Next in Line
Lowered Care Expectations in the Age of Retail- and Value-Based Health
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:26th Oct '17
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

For all the political branding and rebranding of healthcare in the United States, its fundamental unit of currency remains the doctor-patient relationship. This relationship has undergone seismic changes during the twenty-first century, including the introduction of new players (the so-called healthcare "team") and care delivery in settings like big-box stores and bureaucratic health systems. But are any of us better off? Next in Line is the first book to examine the doctor-patient relationship in the context of its new environs, in particular the impact of efficiency-driven innovation and retail-care models on physician mindsets and the patient experience. The overall picture is one of lowered expectations-a transactional, impersonal, and institutionally-limited incarnation of the medical bedside that leaves all parties underwhelmed and overstressed. By first conducting a macro-analysis of key industry trends (including the widespread use of performance metrics and retail principles), then measuring these trends' impacts through interviews with physicians and patients, Next in Line^ is both an examination and a critique of a care system at a crossroads. It is essential reading for understanding why relational care matters -- and why it must be saved in a corporatized health system bent on using retail approaches to deliver care.
Caring and healing are vital core elements of what our health system provides us, not just externalities of some vast economic process. Hoffs sophisticated analysis is a reminder of what we stand to lose as a society if we dont get this right. * Jeff Goldsmith, Health Affairs *
ISBN: 9780190626341
Dimensions: 137mm x 206mm x 15mm
Weight: 295g
256 pages