The relevance of Spiritual Leadership to public health: values, meaning and purpose
Louis W. Fry, Barbara X. Wei, Fawn Phelps, Richard B. Siegrist, William Bean, Theodore J. Witherell, Howard K. Koh

TL;DR
This paper explores how spiritual leadership, based on values and purpose, can improve public health leadership and address current challenges in the field.
Contribution
The paper introduces spiritual leadership as a novel framework for public health leadership, showing its alignment with existing competencies.
Findings
Spiritual Leadership competencies align closely with Public Health Leadership requirements.
Many public health leaders already practice Spiritual Leadership principles.
Spiritual Leadership can enhance purpose and resilience in public health organizations.
Abstract
Public health currently faces many enormous challenges that highlight the urgent need for more effective leadership models. This paper explores Spiritual Leadership in the Workplace as a potential approach to informing and animating the field of Public Health Leadership. Developed and applied over the past two decades, Spiritual Leadership is defined as the “values, attitudes, and behaviors necessary both to motivate and inspire workers and to enhance key individual and organizational goals through a vision of service and a culture based on altruism.” While for some it can relate to, and build upon, religious practices, Spiritual Leadership more broadly relates to leadership based on personal values and actions emerging from a sense of mission, purpose, and connection to something bigger than oneself. This paper first describes the origin and evolution of Spiritual Leadership and its…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWorkplace Spirituality and Leadership · Religion, Spirituality, and Psychology · Religion, Society, and Development
