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Renegotiating Health Care : Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration

AUTHOR: Leonard J. Marcus, et al
ISBN: 0787950211

SHORT DESCRIPTION: "Renegotiating Health Care" presents pragmatic and effective tools for understanding conflict, negotiating differences, and creating a workable balance among those who deliver, receive, administer, and oversee health care. The authors present...

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Negotiating
         Editorial Review

Renegotiating Health Care : Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration
- Book Review,
by Leonard J. Marcus, et al


From Book News, Inc.
Health care specialists representing health policy, management, nursing, and medicine combine efforts with a negotiation expert to provide instruction on the methods, techniques, and styles of conflict resolution in the context of health care. Annotation copyright Book News, Inc. Portland, Or.


Review
"Renegotiating Health Care highlights key skills of public health practice. It is an excellent book for those who aspire to leadership." (Deborah Prothrow-Stith, M.D., associate dean, Harvard School of Public Health)

"This book is an outstanding source for understanding the forces acting on American health care, the conflicts they create, and the strategies for productively dealing with them." (Edward A. Dauer, president, National Center for Preventive Law; dean emeritus, University of Denver College of Law)

"I turn to Renegotiating Health Care as a regular reference and guide. The changes and challenges in health care today require a proficient understanding of the pragmatic and tactful methods taught in this book." (Karen Shoos Lipton, J.D., chief executive officer, American Association of Blood Banks)

"The ample use of clear and relevant examples to illustrate principles and techniques make this book a powerful learning tool. Professionals reading it will surely find many of their own life experiences reflected in the series of stories." (Journal of the American Nursing Association)

"Renegotiating Health Care offers a set of practical tools for navigating the turbulent waters of health care collaboration. Since change is as certain as conflict, skill at eliciting commitment to a shared purpose and orchestrating efforts to achieve it is an essential quality of leadership." (American Journal of Public Health)

"The health care sphere we inhabit would unquestionably be more satisfying if everyone adopted the cooperative techniques taught in this book." (New England Journal of Medicine)

"The best thing I can say about a book is that it is interesting, and this one qualifies. Yes, it has a lot of theory, but it is beautifully fleshed out with vivid real or hypothetical case studies. These make the book very practical in spite of its conceptual basis." (Barbara Barnum, RN, Ph.D., Editor, Nursing Leadership Forum)

"Altogether this is a fun book, which is also practical and has some new ideas. I think both new and old managers will get something from it." (Barbara Barnum, RN, Ph.D., Editor, Nursing Leadership Forum)


Book Description
The health care sphere we inhabit would unquestionably be more satisfying if everyone adopted the cooperative techniques taught in this book.--New England Journal of MedicineRenegotiating Health Care presents pragmatic and effective tools for understanding conflict, negotiating differences, and creating a workable balance among those who deliver, receive, administer, and oversee health care. The authors present practical methods and techniques giving all the players the knowledge and skills they need to put their work in perspective and create workable solutions.


From the Inside Flap
For all who work in health care, the daily routine requires constant negotiation of conflict. Decisions affecting numerous people must be made. Competing priorities have to be balanced. And there is constant pressure that the job be done correctly, often within strict time limits. This book offers a practical guide to help better understand conflict, negotiate choices, and build systems to improve the processes of decision making. Renegotiating Healthcare takes successful negotiation and conflict resolution concepts developed over the past ten years and sets them in current day health care settings. Through narrative, example, and theory, the book gives all the players in health care—physicians, hospital management, nurses, and public health and public policy leaders—the knowledge and skills they need to put things in perspective and work out problems in an arena where issues, authority, and responsibility are still unclear. back jacket[headline] A Practical Guide to Collaboration [set prominently] "The health care sphere we inhabit would unquestionably be more satisfying if everyone adopted the cooperative techniques taught in this book." —New England Journal of MedicineRenegotiating Health Care presents pragmatic and effective tools for understanding conflict, negotiating differences, and creating a workable balance among those who deliver, receive, administer, and oversee health care. The authors present practical methods and techniques giving all the players the knowledge and skills they need to put their work in perspective and create workable solutions. "Renegotiating Health Care highlights key skills of public health practice. It is an excellent book for those who aspire to leadership."—Deborah Prothrow-Stith, M.D., associate dean, Harvard School of Public Health" I turn to Renegotiating Health Care as a regular reference and guide. The changes and challenges in health care today require a proficient understanding of the pragmatic


From the Back Cover
This award-winning book takes the most current negotiation and conflict resolution concepts and applies them to present-day health case settings. Through the use of lively narrative, illustrative examples, and up-to-date theory, the authors offer those in the health care profession the knowledge and skills they need to resolve their problems. A how-to guide written for all the players—physicians, nurses, managers, administrators—in health care.


