The thought leaders in our community are good about sharing their thoughts on the issues of today. Here are the top read and shared guest posts of December that we think deserve sharing again.
By David Burda – Sometimes little studies say a lot about how the healthcare system works in the U.S. and why we need a customer revolution in healthcare. A great example is a recent two-page research letter in JAMA Internal Medicine.
The thought leaders in our community are good about sharing their thoughts on the issues of today. Here are the top read and shared guest posts of September that we think deserve sharing again.
By David Burda – Every profession, industry and field of interest has its own language — a dictionary filled with words and phrases that only the people working in that profession, industry or field know the meaning of instantly.
Our podcast library is growing! Subscribe on your favorite platform. This week we have new episodes of GTMRx’s Voices of Change, Cambia Health Solutions’ HealthChangers, Trusted Health’s The Handoff, Damo Consulting’s The Big Unlock, Medicomp’s Tell Me Where IT Hurts, 4sight Roundup, Healthmark Industries’ Ask the Educator, Roetzel’s HealthLaw HotSpot and Healthcare Rap.
The thought leaders in our community are good about sharing their thoughts on the issues of today. Here are the top read and shared guest posts of January that we think deserve sharing again.
Our podcast library is growing! Subscribe on your favorite platform. This week we have new episodes of 4sight Roundup, Healthcare Rap, and Conversations on Health Care.
By David Burda – Everyone from healthcare incumbents to entrepreneurs to vertical integrators to new market entrants is trying to reinvent primary care. The reason is simple. In a risk-based payment world, you can make a lot of money by keeping healthy people healthy and people with chronic illness as healthy as possible.
By David Burda – Consumers may struggle with health literacy, but they know a lousy provider when they experience one, and many are not afraid to let other consumers know about it. That’s the scary takeaway for provider executives who are dismissive of consumer ratings from a new study in JAMA Network Open that links online provider reviews to county-level mortality rates.