How to Build Healthcare Team Trust Without Medical Knowledge

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Summary

Building trust within a healthcare team doesn’t require medical expertise; it relies on honest communication, psychological safety, and emotional intelligence. This approach centers on creating a supportive environment where team members feel respected and empowered to contribute their perspectives.

  • Model transparency: Admit when you don’t know something or make a mistake, showing your team it’s safe to be honest and open.
  • Encourage participation: Invite quieter voices into discussions by asking for different viewpoints and making space for everyone to share.
  • Prioritize empathy: Respond to errors or challenges with understanding, focusing on process improvement rather than assigning blame.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Dr. Carolyn Frost

    Work-Life Intelligence Expert | Behavioral science + EQ to help you grow your career without losing yourself | Mom of 4 🌿

    320,103 followers

    Trust doesn't come from your accomplishments. It comes from quiet moves like these: For years I thought I needed more experience, achievements, and wins to earn trust. But real trust isn't built through credentials. It's earned in small moments, consistent choices, and subtle behaviors that others notice - even when you think they don't. Here are 15 quiet moves that instantly build trust 👇🏼 1. You close open loops, catching details others miss ↳ Send 3-bullet wrap-ups after meetings. Reliability builds. 2. You name tension before it gets worse ↳ Name what you sense: "The energy feels different today" 3. You speak softly in tense moments ↳ Lower your tone slightly when making key points. Watch others lean in. 4. You stay calm when others panic, leading with stillness ↳ Take three slow breaths before responding. Let your calm spread. 5. You make space for quiet voices ↳ Ask "What perspective haven't we heard yet?", then wait. 6. You remember and reference what others share ↳ Keep a Key Details note for each relationship in your phone. 7. You replace "but" with "and" to keep doors open ↳ Practice "I hear you, and here's what's possible" 8. You show up early with presence and intention ↳ Close laptop, turn phone face down 2 minutes before others arrive. 9. You speak up for absent team members ↳ Start with "X made an important point about this last week" 10. You turn complaints into possibility ↳ Replace "That won't work" with "Let's experiment with..." 11. You build in space for what really matters ↳ Block 10 min buffers between meetings. Others will follow. 12. You keep small promises to build trust bit by bit ↳ Keep a "promises made" note in your phone. Track follow-through. 13. You protect everyone's time, not just your own ↳ End every meeting 5 minutes early. Set the standard. 14. You ask questions before jumping to fixes ↳ Lead with "What have you tried so far?" before suggesting solutions. 15. You share credit for wins and own responsibility for misses ↳ Use "we" for successes, "I" for challenges. Watch trust grow. Your presence speaks louder than your resume. Trust is earned in these quiet moments. Which move will you practice first? Share below 👇🏼 -- ♻️ Repost to help your network build authentic trust without the struggle 🔔 Follow me Dr. Carolyn Frost for more strategies on leading with quiet impact

  • 🔷 Career Corner Insight: Creating Psychological Safety in Teams 🔷 What makes a team truly high-performing isn’t just skill—it’s trust. And at the heart of trust lies psychological safety. It’s the foundation that allows people to ask hard questions, admit mistakes, propose bold ideas, and show up as their full selves—without fear of humiliation or punishment. In healthcare and technology especially, where innovation, precision, and collaboration intersect, the ability to speak up can be the difference between solving a challenge or staying silent and stuck. So how do leaders create psychological safety? It starts with intention: 🔸 Model vulnerability from the top. Leaders who say “I don’t know” or “I got that wrong” set the tone for openness. If you want candor from your team, show them it’s safe to be human. My mea culpa often begins with "Oops...." where it is framed appropriately based on the situation and takes full accountability for a result. The level of "Oops..." may vary, yet consistently is owned and sets up the team to share theirs too. 🔹 Reward curiosity—not just results. Encourage your team to ask questions, test ideas, and explore new approaches—even if they don’t lead to immediate wins. Innovation grows where risk-taking is respected. Incrementalism or "base hits" as I prefer to note, stack up quickly and can lead to a winning environment as it is the constant pursuit of improvement that makes an incredible impact. 🔸 Address breakdowns with empathy. When mistakes happen (and they will), shift the lens from blame to learning. Make it about process improvement, not personal fault. This builds trust and resilience. It also fosters camaraderie as people lean into one another for their expertise and are willing to share what they don't know as freely as what they do know, and it benefits everyone in terms of where there may be collective gaps and abundance to build upon. Creating psychological safety isn’t a one-time leadership tactic—it’s a culture you cultivate daily. And - it starts with you! Bonus insight: Google’s landmark Project Aristotle study found that the #1 predictor of high-performing teams wasn’t skill or experience—it was psychological safety: the ability to take risks and be vulnerable without fear of embarrassment or punishment. 💬 How are you building environments where your team feels safe to take risks and speak up?

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