors made substantive contributions to the perspective and reviewed and approved the final manuscript.

  • Authors’ affiliations

1 Yale School of Public Health, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA. 2 Yale Global Health Leadership Institute, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.

Citation: Linnander EL, Mantopoulos JM, Allen N, Nembhard IM, Bradley EH. Professionalizing healthcare management: a descriptive case study. Int J Health Policy Manag. 2017;6(10):555–560. 10.15171/ijhpm.2017.40

Full text links 

Read article at publisher's site: https://doi.org/10.15171/ijhpm.2017.40

Citations & impact 

Impact metrics, citations of article over time, alternative metrics.

Altmetric item for https://www.altmetric.com/details/26354455

Article citations

Dimensions of health care management professionalization: a scoping review..

Mahmoudian P , Jafari M , De Roodenbeke E , Maleki M

Med J Islam Repub Iran , 37:127, 25 Nov 2023

Cited by: 0 articles | PMID: 38318409 | PMCID: PMC10843347

The Challenges of Establishing Healthcare Services in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: The Case of Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq-Report from the Field.

Brain Sci , 12(11):1433, 25 Oct 2022

Cited by: 4 articles | PMID: 36358360 | PMCID: PMC9688601

Hospital management by health services management graduates: the change paradigm in Iran.

Bastani P , Mohammadpour M , Bahmaei J , Ravangard R , Mehralian G

Heliyon , 7(11):e08414, 17 Nov 2021

Cited by: 1 article | PMID: 34869929 | PMCID: PMC8626693

A Call for Leadership and Management Competency Development for Directors of Medical Services-Evidence from the Chinese Public Hospital System.

Liang Z , Howard P , Wang J , Xu M

Int J Environ Res Public Health , 17(18):E6913, 22 Sep 2020

Cited by: 3 articles | PMID: 32971760 | PMCID: PMC7558119

Perils of Professionalization: Chronicling a Crisis and Renewing the Potential of Healthcare Management.

Health Care Anal , 27(4):269-288, 01 Dec 2019

Cited by: 2 articles | PMID: 30903432

Similar Articles 

To arrive at the top five similar articles we use a word-weighted algorithm to compare words from the Title and Abstract of each citation.

Development and Use of the Leadership Competencies for Healthcare Services Managers Assessment.

Hahn CA , Gil Lapetra M

Front Public Health , 7:34, 28 Feb 2019

Cited by: 2 articles | PMID: 30873397 | PMCID: PMC6403121

Becoming Agents of Change: Contextual Influences on Medical Educator Professionalization and Practice in a LMIC Context.

Hu WC , Nguyen VAT , Nguyen NT , Stalmeijer RE

Teach Learn Med , 35(3):323-334, 23 Apr 2022

Cited by: 0 articles | PMID: 35465797

Training responsibly to improve global surgical and anaesthesia capacity through institutional health partnerships: a case study.

Macpherson L , Collins M

Trop Doct , 47(1):73-77, 30 Aug 2016

Cited by: 4 articles | PMID: 27578856

Impact of MPH programs: contributing to health system strengthening in low- and middle-income countries?

Zwanikken PA , Alexander L , Scherpbier A

Hum Resour Health , 14(1):52, 22 Aug 2016

Cited by: 7 articles | PMID: 27549226 | PMCID: PMC4994422

Workforce interventions to improve access to emergency contraception pills: a systematic review of current evidence in low- and middle-income countries and recommendations for improving performance.

Dawson A , Tran NT , Westley E , Mangiaterra V , Festin M

BMC Health Serv Res , 15:180, 26 Apr 2015

Cited by: 6 articles | PMID: 25927734 | PMCID: PMC4421921

Making it easy to do the right thing in healthcare: Advancing improvement science education through accredited pan European higher education modules.

MacRae R , Rooney KD , Taylor A , Ritters K , Sansoni J , Lillo Crespo M , Skela-Savič B , O'Donnell B

Nurse Educ Today , 42:41-46, 08 Apr 2016

Cited by: 3 articles | PMID: 27237351

Europe PMC is part of the ELIXIR infrastructure

IMAGES

  1. Nursing Descriptive Case Study Template in MS Word, Portable Documents

    professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

  2. descriptive method case study

    professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

  3. Case Study Description With ChecBric

    professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

  4. (PDF) Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

  5. descriptive case study

    professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

  6. Experimental Healthcare Research and Descriptive Study

    professionalizing healthcare management a descriptive case study

VIDEO

  1. Descriptive Study designs: Case report, case series, Ecological and cross-sectional study designs

  2. Risk, Return and Portfolio Management // Descriptive Questions// Last Part //

  3. Discussion On CSIR SO/ASO

  4. Expected Cutoff after Answer Key

  5. Research Design

  6. Healthcare Business analyst

COMMENTS

  1. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Methods. Using a descriptive case study approach, 27,28 we sought to compare the path of the development of the profession of healthcare management in Ethiopia with experiences in the professionalization of healthcare management in the United States. We selected these two countries as paradigmatic cases 29 through which to identify convergent and divergent experiences between country settings ...

