Skip to main content

Loss of Trust in America

Trust is the central element in our national motto.  Do you recall this 4-word phrase?  If you need a reminder of this iconic verbiage, just grab a coin or some paper money and you’ll find it there.  Perhaps, you can’t recall the motto.  Since we don’t study our money when making a transaction, our trustful motto may remain buried in the background – invisible while in plain sight.  I’ll bet that some curious readers are scanning a dollar bill right now! 

 As our trustful motto seems out of view, so has trust across society become much less visible.  When we do stumble across it, it can feel as if we have struck gold.  Years ago, for example, I wrote a post about a proprietor who showed me such a high level of trust that I memorialized the incident in this blog and will never forget the vignette. 

The trust vacuum seems most evident in our political space.  The citizenry does not trust elective officials, particularly those of the opposing political party.  This phenomenon has spread widely now that the political space has metastasized far beyond conventional political boundaries.  Examples of this political mission creep are widespread.  Hard to believe that a public health campaign in a deadly pandemic – which in a prior era would have been welcomed by all – has become as political as tax or immigration policy.  Public health leaders were lambasted as being lying and corrupt tools of the government or the pharmaceutical industry.  Trust in the media continues to decay with some legitimate justification.  Folks or organizations who espouse a viewpoint on an issue are often assumed to have an unspoken and stealth agenda.  Consider a politician who wants to retain a military base in his district that the Defense Department argues should be closed.  How about a political leader who claims election fraud but only if the desired candidate loses?  Once these conflicts of interest are exposed, then distrust explodes.  Would it have been more honest at the onset of the pandemic for public health leaders to state that masks were advised for medical professionals and not the general public because of a limited supply rather than to suggest that they were not medically necessary?

Credibility squandered may be hard to recover. 

Recently, I was on a road trip and came across a scene that impressed me enough to photograph it and share it here with readers.  A flower shop was closed but an array of plants remained outside.  Clearly, this proprietor has trust in the community.  I think we all know what the fate of these plants might be in many other locales.  I have lived years ago in NYC and have never witnessed such a scene.


  A Trusting Scene from Worthington, Ohio

Trust must be earned.  And it requires letting oneself be vulnerable.  If you confide a secret to a good friend, then you are trusting that the information will remain secure.  Trust is the connective tissue that strengthens all vibrant and successful relationships.  This applies to business partners, romantic couples, teachers and students, law enforcement and the public, members of a team, doctors and patients, lawyers and clients, and even bloggers and readers. 

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

When Should Doctors Retire?

I am asked with some regularity whether I am aiming to retire in the near term.  Years ago, I never received such inquiries.  Why now?   Might it be because my coiffure and goatee – although finely-manicured – has long entered the gray area?  Could it be because many other even younger physicians have given up their stethoscopes for lives of leisure? (Hopefully, my inquiring patients are not suspecting me of professional performance lapses!) Interestingly, a nurse in my office recently approached me and asked me sotto voce that she heard I was retiring.    “Interesting,” I remarked.   Since I was unaware of this retirement news, I asked her when would be my last day at work.   I have no idea where this erroneous rumor originated from.   I requested that my nurse-friend contact her flawed intel source and set him or her straight.   Retirement might seem tempting to me as I have so many other interests.   Indeed, reading and studying, two longstanding personal pleasures, could be ext

Should Doctors Wear White Coats?

Many professions can be easily identified by their uniforms or state of dress. Consider how easy it is for us to identify a policeman, a judge, a baseball player, a housekeeper, a chef, or a soldier.  There must be a reason why so many professions require a uniform.  Presumably, it is to create team spirit among colleagues and to communicate a message to the clientele.  It certainly doesn’t enhance professional performance.  For instance, do we think if a judge ditches the robe and is wearing jeans and a T-shirt, that he or she cannot issue sage rulings?  If members of a baseball team showed up dressed in comfortable street clothes, would they commit more errors or achieve fewer hits?  The medical profession for most of its existence has had its own uniform.   Male doctors donned a shirt and tie and all doctors wore the iconic white coat.   The stated reason was that this created an aura of professionalism that inspired confidence in patients and their families.   Indeed, even today

The VIP Syndrome Threatens Doctors' Health

Over the years, I have treated various medical professionals from physicians to nurses to veterinarians to optometrists and to occasional medical residents in training. Are these folks different from other patients?  Are there specific challenges treating folks who have a deep knowledge of the medical profession?   Are their unique risks to be wary of when the patient is a medical professional? First, it’s still a running joke in the profession that if a medical student develops an ordinary symptom, then he worries that he has a horrible disease.  This is because the student’s experience in the hospital and the required reading are predominantly devoted to serious illnesses.  So, if the student develops some constipation, for example, he may fear that he has a bowel blockage, similar to one of his patients on the ward.. More experienced medical professionals may also bring above average anxiety to the office visit.  Physicians, after all, are members of the human species.  A pulmon