Sunday, July 12, 2026

Medicine Saved Her. Who Will Save Physicians?

 


“AI has enormous potential in healthcare, but it cannot replace physician judgment. Patients deserve care decisions that are informed by the latest medical evidence and guided by a physician who understands their individual needs.”Dr. John Whyte, CEO of the American Medical Association


The Mother Who Woke From a Coma. The Baby She Thought She Lost. The Healthcare Lesson We Cannot Ignore.

For two days, Casey Gould lived in a reality no mother should ever have to experience.

She had just given birth to her son.

Instead of celebrating those first precious moments of motherhood, she was fighting for her life.

After childbirth, Casey developed a rare and life-threatening heart condition known as peripartum cardiomyopathy. Her heart stopped. Emergency teams rushed to save her. Her family stood beside her as she remained unconscious in a medically induced coma.

While Casey was asleep, her husband cared for their newborn son.

But when Casey finally opened her eyes, she did not know the truth.

She believed the worst had happened.

She thought her baby was gone.

Then came the moment that changed everything.

Her husband placed their newborn son in her arms.

The child she thought she had lost was alive.

In that moment, healthcare became more than medicine.

It became a bridge back to life.

A bridge back to family.

A bridge back to the future she almost lost.

This is why healthcare matters.

Not because of the procedures.

Not because of the technology.

Not because of the billing codes, hospital metrics, or operational reports.

Healthcare matters because behind every diagnosis is a person hoping for another tomorrow.

A mother holding her child.

A spouse coming home.

A patient getting another chance.

A family receiving more time together.

But this story also reveals a deeper contradiction in modern healthcare.

Medicine is capable of performing miracles for patients while creating impossible conditions for the physicians delivering those miracles.

That is the healthcare conversation we need to have.


The Healthcare Paradox: We Save Lives While Losing the People Who Save Them

Every physician remembers why they entered medicine.

They wanted to help people.

They wanted to solve problems.

They wanted to be present during the most important moments of someone’s life.

Few physicians dreamed about:

  • Reviewing denied claims after clinic hours
  • Fighting with outdated billing systems
  • Managing administrative complexity
  • Tracking missing payments
  • Spending evenings trying to understand revenue reports

Yet this has become a normal reality for many independent practices.

The same physicians who spend years mastering complex medicine are often forced to become accidental experts in healthcare administration.

They know how to diagnose a patient.

But they are rarely trained to diagnose the operational problems inside their own practice.

And that creates a dangerous disconnect.

Because a physician practice is not just a business.

It is the infrastructure that allows care to happen.


The Forgotten Patient in Healthcare: The Medical Practice

Healthcare leaders often talk about improving patient outcomes.

That is essential.

But there is another entity that requires attention:

The physician practice itself.

When a practice struggles, everyone feels the impact.

Physicians feel the pressure.

Staff experience burnout.

Patients face access challenges.

Communities lose trusted healthcare resources.

A financially unstable clinic cannot continue delivering exceptional care forever.

This is why conversations about medical billing, revenue cycle management, and administrative efficiency are not merely financial discussions.

They are patient care discussions.


The Hidden Connection Between Billing and Better Medicine

Many people think medical billing is just paperwork.

It is not.

Billing represents the operational foundation that supports healthcare delivery.

Every unpaid claim affects something:

A delayed payment can mean:

  • A nurse position remains unfilled
  • A clinic delays expansion
  • A physician reduces available appointments
  • A community loses access to care

Behind every financial metric is a human consequence.

The healthcare industry often separates clinical care from operations.

But they are connected.

A physician who spends fewer hours fighting administrative problems has more time for:

  • Listening to patients
  • Explaining diagnoses
  • Supporting families
  • Practicing medicine

The goal is not to make physicians better administrators.

The goal is to remove unnecessary administrative barriers so physicians can return to being physicians.


The Question Healthcare Leaders Should Ask

The healthcare industry has invested billions into creating faster diagnostics, smarter technology, and more advanced treatments.

But we often overlook a fundamental question:

What good is the most advanced medicine if the people delivering it are exhausted, distracted, and disconnected from the work they love?

Healthcare innovation should not only focus on what happens inside the exam room.

It must also improve everything surrounding the exam room.

The future of healthcare depends on systems that protect physician attention.

Because attention is one of the most valuable resources in medicine.


The Real Innovation Healthcare Needs: Giving Physicians Back Control

The next era of healthcare should not be defined only by new tools.

It should be defined by better alignment between technology and human needs.

For physician owners, that means creating systems that provide:

Visibility
Physicians should understand what is happening financially inside their practice.

Transparency
Revenue cycle performance should not feel like a black box.

Automation
Technology should eliminate repetitive administrative work.

Ownership
Physicians should maintain control over the information and decisions shaping their practice.

The goal is not replacing people.

The goal is removing unnecessary friction.


Why Medical Billing Has Become a Physician Leadership Issue

Historically, many physicians viewed billing as something separate from clinical leadership.

That mindset needs to change.

A modern physician leader must understand both:

The science of medicine.

And the system that allows medicine to survive.

