Abstract
Introduction
Since the turn of the century paramedicine has transformed from what was considered a trade to that of a pre-hospital healthcare profession that required registration to practice. This was initially led by the United Kingdom (UK) then followed by Australia and New Zealand with the USA and Canada also introducing state or provincial based licencing requirements during this time. 1 This has been in part driven by a scarcity of primary healthcare resources and a growing and ageing population requiring a much broader scope of practice with particular reference to that of low-acuity presentations.1,2 In many jurisdictions, paramedicine has an expanded out-of-hospital (OOH) scope of practice and has clinicians specialising in both high and low acuity presentations. 3 Furthermore, the burgeoning field of community paramedicine is evolving to support primary healthcare providers, 3 all of which are required to align with the various registration authorities’ mandated focus on patient safety. 1
The nature of the OOH environment limits ready access to a senior clinician or manager requiring paramedics to routinely assume and demonstrate leadership capability contemporaneously with that of clinical competency, ensuring patient safety and minimising incidence of clinical error. 4 A paramedic's operating environment is also decidedly uncontrolled, resource limited and requires a wide array of clinical skills when compared to that of a better resourced and more controlled in-hospital operating environment. 4 There is limited evidence mapping a relationship between the transferability of a paramedic's leadership capability to that of their clinical skill set, other than the identification of non-technical skills (NTS) that are highly desirable for individual paramedics, and indeed all healthcare professionals. 5 Leadership is a key NTS along with other skills and attributes such as decision making, communication, empathy and ethics.5,6 A paramedic will also work in constantly changing teams, placing an even greater necessity on NTS. 6 Should these cognitive and social skills be desirable within the clinical practice of a paramedic, it would be in the interest of all ambulance services to further investigate any associated links to clinical performance. 5
In contrast to paramedicine, physicians and nurses in Australia have a long history as registered professions and have evolved clinically to meet changing patient needs with an expanding scope of practice and that of specialisation such as the recent development of the nurse practitioner role. 7 Both medicine and nursing have identified strong associations between individual and team leadership capability with an improvement in patient safety, including an increase in the reporting of patient safety issues within a hospital environment.8,9 It is not unreasonable to suggest that parallels may exist within paramedicine as it in turn evolves as a registered healthcare discipline.
The relationship between nurse and physician leadership and patient outcomes has been well documented in the literature with systematic reviews identifying linkages between both senior and frontline leadership to that of clinician wellbeing and patient safety, including the incidence of adverse events over the short and long term.9–12 This is in addition to the ongoing psychological state of nurses and physicians and the resultant impact on organisational culture.8–10 Conversely, there is very limited evidence examining these linkages within paramedicine.
Recent research has also identified a strong correlation between self-aware authentic leaders with that of improved healthcare organisational performance and the development of strategies to reduce both inevitable and preventable medical errors.12,13 The promotion of this ethically driven leadership approach helps to reduce the incidence of hospital medical error rates, maintains patient safety and increases the incidence of medical error reporting. 14 The reporting of adverse events by clinicians has been shown to be heavily influenced by ethical leadership practices that promote psychological safety and reduce any perceived power distances between fellow clinicians. 15 These correlations are worthy of further investigation within paramedicine.
Clinical leadership programs have been prevalent in contemporary healthcare for some time, emerging as a result of sub-optimal clinical environments such as crises or unpredictable situations that would have directly affected patient care.16,17 Clinical leadership is seen as interactive and transformational rather than a transactional process that evolves and develops over time for the purpose of improving patient safety. 16 The interchangeability of clinical and leadership skills is an important element in this process and one highly applicable and sought after in the OOH environment of paramedicine. With a lack of current evidence in this space, this research has been designed to explore the perceptions of paramedics as to the role of leadership within their clinical practice.
