Explaining patients’ declining trust in doctors

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/explaining-patients-declining-trust-doctors-robert-pearl-m-d–u3krc

For more than half a century, physicians ranked among the most trusted professionals in America. Even before modern medicine, when treatments usually failed, patients admired their doctors’ knowledge, dedication and compassion. Today, that trust has eroded, with profound implications for the future of U.S. healthcare.

Gallup polling shows just 44% of Americans rate the quality of care they receive as “good” or “excellent,” the weakest showing since Gallup began asking the question in 2001. Meanwhile, trust in doctors’ honesty and ethics has dropped 14 points since 2021, falling to its lowest point this century.

At first glance, you might assume that this decline resulted from recent developments: COVID-19, political polarization and rising vaccine skepticism. Instead, today’s drop in confidence is the predictable result of decisions set in motion some 20 years ago.

How the arc bent

To understand why patients now rate their doctors so poorly, we need to trace the full arc of modern medicine: how trust was built, how it peaked and why it declined.

The arc began with the arrival of antibiotics in the 1920s and ‘30s. Before then, doctors more often offered patients hope and compassion rather than cures. But with the availability of sulfa drugs and, later, penicillin, a doctor’s visit was more likely to prolong a life than shorten it.

The second half of the 20th century became medicine’s golden era. In this next section of the arc, breakthroughs in surgery, transplantation, chemotherapy and vaccines were paired with broader access through employer-sponsored insurance and the creation of Medicare and Medicaid. Life expectancy climbed year after year, and public confidence in doctors soared.

But every arc bends. By the 1990s, the daily demands of clinical practice had shifted. Acute problems like pneumonia or broken bones — conditions that often could be treated in a single encounter — gave way to chronic illnesses such as diabetes, heart failure and hypertension. These conditions demand lifelong management: frequent monitoring, medication adjustments and repeated follow-ups.

As chronic disease became more common, and as patients and patients struggled to manage these ever-present conditions, the result was an epidemic of heart attacks, strokes, cancers and kidney failures. Costs soared while clinical outcomes stagnated.

Insurers, caught between surging costs and payer resistance, had only one lever to pull: rationing. They rolled out high-deductible plans, imposed prior authorization requirements and denied more claims. Doctors, meanwhile, reassured by high patient satisfaction scores, resisted transformation. Most kept practicing in small, siloed offices under fee-for-service, a payment model that rewards volume over outcomes. Many who sought stability and greater reimbursement sold their practices to hospitals or private equity firms. Few found the relief they hoped for.

Why patients feel differently now, why doctors denied it

As the gap between patient needs and physician capacity widened, access to care steadily eroded. Appointments that once took days to schedule began stretching into weeks or even months, both in primary and specialty care. And when patients finally got through the door, visits felt hurried. With doctors averaging just 17 minutes per encounter, there was little time to listen fully, explain thoroughly or follow up afterward.

The consequences were predictable. Delayed appointments allowed medical problems to worsen. Rushed exams led to misdiagnoses. And for patients left waiting, worrying or returning with complications, the logical conclusion was that their doctors didn’t care.

Even as patients noticed the increasingly compromised quality, most medical professionals clung to the belief that small fixes could repair the system and restore the doctor-patient bond. They lobbied for a few more dollars from Medicare, a little less billing paperwork and fewer insurer-imposed prior authorizations. But with less than half of Americans now confident in the quality of care they receive — and premiums projected to rise nearly 9% next year — physicians can see that major healthcare reform is required. The era of denial is ending.

Patient confidence has now collapsed. A minority of Americans rate their care as excellent, and the data back them up. Life expectancy remains the same in the United States today as it was in 2010. And healthcare now consumes nearly one-fifth of the nation’s GDP, with half of Americans struggling to afford their medical bills. The question clinicians are asking is what can we do? Other industries provide answers.

Lessons from business turnarounds

Clay Christensen observed that companies and their leaders resist transformation until it is too late, and disaster strikes. Intel’s recent struggles illustrate how even once-great companies can go from the world’s best to an “also ran.” The lesson for the medical profession: that recognize the crisis early enough and embrace bold strategies are the ones that survive.