This does not mean physicians should spend their evenings learning every billing rule.

It means they need better tools, better visibility, and better partners.

The physician of the future will not be the doctor who knows everything.

The physician of the future will be the leader who knows what needs to be improved — and has the ability to improve it.


Three Expert Perspectives: What Healthcare Leaders Can Learn

1. Atul Gawande: Complexity Requires Better Systems

Dr. Gawande’s work has repeatedly demonstrated that healthcare failures often occur not because people do not care, but because systems become too complicated.

The lesson for physician practices:

Better outcomes require better-designed workflows.

Healthcare cannot rely only on individual heroics.

It needs systems that allow good people to consistently deliver excellent care.

 

2. Eric Topol: Technology Should Restore Human Connection

Dr. Topol has emphasized that technology should enhance medicine rather than remove the human relationship.

The lesson:

The best healthcare technology gives physicians more time to think, listen, and connect.

Automation should create more humanity, not less.

 

3. Donald Berwick: Systems Must Serve Patients and Professionals

Dr. Berwick’s healthcare improvement philosophy focuses on designing systems around people.

The lesson:

A healthcare system that ignores physician experience will eventually affect patient experience.


Key Statistics: The Administrative Burden Behind Physician Burnout

The numbers reveal a difficult reality.

Administrative workload remains a major driver of physician frustration

Physicians continue to report that documentation, paperwork, and administrative responsibilities consume significant time that could otherwise be spent with patients.

Independent practices face increasing pressure

Small and medium-sized clinics often operate with fewer resources while managing:

  • Rising operational costs
  • Staffing shortages
  • Insurance complexity
  • Compliance requirements
  • Technology decisions

Revenue leakage is a silent threat

Many practices lose revenue not because of poor care, but because of:

  • Missed documentation opportunities
  • Claim errors
  • Delayed follow-up
  • Inefficient workflows

The opportunity is clear:

Better systems create stronger practices.


Myth Busters: What Many Healthcare Leaders Get Wrong

Myth #1: “Physicians should not worry about business.”

Reality:

A financially healthy practice creates better healthcare access.

Business knowledge is not a distraction from medicine.

It protects medicine.

 

Myth #2: “More staff will solve administrative problems.”

Reality:

Adding people to inefficient processes often increases complexity.

The answer is not always more labor.

Sometimes it is better design.

 

Myth #3: “Technology automatically creates efficiency.”

Reality:

Badly designed technology creates more work.

The right technology reduces friction and gives people better information.

 

Myth #4: “Billing is separate from patient care.”

Reality:

Every operational decision affects patient access, physician availability, and healthcare quality.


Practical Steps Physician Owners Can Take Today

Step 1: Measure Before You Change

Start by understanding:

  • Claim denial rates
  • Payment timelines
  • Revenue cycle bottlenecks
  • Administrative workload

Data creates clarity.

 

Step 2: Find Your Biggest Operational Friction Point

Ask your team:

“What task takes the most time but creates the least value?”

That is often where improvement begins.

 

Step 3: Create Billing Transparency

Physician leaders should have access to:

  • Revenue trends
  • Claim performance
  • Payment status
  • Operational insights

Visibility creates better decisions.

 

Step 4: Protect Your Team’s Time

Your staff should spend more time helping patients and less time correcting preventable administrative problems.

 

Step 5: Evaluate Technology by Outcomes

Do not ask:

“What features does this platform have?”

Ask:

“What problem does this solve?”


Legal and Compliance Considerations

Any healthcare technology or billing solution must prioritize:

  • HIPAA compliance
  • Patient data security
  • Accurate documentation
  • Appropriate coding practices
  • Transparent business relationships

Automation should support compliance, not bypass it.

Physician leaders should evaluate vendors carefully and ensure technology aligns with ethical and regulatory responsibilities.


Ethical Considerations

Healthcare innovation must maintain a simple principle:

Patients should benefit first.

Technology should not create unnecessary complexity.

Revenue improvement should never compromise:

  • Clinical judgment
  • Patient trust
  • Data privacy
  • Quality of care

The best healthcare systems improve both financial sustainability and human outcomes.


Future Outlook: The Physician-Owned Practice Renaissance

The next decade may represent a turning point.

Independent physicians are not disappearing.

They are evolving.

The future practice will likely be:

  • More data-driven
  • More automated
  • More transparent
  • More physician-controlled

The question is not whether technology will change medicine.

It already has.

The question is:

Will technology give physicians back control, or create another layer of complexity?

The answer depends on the choices healthcare leaders make today.


Frequently Asked Questions

Why should physicians care about medical billing?

Because billing performance affects practice sustainability, staffing, patient access, and physician workload.

 

Does automation replace billing staff?

The goal of automation is not replacing people.

The goal is allowing teams to focus on higher-value work.

 

Can technology reduce physician burnout?

Technology alone cannot solve burnout, but reducing unnecessary administrative burden can improve physician experience.

 

What should physicians look for in healthcare technology?

Look for transparency, simplicity, measurable outcomes, security, and alignment with clinical goals.