About the Author
LEONARD J. MARCUS, Ph.D., is founding director of the Program for Health Care Negotiation and Conflict Resolution at the Harvard School of Public Health. BARRY C. DORN, M.D., is clinical professor of orthopedic surgery at Tufts New England Medical Center and associate director of the Program for Health Care Negotiation and Conflict Resolution at The Harvard School of Public Health. PHYLLIS B. KRITEK, R.N., Ph.D., is professor of nursing and Doctoral Program Director, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston School of Nursing. VELVET G. MILLER, M.P.A., Ph.D., is former director of the Division of Medical Assistance and Health Services of the New Jersey Department of Human Services. JANICE B. WYATT, M.S., is chief executive officer of HCNA (Health Care Negotiation Associates) and former president and chief executive officer of the Metro West Medical Center and vice chancellor and hospital director for the UMASS Medical Center.


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         Book Review

Renegotiating Health Care : Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration
- Book Reviews,
by Leonard J. Marcus, et al

Renegotiating Health Care,: Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration

ANNOTATION

The book contains black-and-white illustrations.

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Renegotiating Health Care is a practical guide to collaboration written at a time of extensive change for the system. It presents effective tools for understanding conflict, negotiating differences, and creating a workable balance among those who deliver, receive, administer, and oversee health care.

SYNOPSIS

This book shows how to move beyond conflict to construct a resilient balance, the authoe team provides the tools and techniques for understanding conflict, negotiating differences, and creating a workable equilibrium among those who deliver, receive, administer, and oversee health care.

FROM THE CRITICS

Bernard H. Baum

This book is a well-written presentation of the concepts, utility, and techniques of the kind of negotiations required in the present changing configuration of the healthcare system. There are really three books in one. The first (chapters 1-6) is a guidebook on the concepts, methods, and techniques of negotiation and conflict resolution. The second (chapters 7-10) is authored by different experts in their respective fields of public health and policy, management, nursing, and medicine. The third (chapters 11-14) reconciles some typical dilemmas, conflicts, and negotiations that face people in healthcare settings. The purpose is to provide health professionals with a range of choices for what is negotiable and how to go about negotiating them. It is designed to be a practical aid in resolving conflicts and achieve the efficient and effective collaboration required in the current healthcare arena. This book is written primarily for persons working in the healthcare field at the professional or managerial level. This well-referenced book is an academic and pragmatic work. It interestingly communicates the concepts and techniques of negotiating applied to the healthcare system. Particularly noteworthy are the parables that bring the process of negotiation to life and the 22-page section entitled ^^Negotiation Handles^^ that provides a classified vocabulary of negotiation and does a splendid job of providing clearly articulated terms for the concepts and methods discussed and illustrated in the book. Because the subject of negotiation is typically undertreated in professional training and education, and because of the present extensive change and conflict in the heath arena, this bookis a valuable contribution. The book is a highly readable, practical, and comprehensive treatise on resolving conflict and developing collaboration among the participants in the healthcare field. It is an eminently useful contribution.

Doody Review Services

Reviewer: Bernard H. Baum, PhD (University of Illinois at Chicago)Description:This book is a well-written presentation of the concepts, utility, and techniques of the kind of negotiations required in the present changing configuration of the healthcare system. There are really three books in one. The first (chapters 1-6) is a guidebook on the concepts, methods, and techniques of negotiation and conflict resolution. The second (chapters 7-10) is authored by different experts in their respective fields of public health and policy, management, nursing, and medicine. The third (chapters 11-14) reconciles some typical dilemmas, conflicts, and negotiations that face people in healthcare settings.Purpose:The purpose is to provide health professionals with a range of choices for what is negotiable and how to go about negotiating them. It is designed to be a practical aid in resolving conflicts and achieve the efficient and effective collaboration required in the current healthcare arena.Audience:This book is written primarily for persons working in the healthcare field at the professional or managerial level.Features:This well-referenced book is an academic and pragmatic work. It interestingly communicates the concepts and techniques of negotiating applied to the healthcare system. Particularly noteworthy are the parables that bring the process of negotiation to life and the 22-page section entitled ^^Negotiation Handles^^ that provides a classified vocabulary of negotiation and does a splendid job of providing clearly articulated terms for the concepts and methods discussed and illustrated in thebook.Assessment:Because the subject of negotiation is typically undertreated in professional training and education, and because of the present extensive change and conflict in the heath arena, this book is a valuable contribution. The book is a highly readable, practical, and comprehensive treatise on resolving conflict and developing collaboration among the participants in the healthcare field. It is an eminently useful contribution.

Booknews

Presents pragmatic and effectives tools for understanding conflict, negotiating difference, and creating a balance among those who work in health care. Uses narrative, example, and theory to demonstrate techniques. Stories present problems, solutions, and outcomes achieved through interest-based negotiation. Of interest to physicians, hospital management, nurses, and policy leaders. Marcus is founding director of the Program for Health Care Negotiation and Conflict Resolution at the Harvard School of Public Health. First published in 1995. This paperback edition contains a new preface. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

RATING

4 Stars from Doody

ACCREDITATION

Marcus, Leonard J., PhD (Harvard Univ); Dorn, Barry C., MD (Tufts Univ); Kritek, Phyllis Beck, RN, PhD (Univ of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston); Miller, Velvet G., BSN, MPA (New Jersey Dept of Human Services); Wyatt, Janice B., MS


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