Methods
Qualitative design and approach
This study has employed a qualitative descriptive design framework investigating whether those paramedics with an acquired leadership capability, have had their clinical practice influenced as a result of their training. A qualitative approach was chosen to facilitate the inductive exploration of the possible relationship between paramedic leadership and patient safety. 18 This qualitative descriptive design utilised reflexive thematic analysis to facilitate the discovery and analysis of the participant's personal experiences with the interconnectedness of leadership and clinical skills and the associated implications to patient safety. It was used to explore and describe experiences in a free and unstructured form from participants who have been emersed in this phenomenon.19,20
Researcher characteristics and reflexivity
As a mature age and newly qualified registered paramedic working for an Australian ambulance service, the lead researcher's prior experiences in organisational leadership have provided a basis for understanding how NTS might support the technical skills in the setting of the OOH environment. The researcher is a practicing paramedic and as such has experienced firsthand the clinical leadership and patient safety challenges being faced in Australia. This, when considered with the researchers’ previous background as an academically credentialled executive leader across small and large non-healthcare-related corporate entities, has influenced their perspectives upon the role of leadership in the relatively nascent field of paramedicine in Australia.
The supporting research team comprises a recently retired Australian state ambulance service senior executive leader, academic and practitioner as chief researcher, and a senior university academic and researcher who have provided subject matter expertise in the shaping and guiding of thematic development whilst ensuring contemporary academic oversight of the project.
Throughout the research project, there were regular diarised discussions to openly debate and discuss those themes and views generated from the data whilst maintaining a reflexive outlook. Given the diverse background of the research team consideration was consistently given to the potential for predispositions associated with the experiences and presumptions influencing the interpretation of the data.
Research paradigm
This research was undertaken with an interpretive lens as an analytical guide, the methodology of which is to understand phenomena via the meaning assigned to them on behalf of the participants. 21 The foundation of this assumption is that interpretive epistemology is subjective in nature in that external reality may only be accessible to those observers after the shaping or influence of their own worldviews, perceptions and experiences to date. 22 With this guiding lens the researcher is afforded the opportunity to understand the phenomena from the viewpoint of the participant rather than themselves. 22 The goal of this research is to attempt to understand the interpretations of phenomena by the individual participants rather than attempt to discover a universal and knowledge-free truth. 22
In applying this paradigm to the research at hand it was required to understand the participant's perspectives as to which leadership characteristics are portrayed, and the processes by which those characteristics influence patient safety. With the interpretive lens of a belief in socially constructed multiple truths and realities being created rather than discovered, 22 the iterative process of revisiting and reconsidering ideas and viewpoints irrespective of the time of formation drove the process of data collection. With subsequent analysis, themes were either abandoned or expanded. This approach allowed the researchers to recognise those multiple constructs and the influence they have on paramedic practice.
Study participants and recruitment process
Australian and New Zealand registered paramedics who self-identified as having leadership training within the last 3 years, either directly or indirectly, were deemed eligible to be included in the research project. These paramedics were eligible regardless of public or private sector employment; however, they were required to be currently employed within a paramedic role within Australia or New Zealand. Convenience sampling was used with recruitment advertisements disseminated via an approved electronic flyer using researcher professional networks and the Australasian College of Paramedicine platform. In addition, purposive sampling was employed with paramedic authors of recently published work in the area of leadership directly contacted. Expressions of interest (EOI) were sought from all potential participants to ensure eligibility. Recruitment of participants occurred between June and August 2023 with eight (8) potential paramedics responding and seven (7) meeting the eligibility criteria. If eligible, participants were sent a videoconferencing invite with an attached explanatory statement and a participation consent form. Participants were assigned a randomly generated alphanumeric code for deidentification purposes in addition to redacting any data that might identify a participant.
