Achieving compliance in chronic illness management: illustrations of trust relationships between physicians and nutrition clinic patients
- 1 November 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Health, Risk & Society
- Vol. 5 (3) , 241-258
- https://doi.org/10.1080/13698570310001606950
Abstract
This paper presents empirical research from a study of trust and co-operation between chronic illness patients and their physicians, conducted in nutrition clinics. The paper details models of trust and co-operative behaviour designed to aid interpretive analysis. The paper then presents an interpretive discussion of 16 examples from interactions observed between patients and their consultants at the initial visit and revisit stage of the illness management process in consecutive clinics. This illustrates some of the ways interpersonal trust development between patients and their physicians may affect health care delivery. The paper finds physicians appear to make in-clinic opportunities for building resilient trust relations with patients based on common understanding and experience, engendering more rapid patient compliance. This is further promoted by a contemporaneous positive focus on key issues, such as patient-perceived importance and patient-perceived self-competence, serving to lower patient co-operation thresholds. In the best instances, the combined effect is significant patient empowerment, and thus improved health care delivery as a result of the compliance thereby achieved. In addition, it is suggested the speed of trust development during the interactions is not commensurate with long term relationship sustainability, and suggests this as an explanation for, amongst others, failure to attend rates.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Models of Interpersonal Trust Development: Theoretical Approaches, Empirical Evidence, and Future DirectionsJournal of Management, 2006
- The role of trust in information science and technologyAnnual Review of Information Science and Technology, 2003
- Trust and confidence: possibilities for social work in 'high modernity'The British Journal of Social Work, 2001
- Trust and Co-operation in Business Relationship Development: Exploring the Influence of National ValuesJournal of Marketing Management, 1999
- A Formal Model of Trust Based on OutcomesAcademy of Management Review, 1998
- Straining for Shared Meaning in Organization Science: Problems of Trust and DistrustAcademy of Management Review, 1998
- Swift Trust and Temporary GroupsPublished by SAGE Publications ,1996
- Developing and Maintaining Trust in Work RelationshipsPublished by SAGE Publications ,1996
- The Patient's Role in Clinical Decision-MakingAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1980
- Conceptual and methodological considerations in the study of trust and suspicionJournal of Conflict Resolution, 1970