Final Thoughts: Healthcare’s Next Breakthrough May Not Be a New Drug or Device

It may be a system that gives physicians back the ability to focus on why they entered medicine.

The mother who woke from a coma and held her baby again reminds us what healthcare is truly about.

Not transactions.

Not paperwork.

Not processes.

People.

The future of healthcare depends on protecting the people who protect us.

First, we must redesign healthcare around human moments.

Second, we must remove the unnecessary burdens preventing physicians from creating those moments.

Third, we must build systems that allow medicine to remain both compassionate and sustainable.


Get Involved: Help Shape the Future of Physician-Led Healthcare

Healthcare cannot improve through observation alone.

It requires conversation.

It requires physicians, innovators, and leaders willing to question outdated assumptions.

Here is the question I want to ask:

What is the one administrative burden you would remove tomorrow if you could give physicians back more time for patient care?

Share your thoughts in the comments.

Your experience may help another physician leader facing the same challenge.

If this perspective resonates, consider sharing this article with another physician, clinic owner, or healthcare leader who believes medicine should become more human, not more complicated.

Join the conversation. Share your voice. Help shape the future of healthcare.


References

A review of healthcare administrative burden and physician workflow challenges.
National Academy of Medicine Action Collaborative on Clinician Well-Being and Resilience

Research and insights on digital medicine and technology’s role in transforming healthcare delivery.
Scripps Research Digital Medicine Program

Healthcare quality improvement resources focused on better system design and patient outcomes.
Institute for Healthcare Improvement


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician, medical consultant, and healthcare entrepreneur with expertise spanning medical technology, healthcare management, and medical billing innovation. His work focuses on helping physicians and healthcare organizations navigate operational challenges while building more efficient, sustainable, and patient-centered practices.

As the founder of OnnX, an AI-powered medical billing SaaS platform designed to reduce administrative complexity and help small and medium-sized clinics gain greater control over revenue cycle operations, Dr. Cham focuses on practical solutions at the intersection of medicine, technology, and healthcare transformation.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Professional Note

This article is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It provides general perspectives on healthcare operations, technology, and medical practice management and should not be interpreted as legal, medical, financial, or compliance advice. Physicians and healthcare organizations should consult qualified professionals for guidance specific to their individual circumstances.


Continue the Conversation

Explore practical strategies, healthcare insights, and behind-the-scenes perspectives focused on improving medicine, practice operations, and innovation.

Knowledge creates progress. Start building your next level of healthcare insight today.

Check my LinkedIn Featured section for a free resource — no signup required.

If this perspective resonates, consider ♻️ reposting to help other physicians and clinic owners rethink how healthcare operations impact the future of medicine.



#HealthcareLeadership #PhysicianEntrepreneurs #MedicalBilling #RevenueCycleManagement #HealthcareInnovation #DigitalHealth #PhysicianBurnout #HealthcareTechnology #IndependentPractice #HealthTech #MedicalPracticeManagement #FutureOfHealthcare

 

Saturday, July 11, 2026

The Most Expensive Disease in Healthcare Doesn't Have an ICD-10 Code



"A life full of accomplishments but lacking in relationships is not a happy life." Dr. Vivek Murthy, former U.S. Surgeon General


A Four-Year-Old Just Exposed a Healthcare Blind Spot

A few days ago, I watched a story that had nothing to do with medicine.

Or so I thought.

A four-year-old boy named Roman lived in North Carolina. His parents had separated. His father moved away. His grandparents lived out of state.

Roman was lonely.

He did not have a treatment plan.

He did not have a therapist.

He did not have a community outreach program.

He simply stood outside and waved at people.

Every day.

One neighbor waved back.

Then another.

Then another.

Eventually neighbors attended his soccer games, swimming lessons, preschool events, and birthday parties.

A child who needed a village ended up creating one.

And that's when I realized something uncomfortable.

Healthcare spends trillions of dollars treating diseases that are often worsened by loneliness, isolation, and disconnection.

Yet we spend almost no time addressing those root causes.

Roman accidentally built what healthcare has spent decades trying to engineer:

Human connection.

And that should make every physician, healthcare executive, and clinic owner stop and think.


The View Nobody Wants to Talk About

Everyone says healthcare has a staffing problem.

Everyone says healthcare has a reimbursement problem.

Everyone says healthcare has a technology problem.

I disagree.

Healthcare's biggest crisis may actually be a relationship problem.

We have more technology than ever.

More patient portals.

More electronic health records.

More telemedicine.

More artificial intelligence.

More automation.

More data.

Yet patients report feeling less heard.

Physicians report unprecedented burnout.

Communities report growing loneliness.

Something is not adding up.

Technology has improved access to information.

It has not necessarily improved connection.

And healthcare is increasingly paying the price.


Why Physicians Should Care

Most physicians already know the pattern.

The patient whose diabetes worsens after losing a spouse.

The elderly patient who schedules frequent visits because the clinic is the only place where someone listens.

The caregiver quietly drowning in exhaustion.

The retiree whose blood pressure rises after social connections disappear.

The patient who appears medically stable but emotionally isolated.

These stories happen every day.

The challenge is that medicine often treats what can be measured.

