Why Study a Leadership in Healthcare (University of Wolverhampton) Postgraduate Diploma with Learna
We have over 10 years’ experience delivering online courses, giving you access to flexible, affordable distance learning in partnership with world-leading educators.
100% Flexible
Our courses are 100% online. No fixed study times mean you can log in and learn whenever and wherever.
Multidisciplinary - study in a group of doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other healthcare professionals.
Expert Led
All of our programmes are authored and developed by world leading experts in their field.
Our faculty are selected due to their subject expertise, experience and teaching abilities to ensure the highest standards of educational excellence.
Career Boosting
Get a University Validated postgraduate qualification in just 1 calendar year instead of 2 academic years.
40% of our alumni reported an increase in salary 2 years after studying with us.
Who is this course for?
This Postgraduate Diploma in Healthcare Leadership is designed for healthcare professionals who want to build leadership skills and enhance their influence within their organisations, without the full commitment of a master's degree. It is particularly suited for:
GPs (General Practitioners)
This PGDip provides GPs with essential leadership skills to optimise practice management, improve team performance, and enhance patient care. With the complexities of healthcare increasing, GPs will benefit from the knowledge needed to streamline operations and drive improvements in care delivery.
Nurses
This PGDip equips them with the foundational leadership skills to take on more responsibility within healthcare settings. It prepares them to manage clinical teams, implement quality improvements, and lead initiatives that positively impact patient outcomes. For nurses aiming for leadership roles, this diploma provides practical tools to develop their managerial capabilities.
Physician Associates (PAs)
This PGDip helps PAs develop the leadership skills needed to take on greater responsibilities within healthcare teams, such as clinic management and coordination of care delivery. It provides practical insights into team dynamics, clinical governance, and effective decision-making in healthcare settings.
Healthcare Administrators/Practice Managers
This PGDip offers them the leadership and operational management skills required to improve organisational performance, streamline processes, and enhance both staff and patient satisfaction. It is ideal for those looking to lead more effectively and implement strategic improvements in their practice or healthcare setting.
Public Health Professionals
This PGDip provides the essential leadership tools to design, manage, and implement public health strategies more effectively. By gaining insights into organisational behaviour, policy influence, and programme management, these professionals can improve the impact of public health initiatives and address community health challenges.
Pharmacists
This PGDip enables pharmacists to develop the leadership skills necessary to manage pharmacy operations, influence healthcare protocols, and improve collaboration with other healthcare professionals. It’s ideal for those looking to step into supervisory or management roles within healthcare settings.
How Will I Learn?
You'll learn through our flexible, interactive online platform, which allows you to engage with clinical cases, complete assignments, and collaborate with fellow students at times that suit your schedule. There's no fixed timetable—simply log in daily to participate in the week's activities.
Learn through engaging discussion
Our teaching approach is highly interactive, using small groups of 10-20 students to foster a collaborative environment where you can engage in thoughtful discussions and receive guidance from your tutor. You'll have access to learning resources and discussion forums that encourage ongoing interaction and deeper engagement with the material.
Throughout your studies, you'll receive support from a dedicated expert tutor and our Student Support Team, ensuring you have the resources needed to navigate the course successfully.
Curriculum
The PGDip in Leadership in Healthcare provides a multi-disciplinary learning environment with online delivery, avoiding the need for the release of staff from the workplace. The programme is competitively priced to offer good value for money whilst enabling practising healthcare professionals the flexibility to continue with their professional development, thereby optimising client outcomes. The breakdown of the modules is considerate of the need to blend subjects with those that are rapidly emerging in the discipline. The one year programme in Healthcare Leadership will be formed of six 20-credit modules (120 credits).Aims of the module:
During the 6 weeks of this module, students will learn and understand why leaders are important and the difference between leadership and management as well as understanding the varying aspects of leadership theory (authentic, charismatic, collective, compassionate leader/follower)
Learning Outcomes
- Systematically examine ‘what is leadership’ and consider its value in complex healthcare organisational structures.
- Critically explore relevant leadership theories in line with understanding ‘followers’ to improve the healthcare organisational environment, taking into account the complexity of interacting social factors.
Module content:
- Is leadership about the individual or the social relationships?
- What do followers potentially admire in a person taking on the role of leader?
- What is power and how does power affect the dynamics of leadership?
- A unique feature of this module will be to understand the value of ethics in organisations. It is expected that this aspect of this module will help leaders to be more ethical in their approaches within a healthcare setting, which is so important for the medical profession.