  2. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Accordingly, we sought to identify a set of common themes in the establishment of a professional workforce of healthcare managers in low- and middle-income country (LMIC) settings using a descriptive case study approach. We draw on a historical analysis of the development of this profession in the United States and Ethiopia to identify five ...

  3. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    This article examines five common misunderstandings about case-study research: (1) Theoretical knowledge is more valuable than practical knowledge; (2) One cannot generalize from a single case ...

  4. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study. This work draws on a historical analysis of the development of this profession in the United States and Ethiopia to identify five common themes in the professionalization of healthcare management: a country context in which healthcare management is demanded, a national framework ...

  5. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    International Journal of Health Policy and Management (Oct 2017) Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study Erika L. Linnander,

  6. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Linnander et al Methods people in 1875 to about 60 hospitals and 7400 beds per million Using a descriptive case study approach,27,28 we sought to people in 1925.33,35 compare the path of the development of the profession of The severe economic constraints of the Great Depression in the healthcare management in Ethiopia with experiences in the ...

  7. PDF Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    which includes the study of leadership, is less than 100 years old. Management sciences ap-plied to health care is still in its infancy. Yet im-portant progress is being made to advance

  8. Professionalizing healthcare management: A descriptive case study

    Professionalizing healthcare management: A descriptive case study. Linnander E; Mantopoulos J; Allen N; et al. See more; International Journal of Health Policy and Management (2017) 6(10) 555-560. DOI: 10.15171/ijhpm.2017.40. 14 Citations. Citations of this article. 149 Readers.

  9. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study. Despite international recognition of the importance of healthcare management in the development of high-performing systems, the path by which countries may develop and sustain a professional healthcare management workforce has not been articulated.

  10. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Despite international recognition of the importance of healthcare management in the development of high-performing systems, the path by which countries may develop and sustain a professional healthcare management workforce has not been articulated.

  11. HPM: Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study. Read the entire article. (22 minutes) NCBI - 2017. ... Measures to strengthen primary health-care systems in low- and middle-income countries ... Module 3: Lesson 3: Budgeting and Resource Management. Module 4: Evaluating Programs, Policies, and Addressing Problems.

  12. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Search worldwide, life-sciences literature Search. Advanced Search Coronavirus articles and preprints Search examples:

  13. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Introduction: One of the essential skills which helps healthcare management students succeed in leadership is development of critical thinking skills during their education. Our study objective was to assess critical thinking skills among healthcare management students of Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences in 2016.

  14. Altmetric

    Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study Published in: International Journal of Health Policy and Management, April 2017 DOI: 10.15171/ijhpm.2017.40: Pubmed ID: 28949471. Authors: ... (LMIC) settings using a descriptive case study approach. We draw on a historical analysis of the development of this profession in the ...

  15. Dimensions of Health Care Management Professionalization ...

    Download Citation | On Oct 20, 2023, Payam Mahmoudian and others published Dimensions of Health Care Management Professionalization: A Scoping Review | Find, read and cite all the research you ...

  16. PDF Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Methods. Using a descriptive case study approach,27,28 we sought to compare the path of the development of the profession of healthcare management in Ethiopia with experiences in the professionalization of healthcare management in the United States. We selected these two countries as paradigmatic cases29 through which to identify convergent and ...

  17. Pathway to professionalizing health leadership in Canada: The two faces

    Linnander E, Mantopoulos JM, Allen N, Nembhard IM, Bradley E. Professionalizing healthcare management: a descriptive case study. Int J Health Policy Manag . 2017;6(10):555-560. Crossref

  18. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study (Q42280416) From Wikidata. Jump to navigation Jump to search. scientific article published on 9 April 2017. edit. Language Label Description Also known as; English: Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study. scientific article published on 9 April 2017.

  19. Dimensions of Health Care Management ...

    Methods The purpose of this scoping review study was to identify critical components in the field of management professionalization, as described by Arksey and O'Malley. A total of 13 studies, characterized by predefined keywords, were meticulously culled from Scopus, Web of Science, PubMed, and Embase, Magiran, and SID databases.

  20. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Free Online Library: Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study.(Hypothesis, Report) by "International Journal of Health Policy and Management"; Health care industry Medical care Ethiopia Medical personnel Practice ... Professionalizing healthcare management: a descriptive case study. Int J Health Policy Manag. 201 (f);6 ...

  21. Leadership and Management: A framework for action

    This case study included face-to-face interviews with 5 healthcare clinical managers who work within a multifaceted health system in the Midwestern region of the United States to reduce the likelihood of medical errors. ... Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study. ... a country context in which healthcare management is ...

  22. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Search life-sciences literature (Over 39 million articles, preprints and more)

  23. Professionalizing Healthcare Management: A Descriptive Case Study

    Search life-sciences literature (41,314,752 articles, preprints and more) Search. Advanced search