Data collection
The collection of data was undertaken by way of semi-structured and in-depth one-on-one interviews between the lead researcher and each participant utilising the videoconferencing and transcription platform, Zoom. This platform was chosen to both alleviate the geographical spread of participants whilst preserving the strength of face-to-face communication. 23
The semi-structured interview question prompts are provided in Appendix 1. The interview guide is composed of nine questions with additional sub-questions designed to align themselves with our research aims and questions. The question prompts were created by the lead researcher after a thorough systematic review of the current literature and subsequent review of the question prompts by the research team. The intent of the interviews was to encourage the participants to freely express their own experiences and perceptions of the relationship between leadership, clinical skills, and patient safety in a confidential and psychologically safe environment.
Before undertaking the interviews, a trial interview was conducted on 25 August 2023, to test question validities and establish whether call quality and reliability would suffice for the study as a research tool. Following this test interview data collection occurred between 11 and 30 September 2023. Before analysis and subsequent data interpretation and with chief researcher oversight, the interview transcripts were reviewed to ensure accuracy and clarity of content. In addition, the authors considered data collected from these participants to be of sufficient depth to provide valuable insight that addressed the study's aims and no further recruitment was attempted.
Data analytic strategy
Data analysis was undertaken by way of Braun and Clarke's six steps of thematic analysis,24,25 where each transcript was coded and collated into potential themes for further review. The lead researcher was responsible for steps one to four of the data analysis utilising a manual methodology. An inductive approach facilitated this process beginning with specific observations to generate potential theories and ideas. A semantic focus on meaning and experiential framework was taken to the coding and theme development. 26
The lead researcher and chief researcher met at steps four to six to assess the initial fit of the proposed themes and review the practicability of the analysis. Furthermore, the themes were reviewed for clarity and strength of core concepts before reviewing the appropriateness of the findings in answering the research aims and questions. This research adheres to the Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research (SRQR). 27
Ethics
Ethical approval was granted by Monash University (MUHREC Project ID: 38635). Signed consent forms were obtained from all participants.
Results
As shown in Table 1, of the seven participants who were interviewed for this study 43% (
Participant characteristics.
The thematic analysis generated five themes, each of which has associated subthemes. These five themes and associated subthemes are presented in Figure 1, and are: ‘discovery of human factors’, ‘knowledge growth is formal and informal’, ‘working smarter’, ‘leadership expectations and usefulness’ and ‘transparency of errors’.

Theme and subtheme generation.
Theme 1: Discovery of human factors
This theme outlines the current perceptions of the role of leadership in paramedicine and the source of its body of knowledge. The data elucidated subthemes where contemporary awareness was built upon the individual paramedic's previous experiences and the normalisation of leadership practices over time.
A consistent reflection within the data told of the self-discovery rather than the teaching of the non-technical paramedic skillset which incorporated such human factors as leadership and communication. This knowledge was furthered with experience and time becoming an embedded part of paramedic practice. 3A – QD – G2 – FU – QD – 9H – PL – FU – 3A – 73 –
Theme 2: Knowledge growth is formal and informal
This theme recognises that clinical leadership knowledge may be derived from either formal or informal means. The integration into paramedic practice of this knowledge requires both deliberate practice and capacity for self-reflection and recognition of personal strengths and weaknesses. PL – 3A – 73 – PL –
FU – 73 – G2 – QD – G2 – FU –
Theme 3: Working smarter
This theme encompasses the data explaining participants’ perspectives as to how acquiring leadership knowledge and capability has influenced their approaches in maximising patient safety and perceptions as to whether these approaches are likely preventing or reducing the incidence of clinical error. Whilst adherence to clinical practice guidelines and procedures and drug therapy protocols was without question, this theme explored those individually derived NTS that were complementary as such. Employing a shared, structured and systematic approach with visualisation techniques, seeking counsel from peers and the recognition of bias were all found to be essential components. QD – 73 – 73 – QD – FU – 9H – G2 – PL – 9H – QD – 73 –
Theme 4: Leadership expectations and usefulness
This theme considers the data relating to how participants believe an OOH service or organisation perceives their roles once they have acquired leadership knowledge and capability. The data reveal subthemes describing both formal and cultural sources of leadership expectations, the broader and potentially beneficial leadership roles that result from an acquired capability and its perceived importance in driving organisational change. 73 – QD – 9H – 9H – 3A – QD – FU – G2 – PL – FU – 73 – FU –
Theme 5: Transparency of errors
This theme underscores participants' perceptions as to how acquiring leadership knowledge and capability has influenced their opinions as to what behaviours promote the growth of a patient safety culture in paramedicine. The subthemes emphasise the importance of reporting and understanding sources of individual and system errors and highlight the importance of providing a psychologically safe environment for paramedics to discuss patient safety concerns. 3A – 9H PL – 73 – 9H – FU – 9H – PL –
Discussion
The results from this study provide constructive insights into the relationship between leadership and clinical skills in paramedicine and the impact on patient safety. The five themes generated provide pertinent points of discussion describing the nuanced and complex associations between leadership capability and that of patient safety. All of these promote the notion that high-performance paramedicine embraces both technical and NTS as having equally pronounced importance.
