# From the Operating Room to the Managerial Table: Healthcare Management Lessons and Transformative Leadership of an Orthopedic Surgeon at a Public Tertiary Hospital in South-West Nigeria

**Authors:** Aminat E Akanbi, Olanrewaju S Jimoh, Solihat U Yesufu

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.99717 · 2025-12-20

## TL;DR

An orthopedic surgeon in Nigeria transformed a public hospital through leadership and digital innovation, setting a national example for healthcare improvement.

## Contribution

Demonstrates how clinician-led governance can drive institutional change and promote health equity in low- and middle-income countries.

## Key findings

- A five-pillar strategy led to hospital reforms adopted by over 70 institutions nationwide.
- Clinician-informed governance improved workforce stability and public accountability.
- Digital advancements and operational efficiency were achieved in a public tertiary hospital.

## Abstract

This qualitative editorial draws on a single-case, semi-structured consented interview conducted in July 2025, triangulated with publicly available institutional reports and data from 2017 to 2025, to examine leadership-driven hospital improvement.

It presents lessons from an orthopedic surgeon who transformed a public tertiary healthcare facility in South-Western Nigeria into one of the nation’s most digitally advanced and operationally efficient public health institutions. The editorial highlights the five-pillar strategy that guided system-wide reforms, which were later adopted by over 70 institutions nationwide. His leadership championed clinician-informed governance, workforce stability, trust, and public accountability. By discouraging unsafe care practices and integrating clinical insight into administrative leadership, this model demonstrates how specialty-trained clinicians can drive institutional change, inform policy, and promote health equity in low and middle-income countries.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** FMC (MESH:D000069279), Word-of-mouth (MESH:D009059), fractures (MESH:D050723), trauma (MESH:D014947), musculoskeletal conditions (MESH:D009140), TBS (MESH:D001847), burnout (MESH:D002055)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12815471