Aims of the module:
The aim of this module is to explore how leaders can develop and improve healthcare services by recognising and harnessing human potential and recognising how the culture shapes an organisation and a focus on integrated teams across the industry, covering culture, purpose, values and trust.
Learning Outcomes
- Recognise the dynamics of effective teams and how to better enhance the healthcare working environment by exploring organisational culture, and engaging individuals to work collaboratively (integrated teams).
- Comprehensively assess the elements of building a high-performing team in your own healthcare setting, including the importance of common purpose, trust and values.
Module content:
- Theories of Motivation - the application of these theories to improve productivity and innovation.
- Organisational Culture - its impact both on leaders and followers.
- Job Design and Engagement - what are the factors that lead to levels of engagement in your role and how are the conditions created to foster employee engagement?
- The Psychological Contract - defining and critically analysing the concept.
- Talent Management - how it is used in a healthcare setting.
- Diversity and Work-life Balance - considering the reality of diversity, equality and work-life balance in healthcare; its importance and how it could be improved.
Aims of the module:
To apply the theory and practice of clinical governance, quality improvement and patient safety to complex healthcare settings, and learn what is the role of leadership in healthcare with regard to clinical governance? Exploring the activities that it is traditionally composed of, moving on to an introduction to the 5 cultural components.
Learning Outcomes
- Evaluate the role of clinical governance in improving healthcare organisations.
- Systematically navigate the complexities of implementing clinical governance and quality agendas in achieving high-quality care and patient safety.
Module content:
- The various approaches to applying clinical governance in practice, including the considerations how it is not applied in practice. This is applied by looking at the various levels within healthcare organisations: department/specialty; organisational level; hospital governance; finally, any external parties involved.
- A critique of the concepts of Safety-I and Safety-II, defining and discussing psychological safety and how it can be implemented at various organisational levels.
- Considering the differences between what is deemed an 'acceptable' error versus an 'unacceptable' error.
- Incorporating accountability and how this is linked to patient safety.
- Considering its importance in healthcare in relation to a blame culture, considering what Just Culture means in practice.
Aims of the module:
The module explores our understanding of what a 'career' is and compares the true meaning of jobs and vocations. It will explore leading through crisis, including material on wellbeing and recognising the blurred line between mentor, coach and counsellor and how to recognise when to pass on to a professional.
Learning Outcomes
- Evaluate the role of career development tools in complex healthcare organisations.
- Critically appraise the elements of mentoring and coaching and effectively consider ‘wellbeing’ in complex healthcare situations.
Module content:
- What is meant by coaching and mentoring in a workplace setting?
- What makes a high-performing healthcare team?
- Potential differences between team leadership and team management. Students will be asked to consider their own places of work and consider how shared team leadership can be more effective in healthcare.
- Leading through crisis.
- In exploring inter-professional teams, the focus is on the collaborative nature of teams working more effectively across boundaries.
- The aim of the final week is to bring all the learning together and consider how to select effective team leaders by weighing a potential team leader’s social capital against human capital.
Aims of the module:
This module explores the concept of VUCA (volatility, uncertainty, complexity, and ambiguity) and focuses on what strategy means and how organisations can become innovative. It also explores healthcare of the future, sustainability, and values-based healthcare.
Learning Outcomes:
- Analyse the role of strategy in achieving aims and objectives within complex healthcare organisations.
- Advocate the means of developing a culture of innovation to build effective healthcare organisations for the future.
Module content:
- Strategy - what does strategy mean?
- Factors that influence strategy
- How to turn a strategy into performance
- How to make an innovative organisation
- How organisations learn
- Healthcare in the future
Aims of the module:
This module combines all the knowledge of the previous five modules to deliver the most important outcome: “The Change.” It looks at leading change and uncertainty.
Learning outcomes:
- Critically evaluate a range of change models and theories, synthesising and selecting appropriate models for a diverse range of situations.
- Justify appropriate leadership in implementing change, taking into account the ‘problem’ being addressed, organisational culture, and personal responses to change.
Module content:
- Students will be able to understand the difference between Change Leadership and Change Management.
- Also, what are the resistors to change?
- What techniques and/or approaches can help guide change?
Assessment Methods
This programme emphasises learning through active participation in case-based discussions, reflection, and real-life scenarios. Students engage with clinical cases that mirror everyday practice, fostering problem-solving and evidence-based application from the very beginning.
Across the modules, assessments are integrated with learning. Each week, you will work through two to three clinical cases, discussing and reflecting on them with peers under the guidance of an expert tutor. These discussions form the core of your learning and are also the basis for your assessments.