Their approach and ultimate success fall into two categories:

  1. They maximize operational excellence to close the gap between demand and capacity. In the 1970s, for example, Southwest couldn’t match the major carriers on brand reputation, so it had to become cost effective. It chose to maximize collaboration. Pilots, flight attendants and ground crews operated as a tightly integrated team, following consistent steps at every airport. Planes turned around in 10 minutes, not 30. That efficiency allowed Southwest to schedule six flights a day (one more than the competition) without purchasing more planes or adding staff.
  2. They embrace new technologies that can increase quality and lower cost. Take Netflix as an example. What began as a DVD-by-mail service pivoted early to streaming. Even before broadband was widespread, Netflix bet on the future. The model slashed costs, improved accessibility and delivered higher-quality viewing. Subscriptions stayed affordable, households remained loyal, and the company reshaped an entire industry.

Healthcare can learn from this. In this scenario, doctors would join together to achieve economies of scale, collaborate across specialties to avoid duplication of services and minimize resource waste through clinical care coordination. Moreover, they would apply the principle of specialization to create high-volume centers of excellence capable of providing consistently high quality with far greater efficiency and significantly lower costs.

Medicine could emulate this approach. Physicians would embrace generative AI, take financial risk under a capitated model, find ways to better control chronic disease and empower patients to take on more of their own care. This would decrease demand on doctors, free-up time for their most complex patients and reduce burnout. But this scenario won’t happen if the payment methodology remains “pay-for-volume,” or if new technologies are relegated to administrative tasks rather than applied to improve clinical effectiveness and efficiency.

Of course, there is a third possibility: doctors cling to denial. In this scenario, they keep running faster and faster on the treadmill, cutting more corners each year and hoping small fixes will make a difference.

If this is the path medicine follows, annual costs will outpace inflation, quality will continue to decline, and the gap between healthcare prices and what patients can afford will widen. To fill in the void, entrepreneurs will seize the opportunity and develop generative AI tools that replace (rather than complement) physicians. When that day comes, doctors will regret not acting while they still could.

Tim Cook’s legacy offers doctors a lesson in money & mission

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/tim-cooks-legacy-offers-doctors-lesson-money-mission-pearl-m-d–qm8sc

In a 2015 commencement address at George Washington University, Apple CEO Tim Cook told graduates that their values should serve as their “North Star.” Work, he said, takes on new meaning when people feel pointed in the right direction. Otherwise, “it’s just a job, and life is too short for that.”

For generations, American medicine was built on a similar idea: that being a doctor was not just a job, but a calling rooted in service.

Doesn’t seem so long ago that most physicians practiced in small, independent offices, deciding for themselves which patients to see, how long to spend with each and how care would be delivered. Their identity and purpose were clear. They were doctors, trained through years of sacrifice to keep people healthy, relieve suffering and save lives.

That era of medicine has been replaced by one in which physicians increasingly struggle to balance mission and financial stability. In that tradeoff, most have chosen stability.

All but 38% of physicians have left or sold their practices. The majority now work for hospital systems, private equity firms or insurers in return for greater negotiating clout, administrative support and economic security. Among those who remain independent, a growing number have embraced concierge medicine, a model in which patients pay an annual fee (typically several thousand dollars, with some practices charging $20,000 or more) for enhanced access and personalized care. For physicians, the appeal is clear: fewer patients, more time per visit and higher income.

These choices are rational. For most doctors, they feel like the only way to protect their families, preserve their careers and survive inside an increasingly unforgiving system.

CFOs often say there can be no mission without margin. They are right. Financial stability matters in medicine, as it does in every profession. But the reverse is also true: without mission, medicine risks becoming, in Tim Cook’s words, “just a job.”

That is the danger many physicians may not fully recognize when they trade independence, access or autonomy for financial security. The gain is visible immediately. The loss only becomes clear only over time.

Cook’s recent retirement, and the debate over his legacy, offers a powerful case study in what happens when institutional optimization and personal values collide. His story helps illuminate the choices now facing medicine, and the consequences that follow when mission and margin move in opposite directions.

The tradeoffs behind Tim Cook’s success

By almost every measurable business standard, Tim Cook’s tenure as Apple CEO was a historic success. After succeeding Steve Jobs in 2011, he transformed Apple from a beloved consumer tech company into one of the most valuable corporations in history.

In the years that followed, Apple’s market capitalization rose from roughly $350 billion to nearly $4 trillion. Annual profits more than quadrupled. Products like the Apple Watch and AirPods became major revenue drivers, while Apple’s services business fundamentally reshaped the company’s economics.

Through this financial lens, Cook’s leadership received near-universal praise. But those metrics do not capture the personal compromises he made to achieve that level of performance or the price those choices likely carried. Cook’s public persona rested on discipline, restraint and values-based leadership. He framed privacy as a “fundamental human right” and argued that technology should be built around trust, accessibility and respect for users.