Connection is harder to measure.

Which means it often gets ignored.


The Statistics Are Becoming Impossible to Ignore

Recent research continues to strengthen the link between social connection and health outcomes.

Research has associated loneliness and social isolation with:

  • Increased cardiovascular risk
  • Higher rates of depression
  • Greater dementia risk
  • Increased hospitalization
  • Higher healthcare utilization
  • Increased mortality

The former U.S. Surgeon General compared the health effects of chronic loneliness to smoking multiple cigarettes daily.

Think about that.

Healthcare aggressively screens for smoking.

Yet many organizations never screen for loneliness.


Expert Opinion Round-Up: What Leading Voices Are Saying

Dr. Vivek Murthy

Former U.S. Surgeon General

Key Insight

Social connection is a public health priority.

Dr. Murthy has repeatedly argued that loneliness is not simply a personal issue.

It is a population health issue.

What Physicians Can Learn

Start treating social connection as a clinical variable.

Not just a lifestyle issue.


Dr. Robert Waldinger

Director, Harvard Study of Adult Development

Key Insight

The strongest predictor of long-term health and happiness is not wealth.

It is not career success.

It is not fame.

It is relationships.

What Physicians Can Learn

Patient outcomes are influenced by more than prescriptions.

Relationships matter.


Dr. Julianne Holt-Lunstad

Leading Researcher in Social Connection

Key Insight

Social isolation creates measurable health risks.

What Physicians Can Learn

Connection should become part of preventive medicine.


The Healthcare Industry's Dangerous Assumption

Healthcare often assumes that if care is available, outcomes will improve.

Reality is more complicated.

Care can be available.

Patients can still struggle.

The missing ingredient is often engagement.

And engagement is built on trust.

Trust is built on relationships.

Relationships require connection.

Roman's story reminds us that people rarely thrive alone.


What This Means for Independent Clinics

Independent practices face pressures from every direction.

Declining reimbursement.

Administrative burden.

Rising staffing costs.

Regulatory complexity.

Corporate consolidation.

Artificial intelligence disruption.

The natural response is to focus on operational efficiency.

That matters.

But there is another competitive advantage emerging.

Relationship capital.

Large healthcare systems can scale infrastructure.

Independent physicians often scale trust.

And trust remains one of the most valuable assets in healthcare.


A Lesson I Learned Building a Healthcare Technology Company

As founder of OnnX, an AI-powered medical billing platform, I spend a lot of time thinking about efficiency.

Automation.

Workflow optimization.

Revenue cycle improvement.

Data quality.

Artificial intelligence.

But one lesson keeps resurfacing.

Technology works best when it removes friction between people.

Not when it replaces people.

Healthcare technology should help physicians spend more time practicing medicine.

Not less.

The goal is not automation for automation's sake.

The goal is restoring human capacity.

Every hour saved from administrative work can potentially become an hour returned to patient care.

That is the opportunity.


Practical Strategies for Physicians and Clinic Owners

Step 1: Measure What You Usually Ignore

Ask patients:

  • Do you feel socially connected?
  • Do you have someone to call during a crisis?
  • Do you participate in community activities?

Simple questions reveal important insights.

 

Step 2: Strengthen Follow-Up

A brief follow-up call often creates more loyalty than expensive marketing campaigns.

Patients remember who checked on them.

 

Step 3: Build Community Around Chronic Disease

Support groups.

Educational workshops.

Peer mentoring.

Group visits.

Community creates accountability.

 

Step 4: Reduce Administrative Friction

Every unnecessary form.

Every duplicate question.

Every billing surprise.

Every delay.

Creates friction.

Friction damages trust.

 

Step 5: Protect Physician Time

The physician's attention is one of the most valuable resources in healthcare.

Guard it carefully.


Common Pitfalls

Mistaking Technology for Connection

Technology is a tool.

Connection is the outcome.

The two are not the same.

Measuring Everything Except Relationships

Many organizations track productivity.

Few track trust.

Assuming Patients Want More Apps

Many patients simply want clarity, transparency, and responsiveness.

Ignoring Physician Isolation

Burnout is not only a workload issue.

It is often a connection issue.


Myth Busters

Myth: More Healthcare Spending Automatically Produces Better Outcomes

Reality:

Many social and behavioral factors influence outcomes.

 

Myth: Loneliness Only Affects Older Adults

Reality:

Loneliness affects all age groups.

 

Myth: Artificial Intelligence Will Solve Healthcare Burnout

Reality:

AI can reduce administrative burden.

But it cannot replace meaningful human relationships.


Recent News and Why It Matters

This week's healthcare discussions continue to focus on:

  • Physician burnout
  • Workforce shortages
  • Mental health
  • Population health
  • Artificial intelligence adoption
  • Community-based care

Although these topics appear separate, they share a common thread:

Human connection.

The organizations that recognize this trend early may gain a significant advantage.


Legal Considerations

Healthcare organizations implementing social determinant screening should ensure compliance with:

  • HIPAA requirements
  • Documentation standards
  • State privacy regulations
  • Referral management policies

Connection should never compromise patient privacy.


