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Jessie Gruman Bio
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1: Why Study Health Behavior Now?
Chapter 2: Dilemmas of Progress for Health Behavior Research
Chapter 3: Is Health Promotion for Older Adults Just Nice or Really Necessary?
Chapter 4: Are We Really “Consumers” of Health and Health Care?
Chapter 5: Prevention Deficit Disorder: When Politics and Science Collide
Chapter 6: Promises and Pitfalls on the Way to Transforming Consumer Health Decision-Making
Chapter 7: How Science and the Media Undermine Behavior Change
Chapter 8: Improving Health: Is Clinical Medicine Up to the Task?
Chapter 9: Follow the Money: What Health Behavior Professionals Need to Know about Foundation Funding
Chapter 10: The Mutual Obligations of Scientists and Society
How Easily We Can Misinterpret the Benefits of Patient-Centered Innovation!
May 8, 2013
Here's the bad news: We will not benefit from the health care services, drugs, tests and procedures available to us unless we pay attention, learn about our choices, interact with our clinicians and follow through on the plans we make together.
The "True Grit"-tiness of Sharing Health Care Decisions with Our Doctors
May 1, 2013
In the Coen brothers remake of the 1969 movie True Grit, Mattie Ross, an intrepid 14-year-old, is determined to hunt down and kill the man who murdered her father. To accomplish this, she hires U.S. Marshal Rooster Cogburn, (played by a mumbling Jeff Bridges) a rough, one-eyed veteran of many such quests then announces that she plans to come along. She figures she is prepared.
Bad Language: Words One Patient Won't Use (and Hopes You Won't Either)
April 24, 2013
When I read Trudy Lieberman’s post yesterday, I was reminded that the highly charged political debates about reforming American health care have provided tempting opportunities to rename the people who receive health services. But because the impetus for this change has been prompted by cost and quality concerns of health care payers, researchers and policy experts rather than emanating from us out of our own needs, some odd words have been called into service.
Whose Patient Engagement Goals Are We Talking About?
April 17, 2013
What we look for when we participate actively in our health care differs from what our clinicians, employers and health plans believe will result when we shift from being passive to active participants. We don't have the same goals in mind. Does this matter?
Has Patient Engagement Stalled?
April 10, 2013
A few discouraging reports on patient engagement have skittered across my desk in the past few weeks. What's going on? Why are so many of us so slow to engage in our care when it is increasingly clear that we will do better if we participate more fully? Here's what I suspect...