But his actions told a different story. And when the values people expound and the actions that they take deviate from one another, psychologists describe the result as cognitive dissonance: an uncomfortable internal conflict.

News articles and podcast retrospectives have questioned Cook’s $1 million donation to Trump’s 2025 inauguration, the custom glass plaque mounted on a 24-karat gold base he gave the president and his attendance at a private White House screening of Melania. There is nothing intrinsically wrong with cultivating a president’s favor, but it is hard to reconcile these actions with Cook’s public image and stated values.

From a financial and shareholder-value perspective, the strategy appears to have worked. As Trump ratcheted up tariffs on imports from India in 2025, the president exempted smartphones and semiconductors, sparing Apple significant costs.

A similar conflict between values and margin appears in Cook’s dealings with China. Over 15 years, he built one of the most sophisticated global supply chains in history, giving Apple a massive competitive advantage. But doing so tied the company to a government known for censorship, human rights violations and a manufacturing system long criticized for its working conditions. To critics, Cook’s willingness to accept those tradeoffs once again ran contrary to his public commitments to privacy, dignity and human-centered technology.

The leaders of publicly traded companies may view such compromises as essential to business success. But what happens when financial optimization pulls clinicians away from their “North Star”?

How financial incentives reshaped medical practice

In 1970, economist Milton Friedman famously argued that the social responsibility of business was to increase profits for shareholders, so long as companies followed the rules of the game. That idea helped define modern American capitalism and the expectations placed on corporate executives.

But medicine is not just another business. Here, the question is what happens to mission-driven doctors when they pursue a finance-first approach, either for their own financial benefit or for the benefit of the hospital, private equity firm or insurer that owns their practice?

Most physicians will never again have the combined autonomy and financial security of previous generations. Industry consolidation has shifted negotiating power away from doctors and toward large hospital systems, insurer-owned medical groups and private equity-backed organizations. These entities have the scale to negotiate higher reimbursement rates, spread administrative costs and operate more efficiently than smaller, independent practices.

Moreover, physician reimbursements from Medicare and Medicaid aren’t keeping pace with inflation. Prior authorization requirements alone force physicians and their staff to spend an average of 13 hours each week navigating approvals, time that could otherwise be spent caring for patients. Furthermore, these financial pressures come on top of the rising cost of staffing, technology, compliance and malpractice coverage.

It is no wonder more than 60% of U.S. physicians are now employed by hospitals, health systems or corporate entities, a dramatic shift from about 40% just a decade ago. Physicians know that joining one of these hospital systems can increase reimbursement rates by 8% to 10% on average, creating a level of financial stability they could not achieve on their own.

Private equity investment has accelerated as well, with roughly 8% of physicians now practicing in PE-backed groups, nearly doubling since 2022. Doctors hope that by selling their practice to private equity, they will receive operational support and long-term financial gain.

In parallel, concierge and direct primary care practices have expanded greatly in recent years. According to Health Affairs, the number of physicians practicing in these models more than doubled between 2018 and 2023, with continued growth since.

What is rarely discussed outside policy circles are the consequences of these financial choices on patient care.

Join a hospital system, and physicians may earn more, but healthcare becomes more unaffordable for both patients and small business owners. Sell a practice to private equity, and studies show the transition is followed by staffing reductions, higher utilization and declines in multiple measures of care quality. Become a concierge doctor, and a physician may earn more caring for 500 patients than previously earned with a panel of 2,000. But that decision also means telling the other 1,500 patients who cannot afford a multi-thousand-dollar annual fee to find another doctor.

The hidden cost of rational decisions

Just as Cook’s financial choices likely caused him cognitive dissonance, physicians who entered medicine with a mission to heal will experience a similar discomfort when their professional choices move them further from their purpose.

Although medical school applications continue to rise, fulfillment among practicing physicians is low. Nearly half of all U.S. physicians report feelings of burnout. Many prefer the term “moral injury” to describe their experience. The phrase, first introduced by psychiatrist Jonathan Shay in the context of war, gained traction in healthcare after physicians Simon Talbot and Wendy Dean argued in 2018 that doctors were not simply burned out, but constrained from delivering the care they knew was right.

However, moral injury implies a lack of agency. It suggests that clinicians are simply victims of forces beyond their control. But it often is applied in ways that obscure the consequences of the choices physicians make when they join a hospital system controlled by a non-clinical administrator, sell to a private equity firm or move into concierge medicine.

This analysis is not a condemnation of those choices. It is an acknowledgment of what has become standard in American medicine and a warning for future generations of physicians. Tim Cook’s story teaches that financial tradeoffs frequently come at personal cost. Legacy is not only about economic results or what others say about us in retrospect. It is built by the choices and decisions we make in real time.

