Developing Collaborative Maternal and Child Health Leaders: A Descriptive Study of the National Maternal and Child Health Workforce Development Center

Maternal and Child Health Journal
Alina Nadira Clarke, Dorothy Cilenti

Abstract

Purpose An assessment of the National Maternal and Child Health Workforce Development Center (the Center) was conducted to describe (1) effects of the Center's training on the use of collaborative leadership practices by MCH leaders, and (2) perceived barriers to collaboration for MCH leaders. The Center provides services to strengthen MCH professionals' skills in three core areas: Change Management/Adaptive Leadership, Evidence-Based Decision Making, and Systems Integration. Description This descriptive qualitative study compares eight interview responses from a sample of the Center's participants and findings from a document review of the training curriculum against an existing framework of collaborative leadership themes. Assessment Systems thinking tools and related training were highly referenced, and the interviewees often related process-based leadership practices with their applied learning health transformation projects. Perceived barriers to sustaining collaborative work included: (1) a tendency for state agencies to have siloed priorities, (2) difficulty achieving a consensus to move a project forward without individual partners disengaging, (3) strained organizational partnerships when the individual representative ...Continue Reading

References

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Aug 23, 2008·American Journal of Preventive Medicine·Scott J LeischowEva Matthews
Jan 29, 2011·Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community·Branda Nowell, Lisa Macon Harrison
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Aug 7, 2014·Maternal and Child Health Journal·Laura KavanaghLauren Raskin Ramos
Aug 7, 2017·Maternal and Child Health Journal·Lewis MargolisDorothy Cilenti

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