You wil be the head of your own department, ensuring that our patients get the possible treatment and care.
Working life
You'll already be a trained healthcare professional, such as a nurse or allied health professional. You'll be leading a team of your peers or a multidisciplinary team where a mix of professionals work together to deliver care such as maternity or the NHS 111 service.You may also be managing a function such as clinical audit or governance.
Just some of our responsibilities could be:
- setting priorities
- planning for future development
- budget management
- ensuring value for money and quality in the services
- responsible for clinical governance and clinical audit – programmes aimed at improving health services to patients.work in clinical audit or clinical governance
- closely involved in any changes to services for patients
Roles in clinical management
The following are examples of roles in clinical management. They are a guide - so you'll need to check any job vacancy you're considering to see exactly what the role involves and the requirements for the post.
- Clinical audit manager
- Clinical governance manager
- Clinical governance manager/assistant lead nurse
- Head of clinical governance and risk management
- Integrated urgent care/NHS 111 clinical adviser and senior clinical adviser
Clinical audit manager
Most likely working in a hospital, you'll have responsibility for managing a team that ensures the efficient and effective development and delivery of clinical audit and effectiveness across the district.
This sort of post requires a minimum of three years' NHS experience in a clinical audit, clinical governance or related clinical effectiveness role, with an ability to plan and co-ordinate the work of others as well as the ability to develop staff and enhance their performance.
You'll need a detailed knowledge and understanding of clinical governance and clinical audit and their application, along with the ability to interpret and implement changes resulting from national and local initiatives.
There are a range of roles in clinical management, including clinical audit and clinical governance.
Clinical governance manager
You'll need to be able to develop clinical governance across the NHS trust, covering radiology, pharmacy, therapies, private patients, outpatients, pathology and the chaplaincy.
You'll be responsible for developing a system that places clinical quality at the heart of all healthcare delivery by working closely with head of clinical governance, the clinical director for clinical governance and the directorate team of clinicians and managers.
Clinical governance manager/assistant lead nurse
You will need to be an enthusiastic nurse with senior management experience. Significant involvement in the clinical governance agenda and a willingness to work flexibly as part of a range of multidisciplinary teams will be crucial.
You will be responsible for clinical governance delivery within local delivery teams, for a range of governance development initiatives. You'll also support the lead nurse in delivery of the professional nursing agenda.
Head of clinical governance and risk management
You might be based at a hospital NHS trust that employs around 5,000 staff and you'll be responsible for developing and delivering the infrastructure to support the trust's clinical governance and risk management agenda.
You will need a thorough understanding of the principles of clinical governance, risk management, complaints and controls assurance to effectively manage the process. It would demand excellent communication, leadership and influencing skills, to work effectively with a diverse range of contacts, including professional bodies and managers.
A university degree in relevant disciplines and/or relevant professional qualifications might be needed as well as proven skills in successfully leading change management programmes. Evidence of implementing national policy at local level and experience with developing strategy to underpin corporate directions would also be important.
You might work in an NHS trust or as part of a clinical commissioning group (CCG).
Integrated urgent care/NHS 111 clinical adviser and senior clinical adviser
Clinical advisers and senior clinical advisers working in integrated urgent care/NHS 111 services manage urgent and non-urgent calls from patients, members of the public and healthcare professionals, such as GPs, nurses and pharmacists.
As a registered healthcare practitioner, you'll use your professional and medical judgement to assess callers, either over the phone, or face to face. Assisted by a clinical decision support system, you'll make appropriate referrals and give health advice to enable patients to manage their symptoms at home.
Clinical advisers and senior clinical advisers are part of an integrated multidisciplinary urgent care team and work with clinical and non-clinical staff, including nurses, doctors, allied health professionals, pharmacists and dentists.
NHS 111 clinical advisers work with a considerable degree of autonomy and use research findings to enhance and underpin their area of practice.
Senior clinical advisers are responsible for the supervision, teaching, mentoring and preceptorship of other staff which may include students, other clinicians and non-clinical colleagues. Senior clinical advisers provide clinical leadership and make sure that performance and quality objectives are achieved through best practice, risk management and performance indicators.
Visit the NHS England website for further details about a career and leadership development in integrated urgent care/NHS 111.