Reviews
In 'Searching for the Family Doctor: Primary Care on the Brink,' management Professor Timothy J. Hoff depicts a field in crisis amid a system trending toward 'transactional,' volume-driven, ever more 'balkanized' care. The practitioner perspective illuminates a system antithetical to the preventive care that is family medicine's stock-in-trade, and Hoff's observations about the missteps behind the field's malaise are incisive. This emphasis will also serve to impart a sense of agency to the book's professional readers — that redemption lies in setting their house in order.
Hoff, professor of management, health care systems, and health policy at Northeastern University, investigates the specialty of family medicine through archival research and interviews conducted with practicing family physicians....An excellent book.
[Hoff] piec[es] out the cognitive dissonance of practicing family medicine in a broken health care system.
Provocative and timely. Exposing the current identity crisis that family medicine finds itself in, this book explores the foundational and internal causes of that crisis rather than blaming it on external forces in the larger health care system.
Succinct, compelling, and well-crafted, Searching for the Family Doctor weaves together dozens of interviews with family physicians at different career stages. Hoff has a healthy and well-informed perspective on how family medicine represents a counterculture to American health care; he is also earnestly serious about the bleak prospects for success without major changes. An essential read for academic family physicians, health policy scholars, and anyone who thinks that the US health care system is broken beyond repair.
A masterpiece! Dr. Hoff's meticulous analysis on the essential role of the family doctor, past, present, and future, is must-read for every member of Congress and policy maker. More power to the family doc!
With health crises becoming an increasing part of the everyday, Hoff's Searching for the Family Doctor could not be timelier. It considers what we all know to be true: relationships with primary care doctors are central to health and well-being. Hoff's excellent book reveals practical actions that may prevent primary care, as we know it, from vanishing.
Book Details
Preface
Chapter 1. Searching for the Family Doctor
Chapter 2. Poor Soil for Growing Generalists: Family Doctors versus the Health System
Chapter 3. Altruists and Accidental Doctors: Why They Become
Preface
Chapter 1. Searching for the Family Doctor
Chapter 2. Poor Soil for Growing Generalists: Family Doctors versus the Health System
Chapter 3. Altruists and Accidental Doctors: Why They Become (Family) Doctors
Chapter 4. Saying Goodbye to the General Doctor
Chapter 5. Saying Hello to the New and Improved Family Doctor
Chapter 6. The Struggle to Be a True Believer as a Family Doctor
Chapter 7. The Realists: Family Doctors Charting Their Own Course
Chapter 8. The Bill Comes Due: Family Doctors' Struggle for Relevancy
Chapter 9. A Top-Ten List for Saving Family Doctors
Appendix. A Note on the Research
References
Index