
If trust is essential to health care delivery, how we pay for services should also be trustworthy.
If trust is essential to health care delivery, how we pay for services should also be trustworthy.
I started working in the field of HIV in 1996. It was the year protease inhibitors and highly active antiretroviral therapy cocktails began to change the course of HIV care. The HIV epidemic in the early years taught clinicians and caregivers the need for, and the intricacies of, culturally appropriate care for the LGBTQI+ community…. Read more »
It’s the unfortunate truth that the health care system has not always exhibited or warranted trust. The system has historically failed – and in some appalling instances directly harmed – people of color.
Trust centers on vulnerability & the need to care for the vulnerable patient. Daniel Wolfson, EVP & COO used this definition to construct the drivers of trust around four “Cs”.
Trust is largely about relationships; it extends professionalism to a larger organizational and community context by focusing on the caring and compassion needed to forge binding human connections.