The first theme describes the current understanding of the role that leadership plays as a function of NTS utilised in daily paramedic practice. The changing cultural paradigm of both the importance of those NTS and the sources of acquiring them in the first place. That is, the reliance of the paramedic's own life experiences, where they may have recognised the value of leadership practices prior to their training and subsequently cementing those practices as normalised behaviour.
These findings are aligned with existing literature where the recognition of leadership and those other NTS deemed as desirable for paramedic practice have been identified with recognition of a conceivable link with patient safety. 5 The importance of these NTS has been well considered and applied in practice to other complex and high-risk fields such as aviation and medicine, where parallels may be drawn with paramedic practice, suggesting potential links with improved patient safety and clinical error avoidance. 28 This is in addition to the suggestion that the engagement of those leadership practices adds value to a paramedic's individual technical strengths to promote better patient outcomes over time. 4
This theme poses the question as to whether the inclusion of formal leadership and/or NTS development programs should be considered when drafting educational and practice competency policies moving forward.
The ongoing formal and informal growth of a paramedic's body of knowledge over time is highlighted in the second theme of this study. The recognition of an inextricable link between those technical and NTS notes the greater challenge in acquiring the latter. The data describes and acknowledges the importance of prioritising leadership when paramedics are faced with a complex presentation where multiple clinicians may be present on scene, and the integration of clinical skillsets to avoid cognitive overload is required. This is in addition to the informal and formal growth of knowledge in a safe learning environment.
The wider healthcare literature describes the growth of knowledge occurring formally with the adherence to correct protocols by the individual clinicians, whilst also suggesting the informal growth in knowledge be at least in part the responsibility of those senior staff and managers.9,10,29 There are limited similarities within the paramedic literature other than the recognition that the adoption of approaches such as crew resource management used in other high-risk industries would benefit patient safety and capture of knowledge/learning opportunities in those team environments.6,28
This study highlighted that paramedics were employing individually derived leadership strategies in their attempts to work smarter with those clinical guidelines, procedures, and protocols to maximise patient safety. The participants adopted risk minimisation techniques before patient engagement and sought real-time performance feedback from peers whilst on the scene, in addition to reflective review from those individuals they considered as clinical leaders. It was revealed that the success of those leadership strategies was heavily reliant upon the paramedic's capacity to recognise the presence of and then address those clinical or cognitive biases whether they had become apparent by themselves or by their peers.