The financial upsides of corporate medicine are clear, but the psychological consequences are rarely discussed. When doctors sell their practices to these entities, part of the quid pro quo is that they will abide by the incentives, constraints and values of the purchasers. And that comes at a steep price.

Caveat emptor: Buyer beware.

Why drugs cost so much, 101: Medicine monopolies

We’re always asking: Why do drugs cost so freaking much? 

And it’s a complicated question. There are a bunch of reasons — to be sure. But in our reporting over the years, like our stories on insulin and tuberculosis drugs, experts cited one big reason over and over again: 

The pharmaceutical industry wages sophisticated legal battles to keep monopoly control over their best selling, most lucrative drugs — blocking generic competition, and increasing their prices along the way. 

How did it come to be this way? 

In this first episode of a new series – what we’re calling An Arm and a Leg 101 – we’re doing a crash course in the history of the drug patent system.

And the rags-to-riches story of one amazing guy is going to help us do it. 

Al Engelberg got schooled in the Art of the Hustle at a young age, collecting dimes at an illegal bingo game on the Atlantic City boardwalk. 

Later, he’d put those street smarts to use as he sat at the negotiation table in Washington D.C., hashing out the details of a law that would usher in the generic drug industry as we know it. Then made millions from the rules he helped write.

And as he admits, his legacy is mixed. 

On the one hand: The rules Al Engelberg helped write — a grand bargain between generic drugmakers and patent-holding brand pharma companies — unleashed the power of generic drugs to save Americans money. 

Nine out of ten prescriptions written today get filled with a generic.

On the other hand: In the process of making his fortune, Al Engelberg discovered loopholes, gaps, and perverse incentives in that grand bargain. 

Gaps that allowed brand and generic drugmakers to profit by keeping generics for many hit drugs off the market.  

So we now spend more than ever on medicine — and more than 20 percent of Americans report skipping their medication because they can’t afford it. 

Al Engelberg, now 86, has spent the last 30 years — and millions of his own dollars — trying to close those gaps. 

“I live in a world — a pharma world — where half the people think I’m dead, and the other half wish I was,” he tells us. 

You can read more of Al’s story — plus his prescription for fixing the crisis of high drug prices — in his book, Breaking the Medicine Monopolies: Reflections of a Generic Drug Pioneer.

And you can hear our earlier reporting on drug patents here:

John Green vs. Johnson & Johnson (part 1)

John Green vs. Johnson & Johnson (part 2)

The surprising history behind insulin’s absurd price (and some hopeful signs in the wild)

An Arm and a Leg 101 is made possible in part by support from Arnold Ventures.

3 healthcare threats that will soon become a crisis too big to solve

https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/3-healthcare-threats-soon-become-crisis-too-big-solve-pearl-m-d–tfuvc/

Most industries enjoy a luxury that U.S. healthcare does not. In professional services, retail, logistics and software, leaders can respond quickly when conditions change. Companies can shrink or expand the workforce, adopt innovative technologies or reconfigure operations within months.

Healthcare lacks that flexibility. Training new physicians takes a decade, making it difficult to adjust workforce supply to meet changing demand. And unlike other industries, hospitals cannot rapidly cut services or reduce capacity. In fact, most clinical service changes require regulatory approval, turning cost reduction into a multiyear process.

With timelines like these, course correction in healthcare is inherently slow. Problems that might have been manageable persist. And by the time leaders act, threats frequently become too large to reverse.

Three of the nation’s most pressing healthcare problems now face this reality:

Threat 1: The affordability cliff

Over the past 25 years, the nation’s total healthcare spending has climbed from $2 trillion to $5.3 trillion.

Businesses and the government have played “hot potato” in response to these rising costs. Employers slowed wage growth and switched to high-deductible health plans to offset ever-higher premiums. In parallel, Medicare and Medicaid set payment increases below the rising cost of delivering care, driving hospitals and physicians to make up the difference through higher charges in the private market.

The financial impact on families has been devastating. With healthcare costs rising faster than wages, half of Americans say they cannot afford their out-of-pocket expenses should they experienced a major illness.

For businesses, the government and families, these financial challenges are mounting with no relief in sight. In 2024, U.S. medical costs rose more than 7% for the second consecutive year, pushing healthcare’s share of the economy to roughly 18%. Out-of-pocket spending by consumers climbed 7.2%, exceeding $500 billion, as demand for hospital care, prescription drugs and physician services outpaced insurer projections. Moreover, insurance premiums are projected to rise by roughly 9% this year.

