Journal article

Clinicians’ attitudes towards a co-leadership structure for maternity emergency teams: An interview study

S Janssens, S Clipperton, R Simon, B Lowe, M Beckmann, S Marshall

Journal of Interprofessional Care | Published : 2025

Abstract

Shared leadership improves team performance in many domains and is present in some interprofessional healthcare teams. Despite the dominant paradigm of a singular obstetrician leader in maternity emergencies, co-leadership, a specific form of shared leadership, has been identified as a potentially beneficial to clinical care. This qualitative interview study addresses the gaps in knowledge regarding clinician attitudes toward co-leadership and how a co-leadership structure might be implemented within a maternity care setting. Twenty-five clinicians (midwives, obstetricians and anaesthetists) working in the birthing units of two tertiary maternity units were interviewed and a conventional con..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

Dr Sarah Janssens is supported by a Betty McGrath Health Practitioner Research Fellowship. A/Professor Marshall is supported by an Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) ECR fellowship grant (1130929).