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https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12163
Title: | Trust in health care encounters and systems: A case study of British pensioners living in Spain | Authors: | Legido-Quigley, H Mckee, M Green, J |
Keywords: | aged aging epidemiology ethnology family relation female health care quality human interpersonal communication interview lifestyle male migrant national health service patient satisfaction psychology Spain trust United Kingdom very elderly Aged Aged, 80 and over Aging Communication Emigrants and Immigrants Family Relations Female Great Britain Humans Interviews as Topic Life Style Male Patient Satisfaction Quality of Health Care Spain State Medicine Trust |
Issue Date: | 2014 | Publisher: | Blackwell Publishing Ltd | Citation: | Legido-Quigley, H, Mckee, M, Green, J (2014). Trust in health care encounters and systems: A case study of British pensioners living in Spain. Sociology of Health and Illness 36 (8) : 1243-1258. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12163 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International | Abstract: | Research on trust in health care faces two enduring challenges. Firstly, there are conceptual ambiguities in distinguishing trust from related concepts, such as confidence or dependence. Second, the tacit understandings which underpin the 'faith' element of trust are difficult to explicate. A case study of British pensioners who have moved to Spain provides an opportunity to explore trust in a setting where they often have a choice of where to access health care (UK or Spain), and are therefore not in a state of dependence, and in which the 'differences' of a new field generates reflection on their tacit expectations of providers and systems. In accounting for decisions to use (or not to use) Spanish health care, British pensioners cited experiential knowledge of symbolic indicators of trustworthy institutions (they were hygienic, modern, efficient), which contributed to background confidence in the system, and interpersonal qualities of practitioners (respect for older people, embodied empathy and reciprocity) which evoked familiar relations, within which faith is implicit. In contrast, with limited recent access to the British system, their background confidence had been compromised by reports of poor performance, with few opportunities to rebuild the interrelational bases of trust. © 2014 The Authors. | Source Title: | Sociology of Health and Illness | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/180161 | ISSN: | 0141-9889 | DOI: | 10.1111/1467-9566.12163 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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