Ethical Considerations

Healthcare leaders should ask:

How much patient data is necessary?

How should social information be used?

How do we balance efficiency with humanity?

These questions will become increasingly important as AI adoption accelerates.


Tools, Metrics, and Resources

Consider tracking:

·       Patient Retention

·       No-Show Rates

·       Care Plan Adherence

·       Patient Satisfaction

·       Referral Growth

·       Physician Burnout Metrics

What gets measured gets managed.


Future Outlook

The next decade of healthcare may not be defined by who has the most advanced technology.

It may be defined by who uses technology to create the strongest relationships.

The winning healthcare organizations will likely combine:

  • Human connection
  • Operational excellence
  • Artificial intelligence
  • Community engagement
  • Financial sustainability

Not one of these elements.

All of them together.


Final Thoughts

A lonely child waved at strangers.

A neighborhood became a community.

A community became a support system.

And a support system improved lives.

Healthcare often searches for billion-dollar solutions.

Roman's story reminds us that some of the most powerful interventions begin with something much simpler.

Connection.

Maybe the most expensive disease in healthcare isn't diabetes.

Maybe it isn't heart disease.

Maybe it isn't cancer.

Maybe it is disconnection.

And maybe the future of healthcare depends on whether we are willing to treat it.


References

1. U.S. Surgeon General Advisory on Social Connection and Loneliness

Why it matters: Official U.S. public health guidance highlighting loneliness and social isolation as significant health risks and calling for action across healthcare and society.

U.S. Surgeon General – Social Connection Advisory

 

2. Harvard Study of Adult Development

Why it matters: One of the longest-running studies of human health and happiness. Its findings consistently show that the quality of relationships is among the strongest predictors of long-term health, well-being, and longevity.

Harvard Study of Adult Development Overview

 

3. Nature Communications (2026): Social Isolation, Loneliness, and Brain Health

Why it matters: Analysis of more than 383,000 UK Biobank participants found significant associations between loneliness, social isolation, and multiple neurological and psychiatric disorders, including dementia, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, depression, anxiety, stroke, and sleep disorders.

Nature Communications Study: Social Isolation and Neurological Disorders


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician, medical consultant, and healthcare technology entrepreneur with expertise in healthcare operations, medical billing, revenue cycle management, and healthcare innovation. His work focuses on helping healthcare professionals navigate complex operational and financial challenges while preserving the human side of medicine.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to continue the conversation.


Professional Note

This article is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It provides general perspectives on healthcare trends and should not be interpreted as medical, legal, compliance, or professional advice. Readers should seek guidance from qualified professionals regarding specific situations.


Continue Exploring

Explore additional perspectives on healthcare innovation, practice management, physician leadership, operational excellence, and the future of medicine.

Knowledge creates momentum. Curiosity drives improvement. Continuous learning shapes better healthcare.

P.S. A complimentary resource is available in the Featured section of my LinkedIn profile. No registration required.

If this article adds value, consider reposting it so other physicians and clinic owners can join the conversation.


#Healthcare #PhysicianLeadership #MedicalPractice #HealthcareInnovation #PopulationHealth #PatientExperience #PracticeManagement #MedicalBilling #RevenueCycleManagement #HealthTech #DigitalHealth #PhysicianBurnout #ClinicOwnership #ValueBasedCare #ArtificialIntelligence #HealthcareOperations #CommunityHealth #PatientEngagement #OnnX #FutureOfHealthcare

  

Friday, July 10, 2026

A 72-Year-Old Nurse Practitioner Went Back to Medical School. The Healthcare Workforce Crisis Is Not What We Think.

 


“The future depends on what we do in the present.”Mahatma Gandhi


A 72-year-old nurse practitioner walked into medical school.

Most people saw an inspiring story.

I saw a healthcare warning sign.

Because her decision raises an uncomfortable question:

Why does healthcare celebrate someone returning at 72, while so many talented clinicians feel forced to leave much earlier?

Dawn Zuidgeest-Craft spent four decades caring for patients as a nurse practitioner.

Forty years.

Thousands of patient conversations.

Countless diagnoses.

Decades of clinical judgment.

Then she decided she was not finished.

At 72 years old, she started medical school.

The obvious lesson is about perseverance.

But the deeper lesson is much bigger:

Healthcare does not only have a workforce shortage. Healthcare has a workforce preservation problem.

We keep asking:

“How do we train more clinicians?”

Maybe we should also ask:

“How do we stop losing the clinicians we already have?”


The Healthcare Workforce Conversation Is Missing Half the Story

Every healthcare conference has a familiar headline:

“We need more doctors.”

“We need more nurses.”

“We need more healthcare workers.”

The numbers are real.

Demand is increasing.

Patients are aging.

Chronic diseases are rising.

Healthcare complexity continues growing.

But there is a missing part of the conversation.

Healthcare has become very good at creating clinicians.

It has become much worse at protecting them.

Think about the contradiction.

A person spends:

  • Four years of college.
  • Medical school.
  • Residency.
  • Fellowship.
  • Years building expertise.

