Sometimes I have this idea that all of us are sorted into two groups: Those that are here to protect the status quo and those that are here to raid it and change it. Most of the population, of course, is in the first category. Otherwise, there would be no such thing as the status quo. If you read the Journal regularly, you know I’m one of those in the small assembly known as change agents.
We’re often not a well-liked group. We make the majority uncomfortable. "Why rock the boat?" The majority moans. The reason for boat-rocking, of course, is that change agents think the boat is sailing the wrong way and, for that matter, that the wood on the boat is rotten.
By definition, if you’re pushing for change, you’re always up against the resistance of the majority. But frankly, change agents can’t help themselves. By nature, they are destined to seek out a better pathway…
For more than thirty years, the mission of American healthcare has been in trouble. Too many hospital CEOs have become obsessed with the mission of money. The goal of true loving care has been relegated to the sidelines.
What do you think? Do you believe hospitals and charities are treating patients with the kind of loving care sick people should receive? If so, why do so many patients feel like third-class citizens as soon as they don a patient gown?
I’ve been speaking about this (and writing about it) for decades to audiences that include some very sympathetic people who nod their heads in agreement and then usually do very little to make change. Clearly, I have underestimated the enormous inertia that weighs down the current system. The only thing that really seems to awaken the energy of most CEOs are packaged programs to "crank up" patient satisfaction with various "tools." Sometimes these programs sound more like tricks then love-based strategies.
But perhaps all of this is the way of the world. We carry out our roles as best we can. And from out of the tension that exists among different types of approaches, we may always hope that Love will triumph. Meanwhile, too many patients are waiting in vain for the loving care they deserve.
-Erie Chapman

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