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Renegotiating Health Care: Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration
 
 
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Renegotiating Health Care: Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration [Paperback]

Leonard J. Marcus (Author), Barry C. Dorn (Author), Phyllis Beck Kritek (Author), Velvet G. Miller (Author), Janice B. Wyatt (Author)
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Book Description

0787950211 978-0787950217 September 17, 1995 1st
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

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 practical methods and techniques giving all the players the knowledge and skills they need to put their work in perspective and create workable solutions.

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Q&A with the Authors of Renegotiating Health Care: Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration


What do you mean by “renegotiating” health care?

For many decades, health care was a relatively predictable experience for patients, doctors, nurses, administrators, insurers, and policy makers. For the past 20 years it has been changing more rapidly and more radically – and the intensity change is increasing. The push to lower costs and improve quality, the shortage of doctors and nurses, and the increasing sophistication of patients are among the trends calling much in the system that we’ve taken for granted into question. With that comes the potential both for conflit and collaboration – every stakeholder in the system will benefit from knowing how to negotiate and resolve conflict constructively.

What are some of those major trends and what are the implications?

One of the most significant is the expanding use of technology. Technology has long been important in delivering treatment; it is becoming much more important in managing the system. For example, there is a growing move to make evidence-driven treatment protocols the default option for many conditions. Doctors are used to exercising their own discretion in choosing what is best for their patients and some resist the loss of control. Patients now have ready access to many digital resources that allow them to look clinical studies, converse with other patients, and peruse performance and cost data. Administrators and insurers have ever-more detailed information on utilization rates, revenue and cost flows, and outcomes. Each of these shifts the power balance in the system and can cause conflict.

Other trends are the aging of population and increased diversity in the workforce. If people have the tools to navigate these changes in a positive way, the system can function more productively. If not, everyone will feel the pain.

What is distinct about your approach to negotiation and conflict resolution?


We have been teaching negotiation and conflict resolution to students, through our work at the Harvard School of Public Health, and to professionals in a consulting role for more than two decades. Over that time we have developed a series of practical, proven concepts and tools that can be used in everyday situations in healthcare. For too many people, their negotiation “training” has come in the context of buying a car or a house – a unidimensional, often confrontational setting. The issues one finds in healthcare are typically multidimensional and confrontational negotiation doesn’t solve the problem. It often compounds it. We have found that when people have a process for multi-dimensional problem solving that they can understand and readily deploy, they approach conflict and negotiation with a different, more hopeful mindset. They seek win-win outcomes rather than trying to “beat” the other party.

One of tools we offer in the book is called “The Walk in the Woods.” It is a four-step process for reframing conflict so that new possibilities – distinct from what either party started the negotiation thinking of as a “win” – can emerge through collaboration. It can be used in a 20-minute performance review or a major policy debate. In fact, we wish Congress and the President had used it when they were debating health care reform. The process might have been less acrimonious and the parties would not have ended the process with such bitterness about the outcome.

In the book you write about leadership. How is this connected to negotiation and conflict resolution?

Many of the people who read this book will be leaders or would-be leaders in some part of the health care system. We believe that negotiation is a critical leadership skill. One hospital CEO we interviewed for the book noted that every interaction between two or more people for which there is a desired outcome is, in effect, a negotiation. Leaders have many, many such interactions each and every day. They have to be able to negotiate and resolve conflict if they are to be effective.

We present a framework we call meta-leadership that is based on observing leaders in high stress, high stakes situations – many when lives were at stake. It addresses the challenges not only of leading one’s subordinates, the focus of most leadership models, but also in leading up to one’s boss and across to one’s peers and external stakeholders such as regulators and communities. It is a 360-degree approach to leadership that we feel reflects the reality that many in health care face. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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)

Product Details

  • Paperback: 480 pages
  • Publisher: Jossey-Bass; 1st edition (September 17, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0787950211
  • ISBN-13: 978-0787950217
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #795,993 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent principles for conflict resolution, June 24, 2001
This review is from: Renegotiating Health Care: Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration (Paperback)
Marcus presents a broad spectrum of options for getting through tough times in the healthcare industry. The personable style and ongoing case history make this a very readable presentation.

Marcus teaches us that conflict is not only always present and unavoidable but can be used as a catalyst for good change. He describes differences in types of negotiation, mediation, and arbitration. He is a proponent of interest-based negotiation which is an attempt to improve the lot of the whole by improving the parts. He advocates active listening.

As witness to his sincerity, he dedicates a chapter each to four of the healthcare stakeholders: policymakers, healthcare management, physicians, and nurses. Each of these chapters speaks loudest to its own stakeholder, at once representing them and persuading them to enter into negotiation.

Postitional bargaining is also explored. Marcus does not advocate being a sacrificial lamb.

This book serves as an excellent introduction to the topic of conflict resolution and negotiation. However, in order to engage into the fray, one would also need to continue to study and practice the principles presented.

Although Marcus seems preachy at times and overhopeful at others, he is at least starting to draw the diverse and strong healthcare industry into one place to sit and talk. Hooray for that.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Must Reading for Health Care Executives, December 1, 2001
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This review is from: Renegotiating Health Care: Resolving Conflict to Build Collaboration (Paperback)
This book is essential reading for any leader in the world of health care. Health care execs are confronted with complex, highly charged negotiation challenges, internal and external, nearly every day. Many of these conflicts can damage lives and corporate finances. The book gives you very practical, results-oriented advice on how to resolve conflicts and move forward.

Dr. Marcus is the nation's leading expert in health care negotiations and conflict resolution, having helped numerous high-profile organizations overcome conflicts and reach mutually productive agreements. This book thoughtfully conveys this valuable expertise.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Practical, Engaging and a Must-Read for Health Care Stakeholders, July 29, 2011
As a lifelong volunteer in the health care industry I found this book to be an insightful, practical and honest guide to navigating the day-to-day complexities of a system that all too often grinds to a halt and fails consumers when teams fail to collaborate. I think this should be required reading for every doctor, nurse and health care stakeholder who wants to improve the health care system.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
If your work is health care, your daily routine requires constant negotiation and involves some measure of conflict. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
health care negotiation, positional negotiation, positional tactics, negotiation jujitsu, image negotiation, bad stakes, negotiation map, substantive expectations, general medical floor, uneven table, negotiation effectiveness, positional bargaining, implicit negotiation, integrative negotiation, opportunity stakes, medical floors, physician recruitment, informal mediation, other negotiators, care disputes, process preferences, health care manager
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Iris Inkwater, Fred Fisher, Oppidania Medical Center, Artie Ashwood, Heather Harriford, Community Health Plan, Charlotte Channing, Janice Johnson, Larry Lumberg, Beatrice Benson, Urbania Medical Center, Arena Health Plan, Nathaniel Norquist, Perry Pratt, Six West, Chuck Cummings, Katherine Knight
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