Then we place them into a system where they spend increasing amounts of time fighting:

  • Documentation requirements.
  • Prior authorizations.
  • Insurance complexity.
  • Claim denials.
  • Administrative workflows.

We spend decades training clinicians.

Then we make them spend their days doing tasks that do not require their expertise.

That is not only inefficient.

It is a workforce strategy failure.


Healthcare’s Biggest Asset Is Also Its Most Underused

Healthcare leaders often think about workforce as a numbers problem.

How many clinicians do we have?

How many do we need?

How many are retiring?

But workforce is not only about headcount.

It is about capability.

A physician with 25 years of experience is not equivalent to a physician on day one.

A nurse practitioner with four decades of patient care has developed something technology cannot replicate:

clinical pattern recognition.

They know:

When a patient says “I’m fine,” but something feels wrong.

When a family needs reassurance before they understand the treatment plan.

When a symptom requires another question.

When medicine is about more than medicine.

Experience is not outdated.

Experience is accumulated intelligence.


Healthcare Has an Experience Problem, Not Just an Age Problem

One of the biggest mistakes healthcare organizations make is confusing age with ability.

We often assume:

Younger means innovative.

Older means resistant.

But medicine itself disproves this.

Experienced clinicians have adapted through:

  • The transition from paper charts to electronic health records.
  • The explosion of medical imaging.
  • Genomic medicine.
  • Telemedicine.
  • New payment models.
  • Constant regulatory change.

They have already survived multiple healthcare revolutions.

The question should not be:

“Can experienced clinicians adapt?”

The better question is:

“Have we built systems worth adapting to?”


The Real Enemy of the Healthcare Workforce: Friction

Burnout is often described as an emotional problem.

But many physicians experience burnout because of operational friction.

Imagine buying a race car and forcing the driver to spend half the race fixing the engine.

That is modern healthcare.

Clinicians are trained to:

  • Diagnose.
  • Treat.
  • Communicate.
  • Make decisions.

But many spend hours:

  • Correcting billing mistakes.
  • Following up on unpaid claims.
  • Managing administrative requirements.
  • Completing repetitive documentation.

The problem is not that physicians do not want to work.

The problem is that healthcare often wastes the work physicians are uniquely qualified to do.


Three Healthcare Experts Explain the Bigger Picture

1. Dr. Atul Gawande: Better Systems Create Better Care

Surgeon and healthcare researcher Atul Gawande has consistently emphasized that healthcare improvement depends on improving systems.

The lesson:

Healthcare cannot solve workforce problems by asking individuals to simply work harder.

A broken system eventually exhausts even the most dedicated professionals.

 

2. Dr. Eric Topol: Technology Should Give Medicine Back Its Humanity

Physician-scientist Eric Topol has argued that artificial intelligence should enhance physicians rather than replace them.

The lesson:

The goal of technology is not fewer clinicians.

The goal is fewer unnecessary tasks.

The best technology disappears into the workflow and allows clinicians to focus on patients.

 

3. Dr. Danielle Ofri: Medicine Is a Human Relationship

Physician and author Danielle Ofri has highlighted the importance of communication and connection in medicine.

The lesson:

Patients do not remember healthcare as a series of transactions.

They remember moments.

A doctor who listened.

A nurse who cared.

A clinician who explained.

Human connection remains healthcare’s greatest differentiator.


The Hidden Connection Between Physician Burnout and Revenue Cycle Problems

Many clinic owners view billing as a financial issue.

But it is also a workforce issue.

Every denied claim creates administrative work.

Every payment delay creates stress.

Every inefficient workflow steals attention.

A physician’s time is one of the most valuable resources in healthcare.

Yet many practices do not measure how much physician capacity is lost to operational problems.

They measure revenue.

They measure expenses.

But they often do not measure:

How much clinical expertise are we wasting?


The New Healthcare Metric: Protected Clinical Time

Healthcare has measured productivity for years.

But perhaps we need a new metric:

Protected Clinical Time.

How many hours per week can clinicians spend doing what only they can do?

Not paperwork.

Not administrative cleanup.

Not chasing missing information.

Actual medicine.

This is where technology, better workflows, and physician-led innovation matter.

The goal is not replacing people.

The goal is protecting people.


Practical Advice for Physicians and Clinic Owners

1. Audit Where Your Experts Are Spending Their Time

Ask your team:

What tasks require clinical expertise?

What tasks simply require better systems?

Many practices discover highly trained professionals are performing low-value administrative work.

 

2. Identify Revenue Leakage

Revenue problems often hide inside workflow problems.

Look at:

  • Denial patterns.
  • Coding errors.
  • Delayed submissions.
  • Missing documentation.
  • Unresolved claims.

Small inefficiencies become large financial problems over time.

 

3. Automate Repetition, Not Relationships

The future of healthcare automation should focus on repetitive work.

Examples:

  • Claim monitoring.
  • Error detection.
  • Workflow alerts.
  • Administrative communication.

But the physician-patient relationship should remain human.


Myths Healthcare Leaders Need to Challenge

Myth: “The only solution is training more clinicians.”

