TITLE:
Ethical Leadership Development: Fairness, Integrity, and Stewardship in Healthcare Leadership
AUTHORS:
Nicole Poston
KEYWORDS:
Burnout, Crisis, Ethics, Fairness, Healthcare, Integrity, Leadership, Moral Injury, Stewardship, Trust
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Access Library Journal,
Vol.12 No.12,
December
24,
2025
ABSTRACT: This theoretical treatise addresses the growing demand for ethical leadership in healthcare organizations amid increasing complexity, moral distress, and institutional strain. The study aims to develop a practical, theoretically grounded framework for ethical leadership centered on the principles of fairness, integrity, and stewardship. Drawing on virtue ethics, deontological ethics, and justice-based reasoning, the paper develops a model tailored to healthcare leadership, where high-stakes decisions frequently carry life-altering consequences. The theoretical treatise is based on a reflective analysis of professional leadership experience within U.S.-based faith-affiliated healthcare systems, where theological commitments to human dignity, care for the vulnerable, and accountability before a moral community sharpen the emphasis on stewardship and moral reasoning. This experience is integrated with contemporary scholarship from organizational ethics and leadership studies. A qualitative, theory-driven approach is employed to examine how ethical leadership values manifest in real-world challenges, such as provider burnout, equity gaps, and psychological safety. In this paper, psychological safety is understood as a shared belief that the team is safe to speak up, ask questions, and acknowledge uncertainty or error without fear of punishment or humiliation. Special attention is given to crisis leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic, used as a test case to examine how ethical principles operate under pressure. The proposed Ethical Leadership Development Model positions psychological safety as a central outcome of value-driven leadership. Ethical leadership is not merely reactive; it requires the intentional cultivation of moral perception and reasoning in the leader’s response to complex moral situations. The results are particularly relevant to healthcare administrators, leadership educators, and policy developers who seek to integrate ethics into training, evaluation, and governance. The framework can be adapted for use in healthcare institutions, leadership development programs, and ethics committees to foster resilient, values-based organizational cultures.