When the Aims and the Ends of Health Care Misalign

Author:

Berry Leonard L.12ORCID,Attai Deanna J.3,Scammon Debra L.4,Awdish Rana Lee Adawi56

Affiliation:

1. Mays Business School, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA

2. Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Boston, MA, USA

3. Department of Surgery, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA

4. David Eccles School of Business, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

5. Pulmonary Hypertension Program, Department of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Care Experience Henry Ford Health System, Detroit, MI, USA

6. Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, MI, USA

Abstract

In health care, a high-emotion service, unintended consequences can be especially problematic. People’s physical, psychological, and financial well-being—even their lives—are at stake. As scientific, technological, and demographic changes make health care a much more complex service to deliver, efforts to anticipate, avoid, and correct unintended consequences become more crucial. Using narrative examples and an extensive review of the data and the literature, we explore these efforts in four domains of U.S. health care: (1) the increasingly widespread, often challenging use of electronic health records; (2) the threat to the patient-clinician relationship from a greater, sometimes narrow emphasis on productivity metrics; (3) the culture of medicine’s frequently misguided prioritizing of treatment over true healing; and (4) the overreliance on family caregivers who are often poorly prepared to care for the seriously ill. We then apply lessons from health care’s unintended consequences to non-health-care services and suggest opportunities for service researchers to contribute to improving health care delivery, a service that all of us need.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management,Sociology and Political Science,Information Systems

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