37: Polarity Thinking: Leading During a Pandemic - podcast episode cover

37: Polarity Thinking: Leading During a Pandemic

Jul 02, 202032 min
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Episode description

Leading a governmental health department is a complex job during the best of times, but particularly so during a pandemic when leaders must navigate every step carefully. In this episode, our guests introduce and discuss a concept called 'polarity thinking,' which invites leaders to embrace situations or problems from the opposing perspectives, or 'poles.'

As public health leaders have to communicate messaging that many people may not want to hear – like wearing a mask in public or urging the public to get a flu shot this fall – embracing 'polarity thinking' can strengthen their arguments and earn them more credibility with the people they serve. Learn more about this leadership strategy in the episode.

PROGRAMMING NOTE: At several points in the interview, the host and guests refer to the word 'STHO,' which stands for "state (territorial) health officials."

Guests:

Abigail Dunne-Moses, Senior Faculty, Center for Creative Leadership

Paul Halverson, DrPH, Founding Dean and Professor at Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health and former Secretary, Arkansas Department of Health

Resources:

Communicating Crucial Messages: 5 Tips to Improve Public Speaking (ASTHO)

Are You Facing a Problem? Or a Polarity? (Center for Creative Leadership)

Lessons from the Trenches: Leading During a Public Health Crisis (ASTHO)

Navigating Complexity: Managing Polarities (Harvard Business)

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