Reality:

Training more clinicians while losing experienced ones is like filling a leaking bucket.

Retention matters.

 

Myth: “Older clinicians slow innovation.”

Reality:

Experience and innovation are not opposites.

Some of healthcare’s best improvements come from people who understand the problems deeply.

 

Myth: “More technology automatically creates better healthcare.”

Reality:

Technology without thoughtful implementation creates more complexity.

The best innovation removes friction.


Ethical Considerations: Innovation Must Protect Humanity

Healthcare transformation must ask:

Does this improve patient care?

Does this support clinicians?

Does this strengthen trust?

Efficiency alone is not enough.

A healthcare system that becomes faster but less compassionate has moved backward.


The Future of Medicine

The future physician will not practice alone.

They will work alongside:

  • Intelligent technology.
  • Better operational systems.
  • Data-driven tools.
  • Collaborative teams.

But the foundation remains unchanged:

Experience.

Judgment.

Human connection.

The story of a 72-year-old nurse practitioner returning to medical school is not simply about age.

It is about possibility.

It is about purpose.

It is about recognizing that healthcare’s greatest resource may not be waiting somewhere in the future.

It may already be here.


Final Thoughts

Healthcare does not have a shortage of people who care.

It has a shortage of systems that allow people who care to continue caring.

The future of medicine will not be built by replacing experience with innovation. It will be built by combining both.

The organizations that protect clinician time will become the organizations that protect patient care.

The biggest healthcare transformation may not be finding new talent. It may be learning how to value the talent we already have.


Get Involved: Help Shape the Future of Healthcare

A question for physicians, healthcare executives, and clinic owners:

Are we truly facing a healthcare workforce shortage, or are we facing a healthcare system that has not learned how to keep its best people?

I would love to hear your perspective.

What changes would help experienced clinicians stay engaged longer?

Share your thoughts in the comments.

If this perspective resonates, repost this article and help start a larger conversation about the future of healthcare.


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician, healthcare consultant, and founder of OnnX, an AI-powered medical billing SaaS platform focused on helping small and medium-sized clinics reduce administrative burden and improve revenue cycle performance.

Through experience in clinical medicine, healthcare operations, and medical technology innovation, Dr. Cham shares practical insights to help physicians navigate the changing healthcare landscape.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Disclaimer

This article is intended for educational purposes and provides general information about healthcare workforce trends, technology, and practice operations. It does not constitute medical, legal, financial, or professional advice. Readers should consult appropriate professionals for guidance specific to their circumstances.


Continue the Conversation

Explore practical strategies and behind-the-scenes perspectives on healthcare operations, innovation, and the future of medicine.

Knowledge drives progress.

Start learning. Challenge assumptions. Help shape the future of healthcare.


Free resources and practical healthcare insights are available in my LinkedIn Featured section — no signup required.

If this perspective resonates, consider reposting ♻️ to help physicians and clinic owners rethink how healthcare supports the people who deliver care.


References

1. Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) — The Complex Reality of the Physician Workforce Shortage
AAMC provides ongoing research on physician supply, demand projections, retirement trends, and the growing need to rethink how healthcare organizations recruit, retain, and support clinicians.
Association of American Medical Colleges Workforce Research

2. National Academy of Medicine — Action Collaborative on Clinician Well-Being and Resilience
This initiative examines the systemic causes of clinician burnout and emphasizes that improving healthcare environments, workflows, and organizational culture is essential to sustaining the healthcare workforce.
National Academy of Medicine Clinician Well-Being and Resilience

3. American Medical Association (AMA) — Physician Burnout and Administrative Burden Research
The AMA highlights how administrative complexity, inefficient workflows, and excessive paperwork contribute to physician burnout and calls for healthcare transformation that allows physicians to focus more on patient care.
American Medical Association Physician Burnout Resources


#HealthcareLeadership #PhysicianEntrepreneur #HealthcareInnovation #FutureOfMedicine #PhysicianBurnout #HealthcareWorkforce #MedicalPracticeManagement #HealthTech #DigitalHealth #RevenueCycleManagement #PrivatePractice #HealthcareTransformation #PhysicianLeadership #HealthcareFuture

 

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Katie Couric Lost 7 Hours of Memory. The Bigger Healthcare Crisis Is What Medicine Has Forgotten.

 


“If we do not help shape the future of medicine, others will shape it for us.”John Whyte, MD, MPH, CEO, American Medical Association


Katie Couric built a career asking people questions.

For decades, she interviewed world leaders, scientists, physicians, and patients.

She helped millions of people understand complicated health issues.

She encouraged people to take control of their health.

She even underwent a televised colonoscopy to encourage colorectal cancer screening.

Then one day, the person asking the questions became the patient who needed answers.

Katie Couric recently shared a frightening experience:

She suddenly lost her ability to retain new memories.

For several hours, she could not remember what had happened.

She repeatedly asked the same questions.

She could not recall important personal details.

Her family watched as someone they knew so well suddenly became confused and vulnerable.

The medical team did exactly what they should have done.

They considered the most dangerous possibilities first.

Could this be a stroke?

Could this be a neurological emergency?

