by jflower | Sep 17, 2009 | Healthcare Economics, Healthcare Management, Healthcare Policy, Healthcare Reform, Systems Thinking, Top Healthcare Stories
From the American Hospital Association Weekly, 9/15/09If you’re thoughtful, if you’re thinking about how health care in the United States actually works; if you’ve been following the bouncing ball here about why it costs so much for such mediocre results, you’re...
by jflower | Aug 20, 2009 | Healthcare Economics, Healthcare Management, Healthcare Reform, Healthcare Workforce, Top Healthcare Stories
Are you waiting for the shoe to drop? The anvil to fall? Don't.Whether or not we're hit with "reform," this won’t be over soon, and it will affect you and your organization for years to come and in more surprising ways than you might...
by jflower | Jul 9, 2009 | Healthcare Economics, Healthcare Insurance, Healthcare Policy, Healthcare Reform, Top Healthcare Stories, Universal Healthcare
(From the July 7, 2009 Hospitals and Health Networks Weekly)How can we tell what health care "reform" will mean for providers, really, on the ground? Politicians, the "chattering class," and especially broadcasters whose income depends on their...
by jflower | Jun 18, 2009 | Healthcare Economics, Healthcare Management, Healthcare Reform, Healthcare Workforce, Top Healthcare Stories
On June 18, SunTrust Bank sponsored a webinar for its physician clients (most of them specialists), in which I discussed the future of business models and care models: How will medical specialists make a living in the future? And how will they care for patients? I...
by jflower | May 12, 2009 | Healthcare Economics, Healthcare Insurance, Healthcare Policy, Healthcare Reform, Systems Thinking, Top Healthcare Stories, Universal Healthcare
(by Joe Flower, from TheHealthCareBlog.com)You want healthcare reform. I want healthcare reform. Grandma Jenkins wants healthcare reform. What is healthcare reform? What kind of animal are we talking about? How would we recognize it if it came up and bit us? What are...
by jflower | May 11, 2009 | Healthcare Economics, Healthcare Insurance, Healthcare Policy, Healthcare Reform, Systems Thinking, Top Healthcare Stories, Universal Healthcare
(by Joe Flower, from TheHealthCareBlog.com)We can actually say what a better healthcare system would look like, if we look at healthcare in the United States as a complex adaptive system stuck in a Nash equilibrium. The ideal reformed healthcare system would be...