What is ailing the healthcare market? Why do we(Americans) pay higher per capita for treating a disease condition? Is it just because we have access to the most innovative solutions? Do we have misaligned incentives? Is all the work that is done in the healthcare value chain value added work? Or are we classifying busy work as value add when all it’s doing is to sustain an over complicated system that existing players have an incentive to maintain.
Let's talk about what ails healthcare. Why is it fundamentally a different kind of product? Why do the normal rules of market competition and capitalism not apply here?
Let’s imagine alternate models - one based on capitalism and competition (but unfettered and unconstrained). Another socialist but efficient universal healthcare.
To choose we must define what our core principles are as a society - do we consider healthcare a "right" or a "privilege".
If it’s a privilege then why do we insist on the Hippocratic Oath - why can’t emergency rooms turn away dying patients unless they can pay upfront?
If it's a right, then why should we not use the most efficient way delivering and paying for healthcare? From a payment perspective, having a single payer for basic services is probably the most efficient, given the benefits of scale.
A combination of the two may be best suited for us - where basic healthcare and pursuit of the Hippocratic oath may be a base guarantee by the government (basic healthcare as a right), while add ons are optional and at the patient's discretion for which they can choose to procure insurance - for e.g. the type of room or facility you check into when being admitted for a procedure. Or the choice of a certain brand of a product that may be above and beyond what basic coverage is available for free.
Also allow for vertical integration across the value chain and let larger end to end entities compete. Remove the incentive of manufacturers to push product, instead they become a part of competing value chains they may compete in treatment levels that are simple, standard or complex.
In addition, the following steps should help make our healthcare delivery systems effective, efficient and outcome based for the patient.
This is an extremely complicated topic and two of the books that have greatly influenced my thinking are Redefining Healthcare by Michael Porter and Elizabeth Teisberg and Healthcare Value Chains: Producers, Purchasers and Providers by Lawton R Burns at Wharton in addition to my own experience navigating this space in various roles at a PBM.
There may not be a silver bullet, but through debate, discussion and action we could move our healthcare system to a place where it delivers for its main beneficiary - "The Patient".
Happy to receive feedback and look forward to a meaningful dialog...