By MATTHEW HOLT & CLAUDE

You’ll recall that a few weeks back I gave Claude some prompts and my entire corpus of work on THCB and asked it to write a piece. It was about 70% my ideas and 50% my writing tone. I’m back trying it again. This time I gave it a lot of prompts from some Linkedin pieces and comments I wrote and then I spent about 20 minutes editing it. This one is about 85% my idea and maybe 70% my tone? I have rewritten something in every paragraph. But it’s a hell of a lot faster than me writing from scratch. So I am going to keep experimenting like this for a while.

This started as a LinkedIn post about Merril Goozner’s plan to cut health care costs. He pointed out that the Center for American Progress’s new 10-point health reform plan is just more incrementalism and worse too boring for anyone to pay attention. Goozner’s own proposal, capping out-of-pocket expenses, isn’t much better. We’ve spent nearly a century proving that incremental reform in American health care doesn’t work — we still have tens of millions uninsured, patients going bankrupt, and outcomes that trail most of the developed world. And of course it enables profiteers to massively extract wealth from the system. In other words, from us.
My alternative: go to the barricades and blow the whole thing up. We need revolution because modest evolution cannot work.
My proposal, which you should go and read is to give everyone a voucher for primary care, but make it Concierge care for all.
The post got some pushback, and some of the objections reveal something important. My idea isn’t too complicated, but so many of us are so imbued in our broken system that we can’t see beyond it. And to be fair, it’s only after 35 years looking at it, that I’ve got the “burn it all down” religion.
My Basic Idea
My proposal is Concierge Care for All. Every American gets a voucher worth somewhere between $2,000 and $3,000 a year, which they have to spend with a primary care physician (or primary care organization) of their choice. Each PCP or equivalent takes on a panel of around 600 patients — roughly 1/3 to 1/4 what a typical fee-for-service PCP practice manages today, and the same as most current direct primary care practices.
That’s $1.2 to $1.8 million in annual revenue per physician; enough to pay the doctor $500,000 to $600,000 a year and still leave $600,000 to $1.3 million for clinical staff, technology, and overhead. This is basically the MDVIP model. It works. People who use it love it. And the latest studies show that it saves a lot (31%) on hospital emergency room use and inpatient costs. That alone saves a significant fraction of what this transition would cost.
The bulk of what a PCP does in this model is managing chronic illness — diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, COPD. These are the conditions that drive the majority of health care spending but which our current system sucks at managing. A well-resourced primary care practice, freed from the hamster wheel of volume-based billing, can do this proactively and can deploy the technology to do it at scale. Remote patient monitoring, AI-assisted care management, continuous data from wearables and home devices — the tools that many digital health companies have shown working well — all of that gets directly integrated into primary care where it belongs. The PCP organization is the purchaser of those technology services. This is basically the logic behind CMS’s new ACCESS program, except that ACCESS tries to bolt these capabilities onto the system from the outside. In this model they’re baked into primary care practice because the PCP wants to manage their patients and has the professional ethics and responsibility to do so.
I’d include a lot of mental health and dental care in the definition of primary care, as well as minor urgent care. Plenty of primary care groups in the US and elsewhere do that now, even though we’ve historically pretended that the head isn’t connected to the body and the teeth are outside it.
What isn’t there is equally important. No co-pays, no coinsurance, no deductibles, no claims. No staff managing all that bureaucratic crap. Your PCP manages your care, knows you, and when you need a specialist or a scan or a surgery, they refer you.
What About Specialty Care?
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