
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Reducing Healthcare Waste: Aligning Incentives and Empowering Primary Care Physicians
To read the full article and show notes with links mentioned as well as a full transcript, click here.
In Episode 413 of 'Relentless Health Value,' Stacey Richter interviews Dr. Will Schrank on the intersection of healthcare waste, value-based care, and the rising influence of primary care physicians (PCPs). Dr. Schrank's extensive background includes roles at CMMI, CVS Health, UPMC, and Humana, and he is currently a venture partner at Andreessen Horowitz. The discussion delves into a study estimating nearly a trillion dollars of annual waste in U.S. healthcare, categorized into administrative failures (fraud, complexity, pricing) and clinical failures (care coordination, delivery, low-value care). Solutions like aligning financial incentives with higher quality care and primary care-driven models are explored. The episode also highlights challenges in shifting away from fee-for-service models, the potential evolving power of banded PCP groups, and the imperative for health systems to adopt value-based approaches.
Love the show? Please consider signing up for our weekly newsletter. We'll send you an article covering the latest episode with show notes, mentioned links and a transcribed intro. Join the RHV Tribe.
05:56 Can we cut healthcare waste while improving patient care?
06:35 What does “healthcare waste” consist of?
06:48 What are the six categories of “healthcare waste”?
09:25 EP363 with David Scheinker, PhD.
09:39 How much money does Dr. Shrank estimate is wasted each year in healthcare?
12:11 Where is that healthcare waste going, and why does it happen?
19:09 Uncaring by Robert Pearl, MD.
20:20 “We’ve built a backbone of extraordinary waste on a fee-for-service chassis.”
21:18 EP409 with Larry Bauer, MSW, MEd.
23:26 EP359 with Dan O’Neill.
25:04 Dr. Shrank’s warning to providers out there.
29:04 Summer Shorts 2 with Scott Conard, MD.
30:43 Why there might be a generational shift among younger providers looking to work with different models.
By Stacey Richter4.9
231231 ratings
Reducing Healthcare Waste: Aligning Incentives and Empowering Primary Care Physicians
To read the full article and show notes with links mentioned as well as a full transcript, click here.
In Episode 413 of 'Relentless Health Value,' Stacey Richter interviews Dr. Will Schrank on the intersection of healthcare waste, value-based care, and the rising influence of primary care physicians (PCPs). Dr. Schrank's extensive background includes roles at CMMI, CVS Health, UPMC, and Humana, and he is currently a venture partner at Andreessen Horowitz. The discussion delves into a study estimating nearly a trillion dollars of annual waste in U.S. healthcare, categorized into administrative failures (fraud, complexity, pricing) and clinical failures (care coordination, delivery, low-value care). Solutions like aligning financial incentives with higher quality care and primary care-driven models are explored. The episode also highlights challenges in shifting away from fee-for-service models, the potential evolving power of banded PCP groups, and the imperative for health systems to adopt value-based approaches.
Love the show? Please consider signing up for our weekly newsletter. We'll send you an article covering the latest episode with show notes, mentioned links and a transcribed intro. Join the RHV Tribe.
05:56 Can we cut healthcare waste while improving patient care?
06:35 What does “healthcare waste” consist of?
06:48 What are the six categories of “healthcare waste”?
09:25 EP363 with David Scheinker, PhD.
09:39 How much money does Dr. Shrank estimate is wasted each year in healthcare?
12:11 Where is that healthcare waste going, and why does it happen?
19:09 Uncaring by Robert Pearl, MD.
20:20 “We’ve built a backbone of extraordinary waste on a fee-for-service chassis.”
21:18 EP409 with Larry Bauer, MSW, MEd.
23:26 EP359 with Dan O’Neill.
25:04 Dr. Shrank’s warning to providers out there.
29:04 Summer Shorts 2 with Scott Conard, MD.
30:43 Why there might be a generational shift among younger providers looking to work with different models.

32,111 Listeners

925 Listeners

1,896 Listeners

2,442 Listeners

499 Listeners

1,447 Listeners

9,155 Listeners

1,082 Listeners

190 Listeners

6,072 Listeners

395 Listeners

1,282 Listeners

5,472 Listeners

16,038 Listeners

156 Listeners