Congressional action (and inaction) is amplifying these pressures. The expiration of enhanced subsidies on the insurance exchanges is driving double- and even triple-digit percentage premium increases for roughly 20 million enrollees. And beginning this year, another 8 to 10 million Americans could lose Medicaid coverage as new eligibility restrictions take effect.

Absent major intervention, healthcare spending is projected to exceed $7 trillion by the end of the decade, consuming more than one-fifth of the U.S. economy. At that point, small businesses will have dropped coverage for millions of employees, and a growing share of federal spending will be diverted to interest payments on the national debt, squeezing Medicare, Medicaid and other healthcare programs as demand for medical care rises.

As long as the economy stays strong, businesses and policymakers will respond with incremental changes that dull the pain but fail to address the cause. Consequently, when the next recession begins (perhaps sooner than later, according to historical analyses), the economic crisis will become so large that solutions dependent on improving patients’ health will be too small and take too long to succeed. That brings up the second major challenge.

Threat 2: The chronic disease epidemic

Since the final decade of the 21st century, the United States has experienced a sustained and worsening epidemic of chronic disease.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, roughly 194 million U.S. adults now live with at least one chronic condition. About 130 million report multiple chronic diseases.

You might assume that if the healthcare system could prevent younger generations from developing these conditions, total costs would fall. But prevention alone cannot offset the cumulative burden of chronic disease already embedded in the American population.

To understand why, consider a single condition: diabetes.

A patient newly diagnosed with diabetes can usually control it and avoid serious, costly complications through lifestyle changes and relatively low-cost medications.

But when diabetes remains poorly controlled for a decade, biological damage accumulates. Each year, the risk of kidney failure or heart attack rises significantly. As a result, the cost of caring for a single patient with long-standing diabetes outweighs the savings that result from preventing diabetes in multiple newly diagnosed patients.

The math: On average, people with diabetes incur medical costs about 2.6 times higher than those without the disease (around $25,000 more per patient each year).

But when diabetes progresses to kidney failure, spending jumps into an entirely different category. Medicare costs for one patient’s hemodialysis treatment is approximately $100,000 annually. That’s not accounting for the cost of treating a patient’s likely cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of death among people with diabetes.

As such, to offset the medical care costs for a patient with a history of diabetes, our nation would need to prevent four new cases.

Add all these pieces together and diabetes alone accounts for more than $300 billion in direct medical costs each year, plus another $100 billion in indirect costs from disability and lost productivity.

Furthermore, effective chronic disease control requires large upfront investment, while the financial returns arrive years later. Act now, and the returns will be substantial. Based on CDC estimates, better prevention and control of chronic disease could avert up to half of all heart attacks, strokes, cancers and kidney failures, reducing national healthcare spending by $1 to $1.5 trillion each year. But if policymakers wait (while healthcare spending rises 7% or more annually), by the time they confront the crisis, they won’t be able to proceed financially since the required investment will be far more expensive than the payoff, at least in the short run.

Finally, if the U.S, wants to effectively prevent and control chronic disease as the means to reduce healthcare costs, there’s a third challenge our nation will need to address.

Threat 3: Training doctors for the wrong future

Ask medical leaders what they view as the greatest threat to high-quality care in the United States, and most will point to the growing physician shortage.

The Association of American Medical Colleges projects a shortfall of up to 86,000 physicians by 2036, with nearly half of that deficit in primary care. But those projections rest on a false assumption: the way doctors deliver care will be the same in 2036 as it is today.

If the United States has any hope of containing healthcare costs and reversing the chronic disease epidemic, it won’t happen by simply training more physicians.

Instead, countering those threats will require a transformation in how care is delivered. And generative AI will play a central role. But how?

Today, advances in medical knowledge allow physicians to effectively follow well-defined, evidence-based pathways for managing chronic disease in all but the most complex cases. As a result, most routine management tasks (monitoring, medication adjustments and decision support) are primed for generative AI. This transition has already begun.

A San Francisco startup, Mercor, recently earned a $10 billion valuation after recruiting more than 30,000 clinicians to help train AI systems to perform specialized medical tasks. Meanwhile, Utah just became the first state to launch a pilot allowing an AI system to renew prescriptions for 250 commonly used, non-controlled medications under physician oversight.

The implications for medical practice are clear. We can expect that generative AI will take on more routine chronic disease management, leaving primary care physicians more time to focus on complex clinical tasks. With AI support, they will increasingly care for patients who today are referred to specialists.

