Skip to main content

Currently Skimming:

The Roles of Trust and Health Literacy in Achieving Health Equity: Clinical Settings: Proceedings of a Workshop - in Brief
Pages 1-8

The Chapter Skim interface presents what we've algorithmically identified as the most significant single chunk of text within every page in the chapter.
Select key terms on the right to highlight them within pages of the chapter.


From page 1...
... While indexes such as medication in clinical settings might impact trust in health care adherence, clinic no-show rates, and hospital admissions institutions, and how that, in turn, might positively can reflect trust or mistrust, health care has yet to impact health equity.1 The following two workshops standardize and adopt measures of trust. There are efforts focused on similar questions but in different contexts: under way to prioritize trust in health care, and she noted rather than clinical settings, they focused on public the work that the American Board of Internal Medicine health institutions and community settings.
From page 2...
... She noted that many people come to a the bidirectionality of trust, Nikki shared a personal story clinical encounter with a history of having experienced about a time that her child, who she noted is medically discrimination or blatant racism, highlighting the complex and disabled, presented with a concerning cough importance of unpacking those experiences and to a physician. The physician was dismissive of Nikki's addressing them in the patient-provider encounter concerns and continued to insist the cough was normal, through deep listening and ensuring that everyone feels rather than trusting Nikki's knowledge and experience of heard and valued by every member of a health care team.
From page 3...
... Confusing equality -- treating every patient the same regardless of who they are and what their history When asked how they would measure trust if trust is -- with equity -- meeting each patient where they became a health care quality measure, Tucker-Seeley are and recognizing the knowledge they bring to an thought that some measure of engagement might be encounter -- can interfere with trust, said Tucker- useful, and Montgomery suggested adding a measure Seeley. His approach to his interactions with health about trust to the Hospital Consumer Assessment of care has been to communicate to a provider that he has Healthcare Providers and Systems survey2 that measures a background in public health and brings not only a patients' perceptions of the care they receive.
From page 4...
... According to Simon, one aspect of measuring trust greatest level of trust in health professionals and health is transparency regarding clearly stated organization values authorities and considered social media as the least and beliefs and how an organization plans to achieve trust trustworthy information source (De Gani et al., 2022)
From page 5...
... One criticism he has regarding trust and health care more broadly concerns the idea that trust is an explanatory Concluding his remarks, Paasche-Orlow said that health paradigm for racial disparities in health care. The basic literacy can be part of the path to trustworthiness underlying principle in much of the literature, said by helping people develop critical appraisal skills, Paasche-Orlow, is that minoritized racial and ethnic simplifying patient-directed materials, and teaching groups simply do not trust the health care system and clinicians to use plain language, which can increase trust, that this is a reflection on the Tuskegee syphilis studies instead of jargon, which decreases trustworthiness.
From page 6...
... care providers would ask in every patient's first perinatal care visit. This could help alleviate the common problem Dedner said that his organization uses an evidenceof a pregnant person leaving that first visit with a pile based intervention that helps all therapists improve their of information and the expectation that they would cultural humility and cultural responsiveness (Dayunderstand and absorb complex concepts such as genetic Vines et al., 2018)
From page 7...
... 2021. Factors associated shamed because they do not automatically trust their with COVID-19 vaccine trust and hesitancy among physician or the health care system.
From page 8...
... STAFF M KELLY MCHUGH, ROSE MARIE MARTINEZ, and CRYSTI PARK SPONSORS This workshop was partially supported by AbbVie, Inc., the California Dental Association, the Department of Health and Human Services, Eli Lilly and Company, Health Literacy Media, Health Literacy Partners, Merck & Co., Inc., the National Institutes of Health, Northwell Health, and Pfizer Inc.


This material may be derived from roughly machine-read images, and so is provided only to facilitate research.
More information on Chapter Skim is available.