Date of Conferral
2-18-2026
Degree
Ph.D.
School
Management
Advisor
Thomas Butkiewicz
Abstract
Preventable medical errors continue to challenge healthcare systems and highlight the critical role of leadership in shaping organizational safety climates. Healthcare leaders need to understand this dynamic as a primary indicator affecting patient outcomes. The purpose of this quantitative correlational cross-sectional study was to examine the relationship between transformational, transactional, and laissez-faire leadership styles and the safety climate within an integrated healthcare system in Northern California. Avolio and Bass’s full range leadership model and Neal and Griffin’s organizational safety climate theory grounded this study. The participants comprised 2,352 clinical and nonclinical staff who completed the safety attitudes questionnaire and the multifactor leadership questionnaire. The results of the multiple regression model were statistically significant, F(3, 2,349) = 1,066.61, p < .001, R2 = .578. The variance in safety climate explains that leadership styles were a substantial predictor of employees’ safety climate perceptions. Active leadership behaviors were associated with stronger safety climates, while passive or avoidant leadership was inversely related. The results underscore the importance of highly engaged and accountable leadership in creating and sustaining safe workplaces. Limiting laissez-faire leadership tendencies could further contribute to safer and more reliable patient care and staff well-being. Understanding these relationships can help healthcare leaders design strategies for leadership development, transform cultures, and enable continuous improvement. Potential implications for positive social change include opportunities for integrated healthcare system leaders to strengthen the safety climate by implementing effective leadership behaviors to optimize patient outcomes.
Recommended Citation
Grewal, Darshan Kaur, "Leadership Styles and Safety Climate in an Integrated Healthcare System in Northern California" (2026). Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies. 19170.
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/19170
