The word “stakeholder” really bothers me particularly in the healthcare space. I’m struck by a quote by Ken Burns.
“The thing that I’ve learned is that there is no ‘them.’ This is what everybody does: make a distinction about ‘them.’ It’s just ‘us’.”
To me, the word stakeholder creates an us versus them scenario. Perhaps the intent is to imply that we are all stakeholders in the health care system. But to me, the term conjures up differences, finger pointing, turf, etc. not commonalities.
It’s divisive…isolating.. It’s different than the word shareholder. A shareholder implies common interest, shared focus, co-ownership, or uniting objective like caring for patients.
I think we need to stick with the Ken Burns’ view – it’s just “us” as that might get us farther than where we are today. Together, we can solve things but as stakeholders, with differing or perhaps divergent interests, we won’t get as far – in fact, we’ll quickly get nowhere.
Featured news
Ted’s Take: Do we need AI guardrails?
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is all the rage now. There are all numbers of folks developing AI technology and applications that range from simple to complex.
Ted’s Take: Does AI learn and incorporate our biases?
We hear tons of conversation around the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI). We also hear that the application of AI might be the solution to almost everything. While that’s both an overstatement and unrealistic, there are a lot of companies and folks working to make AI do just that — solve everything
Ted’s Take: Errors in formulas and what it means for AI
Spinach is the best source of iron. I’ve understood this for decades now. As I ate more and more healthy foods, I’d choose spinach salads because of the “great” nutritional value, particularly iron.
Jayne Koskinas Ted Giovanis
Foundation for Health and Policy
PO Box 130
Highland, Maryland 20777
Media contact: 202.548.0133