Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

      • A stable foundation of trust between patient and nurse can diminish patients' mistrust of the healthcare system while engaging patients in their own care and improving health outcomes. Trust can be fostered through active listening as well as strengthening verbal and nonverbal communication skills.
      pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33660652/
  1. People also ask

  2. Trust is necessary for optimizing health research, eliminating healthcare disparities, and achieving health equity, but efforts to build trust to increase healthcare utilization and research participation may have little effect on attitudes or behaviors that are rooted in distrust or mistrust.

    • Derek M Griffith, Erin M Bergner, Alecia S Fair, Consuelo H Wilkins
    • 2021
  3. Apr 1, 2021 · A stable foundation of trust between patient and nurse can diminish patients' mistrust of the healthcare system while engaging patients in their own care and improving...

  4. Sep 12, 2021 · Participants identified three mechanisms through which hospitals build their trust: (1) competence (effectively treating health issues, providing a safe and clean hospital environment, and having clinicians who are knowledgeable and thorough), (2) caring (hospital culture that prioritizes patients’ comfort, welcoming physical environment, and cl...

    • Jessica Greene, Haley Samuel-Jakubos
    • 31.6
    • 2021
    • 50.0
    • Abstract
    • Purpose
    • Data Sources
    • Study Selection
    • Data Extraction
    • Results of Data Synthesis
    • Conclusion
    • Funding
    • Acknowledgements

    The concept of trust has been predominantly associated with situations of uncertainty and risk, relations of dependency between experts and non-experts, and expectations about future behaviour/interactions. The asymmetrical provider–patient relationship in health care is therefore a prime example of what has been called a ‘trust relationship’ wher...

    The aim of review was to characterize the evidence base on trust in the health-care provider patient relationship in order to see if, and how, the perspectives and focus of trust research may have changed since Rowe's review and to identify directions for future research. A systematic mapping review is ‘a defined method to build a classification s...

    In order to access potential studies in the medical, social science and grey literature to address our research question, we searched the following electronic databases from January 2004 to November 2010: EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsychINFO, The Cochrane Library, Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (ASSIA), Soc Index, Web of Science, ETHOS, SIGLE. T...

    The author N.B. initially assessed the potential eligibility of all abstracts identified from the electronic searches. The whole team independently screened a sample of excluded abstracts (2% each) plus a shared set of 148 included abstracts to refine the inclusion criteria and to agree the main elements of interest for data extraction. To reduce h...

    Given the number of relevant abstracts identified and the aim to provide a characterization of research on trust, we decided to base data extraction on information available from the abstract and bibliographic information. The following information was extracted from the abstracts of included papers:Data were extracted independently using a standar...

    Abstracts identified

    Figure 1 summarizes the results of the literature search based on the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) flow diagram . The literature search identified 13 632 articles, 5179 of which were duplicates. The remaining 8453 items were screened of which 7587 were excluded. Seven thousand and forty-three of these did not address the topic of interest and 268 abstracts were not in the English language. The remainder of these abstracts did address issues o...

    Characteristics of research

    In total, 596 studies were published between 2004 and 2010 ranging from 77 in 2004 to 99 in 2010 and peaking at 110 in 2009. Most studies were carried out in the USA (44%) followed by ‘other’ European countries (20%) and the UK (12%). The studies were carried out in a variety of clinical contexts with Family Care (28%) and Oncology and Palliative Care (16%) being the most common (Fig. 2). The majority of methods employed were questionnaire surveys (34%), followed by interviews (30%) and focus...

    We have provided an up-to-date characterization of the structure of the English language evidence base on trust between health-care providers and patients in order to identify gaps and provide indications for lack of research in certain areas. Our review found that there has been an increase in trust research into the provider–patient relationship ...

    This work was supported by a research initiation funding award from the Foundation for the Sociology of Health and Illness.

    The authors would like to acknowledge the advice provided by Andrew Booth on the role of systematic mapping reviews.

    • Nicola Brennan, Rebecca Barnes, Michael .W. Calnan, Oonagh Corrigan, Paul Dieppe, Vikki Entwistle
    • 2013
  5. Apr 1, 2021 · A stable foundation of trust between patient and nurse can diminish patients' mistrust of the healthcare system while engaging patients in their own care and improving health outcomes. Trust can be fostered through active listening as well as strengthening verbal and nonverbal communication skills.

  6. A stable foundation of trust between patient and nurse can diminish patients' mistrust of the healthcare system while engaging patients in their own care and improving health outcomes. Trust can be fostered through active listening as well as strengthening verbal and nonverbal communication skills.