# Needs, rationale, and outcomes of leadership education in neurosurgery

**Authors:** Janissardhar Skulsampaopol, Sylvia Shitsama, Yu Ming, Ake Hansasuta, Michael D. Cusimano

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0318976 · 2025-02-28

## TL;DR

This study shows that leadership education is lacking in neurosurgery, especially in non-academic centers and among younger surgeons, and that such training is linked to more leadership roles and less burnout.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific demographic and institutional gaps in leadership education and demonstrates its positive impact on leadership roles and burnout rates.

## Key findings

- 48% of neurosurgeons reported no leadership education in their organization, especially in non-academic centers and South America.
- Leadership training is associated with a 16.3% lower burnout rate and a 21.6% higher chance of being offered leadership roles.
- Similar proportions of males and females have access to leadership training and positions despite regional and institutional differences.

## Abstract

Surgeons are expected to lead teams/organizations to achieve optimal patient outcomes; however, few receive formal education in leadership. The goals of the study were to: 1) assess the unmet needs and gaps in leadership education for neurosurgeons and residents/fellows; 2) identify factors associated with availability of leadership education, access to leadership positions and the similarities/differences across geographic regions and institutional type; 3) describe the associations between gender and leadership; 4) determine the impact of leadership education.

International survey of 657 neurosurgeons, residents/fellows. A series of univariate analysis and multivariate were conducted to assess the association between specific variables and leadership outcomes.

Almost half (48%) indicated that leadership education did not exist in their organization. This lack was more notable in non-academic centers (p < 0.001), among neurosurgeons with less than 5 years of work experience (p = 0.03), and respondents from South America (p = 0.02). Nearly two-thirds (61.1%) reported never having leadership training. Significantly fewer respondents in the age range 35–44 years old (p = 0.02), those working in the Middle East (p = 0.02), neurosurgeons with work experience less than 5 years (p = 0.004), working in non-academic center (p = 0.02) attended leadership training. In contrast to the differences seen across geographic regions and types of institutions, overall, the proportions of males and females having access to leadership training and being offered leadership positions were similar. Among participants, 87.1% of those with leadership training were offered leadership roles, compared to 65.5% of those without leadership training (p <  0.001). Additionally, participants with leadership training experienced a burnout rate of 29.2%, whereas those without leadership training had a higher rate of burnout of 40.5% (p =  0.02).

There is a pressing need to develop educational opportunities for leadership in neurosurgery, especially for younger neurosurgeons, neurosurgeons working in non-academic centers, in countries and non-academic institutions where leadership education is less accessible. Leadership education is associated with increased numbers of neurosurgical leaders at all levels as well as reduced levels of burnout.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** burnout (MESH:D002055)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

10 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11870348/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11870348