Contextual factors affecting learning-oriented leadership in healthcare: a case study
Journal article, 2025

PurposeTo explore how contextual factors affect the practice of learning-oriented leadership in fragmented healthcare systems.Design/methodology/approachA qualitative case study using a participatory approach. Data were collected through semi-structured focus groups and interviews with leaders across hospital levels. Thematic analysis was applied.FindingsFour contextual factors were identified: (1) multiple external drivers (why), (2) diverse actors and perspectives (who), (3) emergent, unpredictable change (how) and (4) organizational resources and support (what). The study refines the learning-oriented leadership framework in fragmented healthcare systems by emphasizing (1) cross-boundary leadership, (2) contradiction management, (3) leading for organizational learning under resource constraints and (4) differentiated leadership roles across levels.Originality/valueBy integrating empirical insights with expansive learning theory, the study advances the learning-oriented leadership framework and offers strategies for leadership and policy in complex healthcare systems.

Healthcare leadership

Expansive learning

Organizational learning

Inter-organizational learning

Learning-oriented leadership

Fragmented healthcare systems

Author

Rachel Lörum

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Innovation and R&D Management

Østfold Hospital Trust

Henrik Eriksson

University West

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Innovation and R&D Management

Frida Smith

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Service Management and Logistics

Regional Cancer Centre West

Journal of Health, Organisation and Management

1477-7266 (ISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Health Care Service and Management, Health Policy and Services and Health Economy

Work Sciences

DOI

10.1108/JHOM-03-2025-0151

PubMed

41047895

More information

Latest update

10/17/2025