Promising Care

Promising Care

Berwick, Donald M

37,44 €(IVA inc.)

Promising Care: How We Can Rescue Health Care by Improving It  collects 16 speeches given over a period of 10 years by Donald M. Berwick, an internationally acclaimed champion of health care improvement throughout the course of his long and storied career as a physician, health care educator and policy expert, leader of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI), and administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. These landmark speeches (including all of Berwick’s speeches delivered at IHI’s annual National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care from 2003 to 2012) clearly show why our medical systems don’t reliably contribute to our overall health. As a remedy he offers a vision for making our systems better – safer, more effective, more efficient, and more humane. Each of Berwick’s compelling speeches is preceded by a brief commentary by a prominent figure in health care, policy, or politics who has a unique connection to that particular speech. Contributors include such notables as Tom Daschle, Paul Batalden, and Lord Nigel Crisp. Their commentaries reflect on how it felt to hear the speech in the context in which it was delivered, and assess its relevance in today’s health care environment. The introduction is by Maureen Bisognano, CEO of Institute for Healthcare Improvement, and author of Pursuing the Triple Aim . Praise for previous books by Don Berwick Curing Health Care: The book is an easy and affirming read for anyone who is familiar with and has used the TQM teachings of Dr. Joseph M. Juran and Dr. W. Edwards Deming and would be a simple and informative introduction to the concepts for anyone who has been hearing about TQM but has no idea what it is all about and wants to know more.  — Permanent Fixes (blog) Donald Berwick is the most clearly heard evangelist of applying industrial methods of continuous quality improvement in health care. — Annals of Internal Medicine Escape Fire: With an effective blend of common sense, real–life stories, persuasive metaphors, and out–of–the–box thinking, Dr. Berwick’s presentations make for fascinating reading for anyone interested in improving America’s $1.7 trillion health care system. — Piper Report Anyone interested in change in the healthcare system would enjoy this book. In degree programs, the various speeches would be useful for discussion in a health policy readings course. — The Annals of Pharmacotherapy INDICE: Preface Author Bio Commentary Author Bios Chapter 1 My Right Knee (Commentary by Gary S. Kaplan) Chapter 2 Some is not a Number Soon…is Not a Time (Commentary by C. Joseph McCannon) Chapter 3 Power (Commentary Dale Ann Micalizzi) Chapter 4 Mont Sainte–Victoire (Commentary by Jason Leitch) Chapter 5 A Message for Ramesh (Commentary by Paul Farmer) Chapter 6 Eating Soup with a Fork (Commentary by Paul B. Batalden) Chapter 7 What “Patient–Centered” Should Mean: Confessions of an Extremist (Commentary by Frederick S. Southwick) Chapter 8 Tense (Commentary by Jessica Berwick) Chapter 9  A Transatlantic Review of the NHS at 60 (Commentary by Lord Nigel Crisp) Chapter 10 The Epitaph of Profession (Commentary by Christine K. Cassel) Chapter 11 Squirrel (Commentary by Diana Chapman Walsh) Chapter 12 You Decide (Commentary by Beverley H. Johnson) Chapter 13 The Moral Test (Commentary by Tom Daschle) Chapter 14 New Health System ? New Professionalism (Commentary by James Reason) Chapter 15 To Isaiah (Commentary by Mark D. Smith) Chapter 16 “. . .and Max Said, ‘No.’”

  • ISBN: 978-1-118-79588-0
  • Editorial: John Wiley & Sons
  • Encuadernacion: Cartoné
  • Páginas: 320
  • Fecha Publicación: 25/12/2013
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés