Complex problems do not have simple answers

There is not a simple answer. It took US healthcare 70+ years to get this fragmented, complex, political, entrenched, somewhat inequitable, and definitely exhausting place. It will take a lot of competition, collaboration, and leadership in government, private sector, non-profits, payers, providers, and patients. Basically, there is a lot of wood left to chop.  

Healthcare matters

No one will deny this. If you’ve ever been sick and gotten better, medicine is magic. In 1900, the average life expectancy in the US (not a poor country then either) was 50 years old.  Uh, I am 52 years old now (talk about borrowed time, right?)

Healthcare is massive 

  • It’s 1/5 of the US economy. It is measured in the trillions of dollars (trillions with a T). $4,000,000,000,000+
  • If you take all of US healthcare and divide by the number of people (330 million); it’s $12K per year per person; that’s the equivalent of leasing a Mercedes for everyone in the country, every year
  • There are 5,600+ hospitals and thousands of other sites of care (ambulatory surgery centers, urgent care)

Healthcare is complex

There are multiple healthcare systems running concurrently. There are private & public providers. There is Medicare for the elderly. There is Medicaid for the poor, disadvantaged. There are commercial plans for the employed or pay out-of- pocket. There is the Veterans Administration (VA) for the military and veterans. You get the point, it’s not just 1 system. 

Healthcare results are variable

There is no such thing as “average” and that’s doubly true for US healthcare. We have the best care in the US (foreigners fly to the US to get care).  We are also the only OECD rich country that doesn’t insure everyone. In fact, 8-10% of Americans have no healthcare insurance; they go to the emergency room as their primary care (expensive, painful).

Healthcare is changing

We are living longer and we are more likely to die of chronic illness than infectious diseases (note: Covid-19 was a big anomaly in the trend). So if you have high blood pressure, you need to eat right, exercise, take medicine, see your primary care doctor, and accountability for your health. Until now, the US system was sickcare (get sick and get fixed) vs. healthcare (proactivity managing your own health). 

 If interested, strongly recommend you read these two books (affiliate links):

  • The Healthcare Handbook, 3rd edition, Askins, Moore – This is the only book I assign for my healthcare class.  Written by two physicians, it’s direct, well-documented, easy-to-read, and useful.
  • The Long Fix, Lee – Also written by a physician, who runs Google’s Verily health subsidiary.  Well-written ideas on how we can nudge everyone to improve healthcare – government, payers, providers, patients.

Healthcare has many middlemen

If you know anyone in healthcare, ask them how much time they spend doing paperwork. There is an incredibly byzantine system of charges, lists, regulations, process, middlemen, and charting that most doctors spend 1:1 hour of paperwork for every hour they spend with patients. Pharmacy benefits managers (PBM) sit in between pharmaceutical companies and providers. The “chartmaster” is a secretive list of negotiated payment rates between providers and payers. The case mix (% of commercial payers vs. Medicare vs. Medicaid) drives the profitability of hospitals and physician groups.

how I teach / think about healthcare 

I recently ran a two day boot camp for executive MBA. This is the list of the videos and the discussions we had:

  1. Healthcare introduction: What is your bias going into these discussions?
  2. Current situation in US healthcare: The US spends 1/5 of the economy of healthcare, we have sub-par results
  3. Economics of healthcare: Healthcare is not a perfect market, what are 3 reasons it’s not?
  4. Hospitals, health systems: Hospitals & physician groups make 50% of total spending on healthcare
  5. Fixed cost in US healthcare: Since there are high fixed costs, there are barriers to entry and exit
  6. Shift to ambulatory care: What should a hospital CEO do with the 900,000+ inpatient beds we have in the US?
  7. Hospital profitability: Average hospital profitability is 2-7%, depending on the case mix and the year, not great
  8. Health insurance: Employer-based insurance started in the 1950s, but does it really make sense to do it this way
  9. Medicare: CMS sets the standard for reimbursement rates nationally, commercial payers usually follow suit
  10. Healthcare pricing: Since you don’t know the price until AFTER you get the service, it’s hard to be a savvy buyer
  11. Medicare for all: During the elections, people say “let’s just have Medicare for all”, but what about the 1M people who work at commercial insurance companies (e.g., Aetna, United Healthcare, Cigna, Humana etc) are 50%+ of market•
  12. Affordable Care Act (ACA, a.k.a., Obamacare): three-legged stool a) guarantee issue insurance (yes, even people with pre-existing conditions get covered) depends on b) community rating c) individual mandate
  13. What is strategy: Creating a sustainable competitive advantage that helps you to ‘win’ over the long-term
  14. Best practices: These are often freely shared among healthcare providers, and yet, not implemented fully
  15. Strategy = tradeoffs: You cannot be all things to all people; better to focus and be great at a narrow set of things
  16. Strategy is not planning: Planning = focusing on inputs, reducing risk, strategy = focused on results, winning
  17. Implementing strategy: It takes a clarity (commander’s intent) and commitment (culture) to make things happen
  18. Healthcare in the news: Huge M&A happening in provider space (Kaiser + Geisinger); what’s your opinion?
  19. Healthcare industries: It’s a dozen different industries (pharma, provider, medical device) with varying margin %
  20. Industry analysis: Yes, competition is more than just your rivals (think: suppliers, distributors, new entrants)
  21. Economic moat: What are you doing to make it difficult for new entrants to steal your customers, profits?
  22. Industry convergence: Industries are not necessarily distinct (think: UNH insurance is the largest physician employer
  23. Intermountain healthcare: Well-known, high-quality health system is making their own generic drugs
  24. Industry trends according to CEO: Look for gains from IT integration and clinical variance reduction
  25. Quality: Four quality failures (over-use, under-use, mis-use, variation)
  26. Quality: Donabedian Triad thinks of quality as a progression: 1) infrastructure 2) process 3) outcomes
  27. Quality: Making healthcare better (NY Times article), amazing here
  28. Quality: Joint Commission is the largest accreditation body; without their gold star = trouble
  29. Quality: Readmissions reduction program is just 1 example of CMS programs to put more risk-sharing on providers
  30. Quality: HCAHPS is a patient satisfaction survey which gives “voice of the patient” (good), but also can be gamed (bad)
  31. Quality: DMAIC is Lean / Six sigma tool to D (define), M (measure), AI (analyze, improve), C (control) performance
  32. Quality: Being Mortal is an incredible book written by Atul Gawande (affiliate link) on living a good life, ending well
  33. Cost: Flow of funds show where the $$ for US healthcare comes from (patients) and goes (payers, providers)
  34. Cost: Administrative costs = massive. McKinsey estimates here that $250Billion (with a B) could be saved
  35. Cost: Critical to quality (CTQ) asks the question, “What’s truly needed and value added?” If not, don’t do it
  36. Cost: 8 kinds of waste TIMWOODS (transportation, inventory, motion, waiting, overproducing, overprocessing, skills)
  37. Cost: Reducing clinical variation is a huge opportunity because the “standard of care” definition varies, a lot
  38. Cost: Consumerism has started with people “shopping around” because of higher co-pays and other incentives
  39. Cost: Economies of scale provides the benefits of being big: financial, operational, talent, clinician, population health
  40. Access: Americans – even those with insurance – often have to wait too-long for care. This problem is not unique to the US, look at the trouble with wait times in the UK with NHS.
  41. Access; Rural America is 20% of population. Many critical access hospitals (under 25 beds) are often underfunded
  42. Access: Provider capacity is a challenge (even in the US). We need to increase supply, which is not simple
  43. Access: Telehealth adoption spiked (because we had to during the pandemic), but many obstacles remain
  44. Access: Disruptive innovation is “less for less” which need to sounds bad, but it’s super practical and cost-savings
  45. Access: If telemedicine is such a “no-brainer” why is Teledoc consistently unprofitable?
  46. Access: Healthcare equity is not the same as access. Who you are, where you were born, where you live matters.
  47. Access: The vaccines which were developed because of Covid-19 was a testament to ingenuity, power of focus
  48. Provider well-being: Oddly, technology often makes providers’ lives more difficult & increases costs
  49. Provider well being: We are burning out our clinicians; the system makes it difficult to care for patients = bad K
  50. Keep learning; 100+ links here to different resources to learn more about US healthcare

Healthcare matters and needs your help

Stay engaged, as patients, as providers, as taxpayers, as caregivers, as curious people. I am proud clinicians and the work they do for all of us.  Thank you CKL and ITG. 

 

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