Specialists, in turn, will spend less time on evaluation and follow-up visits and more time performing procedures and advanced interventions that require human judgment and technical skill.

The combination of healthier patients and the redistribution of work (enabled by generative AI) will ease the physician-shortage problem. To prepare for this outcome, medical schools and residency programs will need to quickly integrate generative AI into every aspect of training. If not, physicians in many specialties will find themselves trained for the roles of the past, not the skills they will require a decade from now.

When Systems Fail, They Fail Together

When chronic disease becomes widespread and clinicians are overwhelmed, America’s health deteriorates, complications ensue and healthcare costs surge.

When chronic disease is managed effectively, the opposite occurs: hospitalizations fall, costly complications become rarer and the demand for specialty care declines.

For decades, healthcare has consumed an ever-larger share of GDP, while clinicians practiced medicine much as their mentors have for generations.

That era is ending. With costs accelerating and incremental fixes exhausted, healthcare is approaching a breaking point. Act aggressively, now, and the nation can prevent and better control chronic disease, avert hundreds of thousands of heart attacks, strokes and kidney failures, and flatten healthcare inflation.

By contrast, wait another decade and there will be no way to rein in spending or chronic disease. And if workforce adaptation is delayed, as many as 30% of physicians will find themselves trained for a version of medicine that no longer exists.

We still have a choice, but the clock is ticking.

The U.S. Anxiety Pandemic

The U.S. bombing of Iran’s nuclear capability is unsettling: whether MAGA or not, hawk or dove, young or old, conservative or liberal, rich or poor—it matters.

Stability at home and abroad is utopian to some but desired by all. Pandemics, mass violence, natural disasters and even election results contribute to instability and lend to insecurity. Operation Midnight Hammer might contribute to the nation’s anxiety—time will tell.

The immediate aftermath of the bunker-bombings in Iran will involve two orchestrated campaigns by government officials:

  • The Campaign to Contain Middle East Tension: military, diplomatic and economic levers will be put to the test to limit escalation of the bombing and limit its consequence to the region.
  • The Campaign to Win Public Support: issues of consequence like military intervention ultimately depend on public opinion that support laws, funding and subsequent actions taken in response. History teaches and political leaders understand that ‘winning the hearts and minds’ of the public is necessary to success. Predictably, justification for Operation Midnight Hammer will be messaged loudly by supporters and challenged by critics.

For the moment, the news cycle will shift to foreign policy and away from tariffs, inflation, household prices and the “Big Beautiful Budget Bill” which the Senate Republicans hope to bring to the floor this week. News media will speculate about the after-effects of the Israeli-Iran bombing and what role the U.S. plays in an increasingly complicated geopolitical landscape marked by marked by armed conflicts Gaza, Ukraine, Myanmar, Yemen and 26 and other countries.

The attention these get in traditional media and social media channels will exacerbate public anxiety that’s already high: 19% U.S. adults and 40% of the country’s adolescents suffer from anxiety disorder: “a persistent, excessive fear or worry that interferes with daily life and functioning”. But, per the National Institute of Mental Health, fewer than a third suffering from severe anxiety receive professional treatment.

In the public health community, much is known about anxiety: it’s more prevalent among women than men, in minority populations, lower income populations and in the Southeast. It’s significant across all age groups, and at an alarming level among young working-class adults facing unique issues like affordability and job insecurity.  And it is stigmatized in certain communities (i.e. certain fundamentalist religious sects, certain ethnic communities) lending to silent suffering and unattended consequences.

My take:

Operation Midnight Hammer came at a time of widespread public anxiety about the economy, tariffs, inflation, costs of living and political division. I will let pundits debate the advisability and timing of the bunker-bombing but I know one thing for sure: mental health issues—including anxiety, mood and substance abuse disorders– deserve more support from policymakers and more attention by the healthcare community.

  • The former requires local, state and federal lawmakers to revisit and enforce mental health parity laws already on the books but rarely enforced.
  • The latter requires the healthcare community to elevate behavioral health to a national priority alongside obesity, heart disease, cancer and aging to secure the public’s health and avoid unintended consequences of neglect.

Regrettably, the issue is not new. Employers, school systems, religious organizations and local public health agencies have been mental health default safety values to date; extreme have been temporarily shuffled to in hospital emergency rooms most ill-equipped to manage them. But systematic, community-wide, evidence-based help for those in need of mental health remains beyond their reach.