These findings are in line with previous studies that had found that leadership strategies were used to reduce preventable medical errors and increase the clinician's commitment to improving patient safety. 13 In addition, it was noted that those clinicians who operated in environments that promoted these leadership strategies maintained a greater degree of clinical competence which in turn again promoted patient safety.9,11
A greater understanding as to how these strategies might be developed, and the positive influence they could have in paramedic practice, is worthy of further investigation. Identification of the expectations that an OOH service or organisation has of its paramedics post acquiring leadership capability and the perceived sources of leadership are an important finding in this study. The positive correlation between time of service and perceived leadership, whilst not unremarkable, was found to be considered as a disconnect in some circumstances, whilst the positive correlation between clinical level and perceived leadership was readily expected. It was also anticipated that those clinical leaders would both take the lead in educational excellence and driving organisational change. Within the wider literature, there is strong support for the notion that leadership development is strongly correlated with both individual and team level advancements across all NTS and, as a result, the caregiving process. 17
There is emerging evidence in support of a significant relationship between those authentic leadership qualities and that of a patient safety culture including that of improved patient outcomes within hospital-based organisations worthy of further investigation in the OOH environment. 8 The challenge to both drive change whilst maintaining sound clinical practice individually and organisationally cannot be understated.16,17 An understanding of how these leadership skills are both developed and applied to paramedic practice might not only influence current practice but also the overarching body of paramedicine knowledge.
Our findings have promoted the proposal that identification and reporting of clinical errors in a non-punitive, psychologically safe environment is crucial to the success of future policies, procedures and guidelines that will enhance patient safety. The development of individual paramedic leadership traits within this environment will promote ongoing clinical growth in day-to-day practice.
The results of this study add to a growing body of research that supports the notion that sound leadership practices in healthcare environments will contribute to both the reduction of clinical errors and as such improve patient safety overall.12,14,15 The central theme of this association is the linking of leadership practices to organisational culture and its shaping or orientation of the working environment as to error management and the resultant behavioural practices of employees. 12 The wider literature has found that the provision of psychological safety and the reduction of perceived power distances between operational/management tiers will heavily influence the willingness of clinicians to report adverse events. 15
These findings offer some consideration to OOH organisational management practices around those policies and procedures that are aimed at preventing errors. That is, the promotion of leadership practices facilitates transparency of those inevitable clinical errors and recognises the opportunity for knowledge growth that will shape the paramedic's behaviours around patient safety.
Limitations
A number of limitations should be considered when interpreting the results of this study. Firstly, the design is observational focussing on the recollections and understanding of the leadership experiences of a small cohort of specialist paramedics. This design in the absence of a control group allows the researchers to consider the prevalence of a possible relationship between leadership and clinical skills with that of patient safety.30,31 Notwithstanding this, these limitations should not be considered unique or inherent to this study and as such will still provide insights to the causal effects of this relationship, which in turn contribute to a more nuanced future understanding and assessment. 31
As described in Table 1, all the participants were of a ‘specialist’ paramedic clinical level. This cohort represents only a minority, with the majority being general-duty paramedics, of the total population of paramedics targeted for the study. As such, the interpretation of the results and the consideration of external validity to the wider population will need to be reflected upon with care. This is in addition to the investigation as to why those generalist Paramedics did not respond to the request for EOI and whether a perceived NTS knowledge gap exists between these cohorts.
The development of the semi-structured interview guiding questions asked of participants were developed after a systematic review of the literature and reflective consideration by the lead researcher and an additional review with the chief researcher as an expert in the area. Notwithstanding that the questions were both open ended and used as a guide, the risk of potential bias that might unintentionally skew responses will remain. Whilst a noteworthy limitation, this observation is not unique to this study. 32
Conclusion
Paramedics are often patients’ first point of contact and set the scene in their journey through a health care system. The importance of leadership development and other NTS within paramedic practice is key to the growth and promotion of a patient safety culture within this setting. This study has explored the perceptions of paramedics and the role of leadership within their clinical practice and its influence on patient safety. As there have been very limited previous investigations specific to paramedicine, this research has sought to seek out those lived experiences of registered paramedics and in doing so contribute to this body of knowledge. The participants in the study have identified that those NTS are inextricably linked and of equal importance to those clinical skills. The awareness of those human factors by either formal or informal means provides a basis for clinical growth, driving organisational change and the promotion of patient safety.
