Challenges Facing the Implementation of Leadership Quality Standards at Hospitals | ||
| The Egyptian Journal of Hospital Medicine | ||
| Article 6, Volume 101, Issue 1, October 2025, Pages 4602-4609 PDF (666.82 K) | ||
| DOI: 10.21608/ejhm.2025.456368 | ||
| Abstract | ||
| Background: Leadership plays a critical role in ensuring effective hospital performance, staff engagement, and quality of care. In healthcare settings, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), implementing leadership quality standards remains a significant challenge due to systemic, cultural, and institutional barriers. Total Quality Management (TQM), which depends on strong leadership commitment, has emerged as a framework for continuous improvement in healthcare. However, in practice, hospitals face persistent obstacles that hinder the integration of leadership and quality management strategies. Objective: This study aimed to investigate the primary challenges hindering the implementation of leadership quality standards in hospital settings and to analyze how these obstacles affect the successful integration of TQM frameworks within healthcare organizations. Method: A cross-sectional, descriptive quantitative approach was adopted. Data were collected using a structured questionnaire administered to 20 hospital staff members, including physicians, nurses, administrators, and technicians, from public, private, and university-affiliated hospitals. Purposive sampling ensured diversity in professional roles and institutional backgrounds. The survey addressed leadership practices, organizational culture, resource constraints, and the integration of TQM principles. Results: The results indicated that while many hospital leaders articulated a vision and demonstrated recognizable styles, major gaps remain in open communication and practical support for TQM initiatives. Centralized decision-making and bureaucratic rigidity were major organizational barriers, reflected in low staff autonomy scores. Human resource challenges were evident, particularly regarding staffing shortages, high turnover, and inadequate empowerment and appraisal systems. Cultural expectations and resistance to change significantly influenced leadership effectiveness, with limited availability of cultural sensitivity training. TQM integration remains weak across hospitals, with only moderate use of data-driven decision-making and low establishment of continuous improvement cultures and staff recognition practices. Conclusion: These findings revealed that while leadership frameworks exist in hospitals, deeper integration of TQM and enhanced support through HR policies and culturally adaptive practices are essential. Addressing these structural and contextual gaps is vital to fostering sustainable leadership and advancing quality care across healthcare institutions. | ||
| Keywords | ||
| Total quality management; Leadership quality standards; Hospitals | ||
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