The Trump administration’s healthcare leaders under HHS’ Kennedy and CMS’ Oz espouse the U.S. healthcare system should prioritize chronic disease and preventive health. They believe its proficiency in specialty care is, in part, the result of lucrative incentives that reward providers and their financial backers handsomely in these areas.

In the President’s February 13 Executive Order establishing the Make America Healthy Again Commission, its goal was laid out:

“To fully address the growing health crisis in America, we must re-direct our national focus, in the public and private sectors, toward understanding and drastically lowering chronic disease rates and ending childhood chronic disease.  This includes fresh thinking on nutrition, physical activity, healthy lifestyles, over-reliance on medication and treatments, the effects of new technological habits, environmental impacts, and food and drug quality and safety…  We must ensure our healthcare system promotes health rather than just managing disease.”

Nothing could be more timely and necessary to the Commission’s work than addressing mass anxiety and mental health as a national priority. And nothing is more urgently needed in communities than mainstreaming anxiety and mental health into the systems of health that accept full risk for whole person health.

PS: Before Operation Midnight Hammer over the weekend, I had prepared today’s report focused on two government reports about the long-term solvency of the Medicaid and Medicare programs. Given the gravity of events in Israel and Iran and other hot spots, and after discussions with my family and friends this weekend, it became clear public anxiety is high.

I am concerned about the future and worry about the health system’s response. It’s composed of good people doing worthwhile work who are worried about the future.  I recently spoke to a group on the theme (link below): ‘the future for healthcare is not a repeat of its past.’ That lends to anxiety unless accompanied by a vision for a better future. That’s what all hope for those in Iran, Gaza, Israel and beyond, and for all who serve in our industry.

Hospitals look inward, add C-suite officer to boost staff wellness

https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/hospitals-look-inward-add-c-suite-officer-to-boost-staff-wellness/516451/

Chief wellness officers are becoming more mainstream.

As healthcare organizations look for ways to reduce physician burnout, some are placing their bets on a new C-suite role: chief wellness officer.

Hospitals that appoint an executive to oversee wellness anticipate not only happier employees but also improved patient experience and outcomes.

Physician burnout is at an all-time high. In a recent Medscape survey, nearly two-thirds of doctors reported feeling burned out, depressed or both. Worse, 33% of respondents said those feelings impacted their patient interactions. Burnout rates were highest among family physicians, intensivists, internists, neurologists and OB-GYNs, and were higher among women than men.

This epidemic, if you will, comes as the nation faces a growing shortage of doctors. The Association of American Medical Colleges projects the physician shortage could reach 105,000 by 2030.

Among factors fueling burnout are long hours, increasing regulatory and recordkeeping requirements and administrative and computer tasks. An Annals of Family Medicine report in September found that primary care physicians spend more than half their workday on EHR tasks. But the implications go beyond the looming shortage; physician burnout has been linked to lower productivity and absenteeism, medical errors, poorer outcomes and lack of engagement with patients.

Enter the chief wellness officer, or chief physician wellness officer as the title is sometimes called. The idea is not new, says Linda Komnick, a senior partner and co-leader of the physician integration and leadership practice at Witt/Kieffer. Companies and large organizations have employed them for more than a decade. However, it’s only in the past couple of years that they’ve started cropping up in healthcare.

“I would not call it a ‘trend’ yet,” she told Healthcare Dive. “What is a definite trend is that healthcare organizations are trying to be more holistic in supporting employees.”

The idea of CWOs aligns with the shift toward value-based, patient-centric care. Hospitals are trying to differentiate themselves culturally while they manage cost and risk. And there’s growth in self-insured plans and the overall societal thrust toward wellness.

Last summer, Stanford Medicine became the first academic medical center in the U.S. to designate a CWO, naming Dr. Tait Shanafelt, a hematologist who spearheaded an anti-burnout initiative at the Mayo Clinic.

Creating incentives for wellness

Concerns about chronic disease and rising healthcare costs led the Cleveland Clinic to appoint the C-suite role a decade ago. The question was “could we change the culture and environment of the organization by figuring out incentives to help people stay well and then reward them for staying well?” explains CWO Dr. Michael Roizen. “And what would that do to absenteeism and productivity?”

To do that, the clinic asked employees to achieve six “normal” vital signs — blood pressure, fasting blood sugar, body mass index, LDL cholesterol, healthy urine, learn to manage stress and see a primary care physician once a year. Those who meet those targets or are on a clear path to achieving them get the insurance rates and benefits in effect in 2008, when the CWO program took off. Everybody else gets rates in line with the current economy.

