
To instigate meaningful change in institutional wellbeing, today’s VCs, DVCs, PVCs, and senior university leaders must step up and become personal agents of social change and true impact players across their ever-expanding ecosystems of influence.
Senior university executives, spurred on by structural shifts amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic and its transformation of study and work environments, need to rise above “inertia”, “resistance”, “politics” and “risk” to: embrace their responsibility for wellbeing.
They are required to be both tech-savvy, says Acland, and health-savvy, says Deloitte. “Vice-chancellors now also have to be able to assess vast amounts of data…with digital developments set to transform higher education…” and they need to “appreciate that decisions relating to health and health care can have a significant impact on the culture of their organisation, the way in which work [and study] gets done… and the power of [their] personal brand to support people’s health”.