Our innovative teaching methods are designed to help you translate this learning into real-world clinical practice. You'll need to regularly log in to participate in discussions, ideally on a daily basis, and commit approximately two hours per day to your studies. Our dedicated Student Support Team is available to assist with any challenges you may encounter, from navigating our online platform to managing deadlines.
How Foundational Knowledge is Developed
The programme is structured so that foundational knowledge is introduced through carefully designed clinical cases. Each case is crafted to highlight essential concepts and progressively deepen your understanding as you apply critical thinking and evidence-based analysis. This hands-on approach ensures that you are not only acquiring theoretical knowledge but also learning how to apply it in a practical, clinical setting.
This programme is suited for professionals who thrive in an online, discussion-based learning environment. Please note that this course focuses on interactive, applied learning through peer collaboration and case discussions. You will be fully supported, encouraged and led through the programme to success and graduation!
- Every week students are presented with two/three case-based scenarios that are reflective of every day clinical practice and research.
- Your tutor will post a number of questions and prompts to aid students in a formal discussion of each case.
- These discussions are facilitated throughout by your tutor and are then assessed at the end of every module.
The reflective journal is used by students throughout each module to monitor personal progress. This is guided by weekly feedback from your tutor and is graded at the end of every module. The journal typically includes the following:
- Initial expectations and reasons for taking the course.
- Module and/or personal learning objectives.
- Description of events, issues and learning points within current personal practice.
- Change in every day practice due to knowledge gained on each module.
- A description of what has been learned during the module.
At the beginning of each module, students are presented with a module assignment. The module activity may take the form of an individual piece of work, such as an essay on a relevant topic, or may be a group activity, such as the creation of a marketing plan. This activity tests a student's ability to work independently or work within a team: to select, sift and analyse information, interact with colleagues and apportion group member’s roles and derive a solution to the module task.
The diverse assessment methods within each module are designed to test the expected characteristics of Masters graduates. These include critical awareness of current issues and developments in leadership, critical skills, knowledge of professional responsibility, integrity and ethics and the ability to reflect on their own progress as a learner.
Entry requirements
Since our courses for health professionals are conducted entirely online, they are accessible to both UK and international registered healthcare professionals.
Applicants will typically hold a first degree or equivalent (including international qualifications) in a relevant professional healthcare field, such as a medical or nursing degree.
Registered healthcare professionals without these recognised qualifications will be considered on an individual basis and a wide range of prior experience may be taken into account. In some cases, applicants may be asked to submit a piece of work for assessment in order to confirm that they are able to work comfortably at postgraduate level, and demonstrate the requisite clinical and professional knowledge.
Documents Required
- A copy of your updated CV including your address and date of birth.
- A copy of your undergraduate degree certificate.
- The name and email address of someone who is able to provide a reference, this can be a work colleague, employer or former tutor.
- A detailed personal statement explaining why you would like to undertake the course.
- A copy of your proof of English competency (see below).
English Language Requirements
Proficiency in the English language is also essential to completing our courses. If English is NOT your first language, we ask for proof of competency during the application process. We are able to accept an IELTS overall score of 6.0 (with a minimum of 5.5 for each band) or an equivalent qualification.
Should you have already successfully completed the 1 year Postgraduate Diploma and wish to convert to the MSc and complete only the second year of the programme this is possible. Please contact our admissions department admissions@diploma-msc.com to find out more.
Course Fees
Option 1: Upfront Payment in full. Option 2: Interest free payments every other month for the duration of the course.
Date | Instalments | Up-Front Payments |
---|---|---|
Deposit | £895 | £5,360 |
1st May 2025 | £893 | |
1st July 2025 | £893 | |
1st September 2025 | £893 | |
1st November 2025 | £893 | |
1st January 2026 | £893 |
† Deposits are non-refundable
†† Prices are subject to review following each intake
Option 3: Lower your monthly payments by spreading the cost for between 2 and 8 years with a loan from our lending partner Lendwise*.
*Subject to eligibility criteria.
Learna | Diploma MSc has a partnership with Lendwise which is a leading private student loan provider, to help UK students fund their course fees should they require financing. Lendwise is a UK-based education finance platform through which candidates can fund their postgraduate and professional qualification studies at leading educational institutions.
A Lendwise loan comes with a fixed interest rate for the duration of the loan (between 2 and 8 years) and no early repayment penalties. The interest rate offered will depend on the overall applicant profile and the application process is entirely online.*
*Other sources of funding are available.
Learna | Diploma MSc does not offer financial advice, recommend or endorse any financial product. You should always check the suitability of the product that is of interest to you. If you are in any doubt as to its suitability, we suggest that you seek independent professional advice.