Preventing burnout is a big part of Roizen’s role. He says stress levels for healthcare workers were five deviations above the mean in 1983 when the Perceived Stress Scale was developed. To address the problem, the clinic offers an online stress management program. Those who take it see their stress and burnout levels fall by about 75% and 44%, respectively, he says.

The clinic also designated two physicians to work solely on reducing EHR clicks for physicians and uses scribes to assist its primary care practices.

There have been environmental changes as well, such as removing sugary products from vending machines, eliminating fried foods and trans fats in its eateries and making on-campus fitness centers free to employees.

The effort has paid off. In 2008, about 6% of clinic employees had six normal vital signs. Today, 63.8% of employees are in chronic care management programs and 40% have the six normal numbers. “That’s saved us, compared with competitors, $254 million for 101,000 employees in the past three years,” Roizen tells Healthcare Dive.

In addition, absentee rates have dropped from 1.07% to 0.70%. That change alone, if all the clinic did was replace the nurses, saves about $7 million a year, he adds.

It’s a win for employees, too, Roizen notes. The lower insurance rates translate to about $200,000 more in retirement funds, and employees live about eight years younger, meaning their risk of getting a chronic disease is that of someone younger.

A holistic approach

Dr. Edward Ellison, executive medical director and chairman of Southern California Permanente Medical Group, hired a CWO six years ago after physicians ranked the organization “very low” on wellness support in an internal survey. The response stood in contrast to that of managers and other staff.

The survey was trigger of sorts, Ellison says. “I had been a practicing physician and I knew the stresses. I knew the challenges of the electronic health record and how it had made many positive gains for systems of care and caring for patients, but created an added burden for physicians.” The survey was a “data point for me and what really prompted me to appoint a chief physician wellness officer,” he adds.

To increase physician satisfaction, the group now offers flexible and alternate work schedules, reduced hours, mental health resources and peer-to-peer support. Specified teams help physicians prioritize administrative tasks so that others can handle the clerical work. There is also a physician concierge to help with non-work life planning, social events aimed at reducing the isolation physicians can feel in their job. Doctors are taught to practice personal preventive care and provided access to workout equipment.

“You have to take a very holistic approach,” Ellison tells Healthcare Dive. “It starts with culture, but it’s also about the practical, tactical time in your day. It’s about reducing the hassle factor and some of the bureaucracy of systems, and it’s about personal care and resilience and connecting people so that they don’t feel isolated.”

SCPMG has repeated the survey that showed physicians did not feel the organization supported their wellness. The response today: double-digit improvements on culture and wellness, Ellison says.

An evolving role

So what qualities does a CWO need? Healthcare organizations are still figuring that out, says Komnick. Some are tacking physician and employee wellness onto medical director, chief human resource officer or chief experience officer roles. For those focused on physician wellness, it helps to have someone with a medical degree or research credentials. Other assets include the ability to lay out a vision for long-term wellness and supportive programs and exceptional collaborative and communication skills to get people on board with new ways of working in organizations that are traditionally resistant to change, she says.

The challenges for CWOs are huge and call for a wide continuum of solutions. “It’s not one size fits all, and we have to do this in the face of enormous change in healthcare, a lot of ongoing changes in reimbursement strategies and systems of care,” says Ellison, noting CWOs have to navigate all of that while focusing on wellness and resilience.

Meanwhile, the problem of burnout is only getting worse. Ellison sees a parallel in airline passengers being told to don their own oxygen mask before helping others. “We need to make sure that our physicians are as healthy as they can be because they are then going to be able to be their for their patients and support them,” he says. “It is in line with taking care of our patients.”

 

 

Making The Business Case For Investing In Community Health

http://healthaffairs.org/blog/2016/06/02/making-the-business-case-for-investing-in-community-health/

Blog_Tuscon_Arizona

In recent years, many businesses have put a premium on improving employee health—often through investments in workplace wellness programs, onsite clinics, or the availability of fruit and vegetables on the premises.

Ostensibly, these programs are intended to generate a return on investment (ROI), with the thought that healthier employees are more productive employees, less likely to miss work, and more prepared to fulfill their potential. To date, though, research from the field has been mixed on whether workplace wellness programs and clinics deliver the ROI they promise.

What my ‘summer vacation’ taught me about US healthcare

http://www.hospitalimpact.org/index.php/2015/06/11/what_my_summer_vacation_taught_me_about?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal&mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRojs6nNZKXonjHpfsXx7uUrWKeg38431UFwdcjKPmjr1YUCSst0aPyQAgobGp5I5FEKQ7TYUbFmt6UIXQ%3D%3D