Niagara Health beats national average of women in hospital leadership roles
Niagara hospital system has ‘made a very deliberate decision to support female leaders with flexibility in their work schedules,’ says president and CEO Lynn Guerriero
Lynn Guerriero couldn’t help but be taken by the sight as she scanned a hospital auditorium filled with women.
The president and chief executive officer of Niagara Health was participating in a photo with 45 of her fellow female-identifying leaders at the organization to celebrate International Women’s Day on March 8. She smiled as she took stock of the crowd, a cross-section of the women who guide hospital health care in the region.
“It’s really moving that we have this many female leaders,” Guerriero said. “To see the number of women we have in leadership roles when I walked into the room was a little overwhelming.”
Health care has historically been a sector with a predominantly female workforce. When it comes to leadership, it’s also one where the glass ceiling is showing cracks.
Women represent 82 per cent of Niagara Health’s staff. At the executive level, seven of nine leaders gathering around the table are women, some of whom began their career trajectory on the front lines of health care. The board of directors is also chaired by a woman, Marylee O’Neill.
Based on numbers alone, Niagara Health is above average when it comes to female representation at the decision-making tier in Canadian hospitals.
Nearly 52 per cent of hospital presidents and CEOs across Canada are perceived to be women, according to a March 2022 study in the Canadian Medical Association Journal, which gleaned its data from hospital websites.
Closer to home, 52 per cent of Ontario hospital CEOs are perceived to be or self-identified as women, according to the Ontario Hospital Association’s Proximity Institute.
“We’ve made a very deliberate decision to support female leaders with flexibility in their work schedules, including the ability to do work from home or flex work schedules,” Guerriero said. “That helps the whole workforce, but especially women.”
Support for women working at Niagara Health shows in other initiatives.
The organization recently purchased three lactation pods to help mothers who need to breastfeed or express breast milk on the job and prefer a private space to do so. The pods at the St. Catharines, Niagara Falls and Welland hospitals are available to health-care workers, learners, volunteers, patients and visitors.
The organization has established mentorship and bursary programs that provide professional development support to assist equity-deserving groups in career advancement. Supports are also in place for women physicians on the leadership track.
“Health care is predominantly women,” said Fiona Peacefull, Niagara Health’s executive vice-president of human resources. “Eighty-two per cent (of our workforce being women) really shows that we’re an organization that needs women to operate. That’s translated to some really phenomenal professional development opportunities for women in our organization.”
These are women who are mothers, daughters in caregiving roles to aging parents or ailing partners, those going back to school in their spare time, or dealing with personal challenges, such as divorce, Guerriero noted.
Guerriero’s own lived experience as she worked to become a hospital CEO included raising three children, getting her master’s degree while having to work full-time and navigating a separation while her children were young. Through it all, she said, she had supportive managers and leaders who never made her choose between work and family. That’s become fundamental to her own principles as a leader.
“It’s making sure women can achieve their career goals, even if it’s a hard road to get there,” she said. “We absolutely expect them to put their personal lives first, not work. You don’t have to give up being a good mom and partner for your career. You can absolutely have both.”
Niagara Health also stepped up to the Canadian government’s 50/30 Challenge, an initiative to increase representation and inclusion of diverse groups in the workplace. Goals of the challenge include achieving gender parity (50 per cent women and/or non-binary people) on boards or in senior management, and at least 30 per cent representation of other equity-deserving groups, particularly racialized groups, people with disabilities and gender and sexually diverse people, on boards or in senior management.
In a hospital, that kind of representation means a better working environment for everyone, a more resilient organization and, ultimately, better health care, Peacefull said.
“People are inspired if they see relatability in their leaders. I see a lot of women and diversity in our leadership group and I hope that’s really encouraging,” Peacefull said. “I personally find it inspiring. The environment I work in right now allows me to do my best work. I attribute that to Lynn (Guerriero) and the peer group I work with, and that’s not just based on gender.”
None of this is accidental or incidental. Back in the auditorium at The Marotta Family Hospital in St. Catharines, Guerriero said that having so many women leaders to celebrate at Niagara Health is deliberate. And it will continue to require conscious action to sustain until it becomes business as usual.
“We still have to be intentional around supporting female leaders. Culture change takes time,” she said. “But some day, I hope it will be part of the culture. We’ll support that because we believe, in our gut, we need diverse leadership to achieve the best outcomes. If we believe it, and I do, it becomes part of the culture.”
‘‘Culture change takes time. But some day, I hope it will be part of the culture. We’ll support that because we believe, in our gut, we need diverse leadership to achieve the best outcomes. If we believe it, and I do, it becomes part of the culture.
LYNN GUERRIERO NIAGARA HEALTH CEO