Linked e-resources

Details

Dedication; Foreword: "First, Do No Harm" ; Contents; Contributors; Chapter 1: Introduction: The Problem of Distracted Doctoring; References; Chapter 2: Medicine Enters the Computer Age; The 1960s and 1970s: The Dawn of Computerization in Health Care; The 1980s and 1990s: Growing Heterogeneity, Lofty Goals, and the Arrival of HIPAA; The 2000s and Early 2010s: The Alphabet Soup of ONCHIT, HITECH, and MU; Medicine and Computers Today: Is Waiting for "Disruption" the Only Answer?; References; Chapter 3: Electronic Challenges to Patient Safety and Care; Cognition not Character.

A Cultural Revolution Hyperculture; Smartphone Zombies; A Deadly Wandering; Digital Doctoring; Cognition and Character; References; Chapter 4: Addiction to Technology and Speed; Introduction; What Is Distraction?; What Is the Problem? How Distraction Works; What Is Speed? [33]; What Is Addiction?; Societal Addiction to Speed, Technology, and Distraction; Loss of Control; A Belief in No Limits; A Belief in the Omnipotence of Human Power; Dichotomous Thinking.; Facing Society's Addiction to Speed, Technology, and Distraction; Awareness.

Accepting Loss of Control and the Need for Limits Small Steps; Conclusion; References; Chapter 5: A Note to My Doctor: Lessons from Fifty Years of Distracted Driving Research; The Attention Economy; This Is Not a New Research Problem; The Problem Will Get Worse; Changes in Demographics Indicate Increased Distraction; Information Is Perceived as Having Immediate Value; Our Brain Fools Us; Solving the Problem; The Role of Education, Legislation, Enforcement, and Norms; Putting It All Together; Applying the Lessons of Distracted Driving Research to Safe Doctoring; References.

Chapter 6: Distraction, Disengagement, and the Purpose of Medicine Introduction; Distraction; Disengagement; The Purpose of Medicine; The Public Space; Questions of Purpose; Conclusion; References; Chapter 7: Taking Time to Truly Listen to Our Patients; Visit to a Country Doctor; Technology, Listening, and Distraction; Value of Listening; Careful Listening Leads to Better Diagnoses; Close Listening Allows Patients' Self-Narration; Close Listening Allows Bearing Witness; Creating Practices of Listening; Attention Is at the Heart of Listening.

Lessons from the Mindfulness Tradition Narrative Medicine as a Path to Narrative Competence; Listening with One's Whole Body; Creating Spaces that Nurture Listening; Desire to Know the Patient's Story; Conclusion: Listening as a Relational Act; References; Chapter 8: When It Comes to the Physician-Patient-ƯComputer Relationship, the "Eyes" Have It; Introduction; A Brief History of Medical Record Keeping; High Tech Versus High Touch in the Exam Room; You and Me and the Computer Make Three; Distracted Doctoring; Recommendations; Conclusion; References.

Browse Subjects

Show more subjects...

Statistics

from
to
Export