
Trust: 120 episodes and still learning. This time: how we decide to act on health data. It’s messy. Let’s wade in together.
Summary
I’m going to spend the next few months connecting with you, my community—podcast and social media channel subscribers, followers, friends, and colleagues—focusing on TRUST. I’ll share nuggets I’ve learned, suggest prompts, ask and answer questions, and respond to others’ channels on trust.
Click here to view the printable newsletter with images. More readable than a transcript.
Contents
Please comment and ask questions:
- at the comment section at the bottom of the show notes
- on LinkedIn
- via email
- YouTube channel
- DM on Instagram, TikTok to @healthhats
- Substack
- Patreon
Production Team
- Kayla Nelson: Web and Social Media Coach, Dissemination, Help Desk
- Leon van Leeuwen: editing and site management
- Oscar van Leeuwen: video editing
- Julia Higgins: Digit marketing therapy
- Steve Heatherington: Help Desk and podcast production counseling
- Joey van Leeuwen, Drummer, Composer, and Arranger, provided the music for the intro, outro, proem, and reflection
- Claude, Perplexity, Auphonic, Descript, Grammarly, DaVinci
Podcast episode on YouTube
Inspired by and Grateful to: Amy Price, Christine Von Raesfeld, Laura Marcial, Tomas Moran, Marianne Hudgins
Photo Credits for Videos
Featured Image by Michael Chaffin
Referenced in episode
Mayer, R. C., Davis, J. H., & Schoorman, F. D. (1995). An integrative model of organizational trust. Academy of Management Review, 20(3), 709-734.
Schoorman, F. D., Mayer, R. C., & Davis, J. H. (2007). An integrative model of organizational trust: Past, present, and future. Academy of Management Review, 32(2), 344-354.
Episode
The Bottom Line
I’m going to spend the next few months connecting with you, my community—podcast and social media channel subscribers, followers, friends, and colleagues—focusing on TRUST. I’ll share nuggets I’ve learned, suggest prompts, ask and answer questions, and respond to others’ channels on trust.
Everywhere and Nowhere
Unsurprisingly, the word of the year for me is TRUST. When has trust not been paramount in history? Never, I think. More than 120 of my 600+ episodes have included trust, with 25-30 primarily on the topic.
My mission is ‘Learn with people on the journey toward best health.’ Learning is built on trust. Embarking on a journey requires trust. Best health is an uncertain destination. Comfort with uncertainty entails trust. Decision-making is easier with trust.
Model of Trust
Researchers break TRUST down into interpersonal trust—do I trust you? —and organizational trust—do I trust this hospital?—and then way up into societal trust—do I trust the healthcare system itself? There’s a 1995 model by Mayer, Davis, and Schoorman that keeps showing up in the research. They say trust boils down to three things: Can you do what you say you can do? Do you actually care about me? And do your actions match your words? Ability, benevolence, integrity. Simple framework, massive implications. There’s a 2007 update that looks back at what has happened in trust research since 1995. I especially bonded with sections on affect and emotion in trust, on distrust separate from trust, and on cross-cultural tensions.
Trust in Self
Missing from these articles is trust in myself. Do I trust my ability to manage my health and own my life? What a can of worms—self-knowledge. Understanding my risk tolerance, my culture, my history. I may be a trusting soul at heart, but I’ve been burned. I’m curious, but a skeptic. It affects trust. But I can control myself more than anything.
Comfort with uncertainty
I’m daunted by the stormy sea of trust. Gosh, I’m scared of water and a low-confidence swimmer. The sea of trust is massive, too much for me to get my brain around. I need a cove to focus on – boundaries. You know me. I can spin anywhere. No, Danny, focus.
I want to explore the trust we need to make health decisions. Think about it. Someone hands me my lab results—that’s data. How does that become information I trust enough to act on? My doctor says I need surgery—what makes me believe her? I’m looking at my health data, trying to figure out next steps—what combination of data quality, sensible interpretation, and relationship strength tips me toward yes or no?
I keep coming back to this intersection: a trustworthy self, trustworthy data, and a trustworthy person or source interpreting it for or with me. That’s the slice I want to dig into over the next few months. Not trust in general—trust in the specific moment when someone with a health concern must decide what to do next. What data matters? All of it? Some? Which part? What would you do with it? What approaches, tools, and methods do you use to clean it up and trust it?
Calculated Risks
When exploring, I need to feel safe. I’ll take calculated risks, but I won’t set sail without a team, provisions, a destination, and a sextant (or other guiding tools).
What’s next
So, what’s next? I’ll start with a Book Club format, well, not books. Too long. I don’t have the time – perhaps a story, a quote, a chart, a comment made, or an article. I’m going to partner with my buds, Laura Marcial, Amy Price, and Christine Von Raesfeld, on Substack. Maybe include LinkedIn and YouTube. Social media will have short or shorter content – Two to 15 minutes. Of course, my podcast will be included – combining shorter stuff. We’ll see how it goes. We’ll figure out some kind of rhythm—maybe we’ll even end up with something publishable. Who knows? That would be fun. Spread the wealth.
I’m depending on you to join me. Onward!
Related episodes from Health Hats
Trust is Complicated: Person-First Safe Living in a Pandemic Part 3
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Disclaimer
The views and opinions presented in this podcast and publication are solely my responsibility and do not necessarily represent the views of the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute® (PCORI®), its Board of Governors, or Methodology Committee. Danny van Leeuwen (Health Hats)