The Trust Crisis in Healthcare

The Trust Crisis in Healthcare

by David A. Shore
ISBN-10:
0195176367
ISBN-13:
9780195176360
Pub. Date:
09/14/2006
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195176367
ISBN-13:
9780195176360
Pub. Date:
09/14/2006
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
The Trust Crisis in Healthcare

The Trust Crisis in Healthcare

by David A. Shore
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Overview

The lack of trust in our healthcare system brings ominous results, from decreasing health outcomes to increasing costs, from organization inefficiencies to a pervasive pattern of litigation. This will only worsen as healthcare becomes subject to greater market mechanisms, and as patients, providers, and payers view each other with increasing suspicion. Healthcare professionals are just now coming to realize what other professionals have known for years: trust is earned, not assumed. The Trust Crisis represents the first comprehensive survey of the causes and consequences of declining trust in healthcare, and more importantly, it provides suggestions for restoring that trust.

Editor David A. Shore, founder of the Harvard School of Public Health's Trust Initiative, brings together an unparalleled collection of healthcare leaders for this volume. Chapter authors include Donald Berwick, Robert Blendon, Lucian Leape, and George Lundberg. The book also features an introduction by Cokie and Steve Roberts. Causes, consequences, and cures for the crisis in trust are specifically addressed. Critical areas treated by the authors include:
- systemic conditions that lead to medical errors, and remedies for promoting quality of care.
- outdated modes of doctor-patient communication that hinder compliance.
- novel modes of interaction to improve satisfaction. - patient-centered care and metrics to evaluate its presence or absence.
- media communication and miscommunication, and new standards for medical reporting.
- clinical insights applied to the use of human subjects in biomedical research.
- recommendations for revising medical school curricula and strengthening the peer-review process in medical journals.
- practical strategies for decreasing the lingering discord between patients, providers, and health plans.

While presenting a diversity of topics and opinions, the authors of this volume agree upon a few principles. The trust famine will have dire consequences if it continues unchecked. Healthcare leaders can take measures to improve trust. Regaining trust requires that entire organizations pay closer attention to the "human factors" of healthcare. And perhaps most critical for change, trust-building is not only good medicine, but good business as well.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195176360
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 09/14/2006
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 9.30(w) x 6.30(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Harvard School of Public Health

Table of Contents

Introduction: Reflections on Trust. , Cokie Roberts and Steven V. Roberts1. The (Sorry) State of Trust in the American HealthCare Enterprise, David A. Shore2. Why Americans Don't Trust the Government and Don't Trust Healthcare, Robert J. Blendon3. Skeptical Patients: Performance, Social Capital, and Culture, Pippa NorrisPart II. 4. Building Quality in the Healthcare Environment, Donald M. Berwick5. Medical Errors and Patient Safety, Lucian L. Leape6. Assessing Quality: Today's Data and a Research Agenda, Christine G. WilliamsPart III. 7. Patients' Trust in Their Doctors: Are We Losing Ground?, Dana Gelb Safran8. Health Care Research: Can Patients Trust Physician Scientists?, Greg Koski9. Medical Education: Teaching Doctors to be Trustworthy, Jordan J. Cohen10. Trustworthy Information: Medical Journals and the Internet, George Lundberg11. Trustworthy Information: The Role of the Media, Trudy Lieberman12. Confusion at the Table: Can We Trust That Our Food is Healthy?, Walter C. Willett13. Trust in Vaccines, Marie C. McCormick14. Trust in the Trenches: Developing the Patient-Physician Diad in Medical Genetics, Susan P. PaukerPart IV. 15. Gaining Competitive Advantage in the Health Care Marketplace by Building Trust, David A. Shore16. The Changing Relationship Between Health Plans and Their Members, Charles Cutler17. Building Trust in a Healthcare System, Michael J. Dowling18. Building Trust in the Clinician's Office and at the Bedside, Howard King and Richard Toran19. Conclusion: Trust in Health Care, Trust in Society, Marc Roberts
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