Could this be something life-threatening?

A stroke protocol was initiated.

Imaging was performed.

The evaluation continued.

Fortunately, the diagnosis was transient global amnesia (TGA) — a rare condition involving temporary memory disruption.

But the most important lesson from this story is not simply about a neurological diagnosis.

It is about something much bigger.

Something healthcare leaders, physicians, and innovators should seriously consider.

Healthcare is becoming better at collecting information, but are we becoming worse at understanding people?


The Healthcare Industry Has More Data Than Ever. So Why Are Physicians More Overwhelmed Than Ever?

Medicine has entered an unprecedented era.

We have:

Artificial intelligence.

Predictive analytics.

Precision medicine.

Genomic testing.

Advanced imaging.

Remote monitoring.

Digital health platforms.

The amount of medical information available today would have seemed impossible decades ago.

Yet many physicians feel increasingly disconnected from the very reason they entered medicine.

Caring for patients.

Why?

Because healthcare has created a dangerous assumption:

More data automatically creates better care.

It does not.

Data without context creates noise.

Technology without thoughtful implementation creates friction.

Automation without understanding creates more complexity.

The future of healthcare will not belong to organizations that collect the most information.

It will belong to organizations that transform information into meaningful decisions.


The Contrarian Lesson From Katie Couric’s Story

The obvious lesson is:

“Recognize neurological emergencies.”

That is true.

But the deeper lesson is:

Medicine still depends on human judgment.

When a patient experiences sudden memory loss, the diagnosis does not begin with a machine.

It begins with questions.

When did it start?

What happened before symptoms appeared?

Was there stress?

Was there physical exertion?

Were there medication changes?

Did someone close to the patient notice something unusual?

The answers create the clinical story.

The story guides the diagnosis.

The diagnosis guides the treatment.

Technology supports this process.

It does not replace it.


The Problem With Modern Healthcare: We Are Optimizing the Wrong Things

Healthcare loves optimization.

We optimize:

  • Appointment schedules
  • Documentation workflows
  • Billing processes
  • Hospital throughput
  • Performance metrics

But we rarely ask:

Are we optimizing for the right outcome?

A faster system is not always a better system.

A more efficient system is not always a more human system.

A hospital can process more patients while physicians become more exhausted.

A clinic can submit more claims while providers spend less time with patients.

An organization can implement artificial intelligence while increasing administrative burden.

The question should not be:

“How can we make healthcare faster?”

The better question is:

“How can we remove unnecessary friction so healthcare professionals can focus on what only humans can do?”


Expert Perspective: What Three Medical Disciplines Teach Us

1. Neurology: Never Underestimate the Unknown

Neurologists understand a difficult reality:

The brain remains one of the most complex systems in medicine.

Symptoms can overlap.

Conditions can imitate each other.

Rare presentations can resemble emergencies.

Transient global amnesia demonstrates this perfectly.

A patient may appear confused.

The family may be frightened.

The physician must quickly separate dangerous possibilities from less harmful explanations.

The lesson:

Excellent medicine is not about having instant certainty. It is about managing uncertainty responsibly.

 

2. Emergency Medicine: The First Job Is Protecting the Patient

Emergency physicians live in uncertainty every day.

They rarely receive a complete story.

They often see patients at the most vulnerable moments of their lives.

Their challenge is not simply finding the answer.

Their challenge is identifying what cannot be missed.

This requires:

  • Pattern recognition
  • Clinical experience
  • Communication
  • Prioritization

Technology can assist.

Protocols can guide.

But judgment remains essential.

 

3. Primary Care: Relationships Are a Medical Technology

One of the most underestimated tools in healthcare is continuity.

A physician who knows a patient’s history has something an algorithm may never fully understand:

Context.

A primary care physician may recognize:

“This patient does not normally behave this way.”

A spouse may notice:

“She seems different today.”

A caregiver may say:

“This is not her baseline.”

Those observations are not anecdotes.

They are clinical information.


The Hidden Healthcare Crisis: Physicians Are Losing Time to Everything Except Medicine

Many physicians entered medicine because they wanted to solve meaningful problems.

They wanted to:

  • Diagnose illness
  • Relieve suffering
  • Build relationships
  • Improve lives

But modern healthcare often creates a different reality.

Physicians spend countless hours managing:

  • Documentation requirements
  • Insurance rules
  • Prior authorizations
  • Coding complexity
  • Administrative workflows

The result?

The most highly trained professionals in healthcare spend increasing amounts of time on tasks that do not require their expertise.

This is not simply inefficient.

It is a system design failure.


The Same Problem Exists in Medical Billing

Healthcare leaders often describe billing challenges as a revenue cycle problem.

But many billing failures actually begin much earlier.

They begin with information.

Incomplete documentation.

Disconnected systems.

Poor workflow design.

Missing clinical details.

A claim does not fail because a billing team suddenly made a mistake.

Many failures originate upstream.

This leads to a controversial but important idea:

Medical billing is not primarily a billing problem. It is a healthcare data quality problem.

If clinical information is captured incorrectly, every downstream process becomes reactive.

More reviews.

More denials.

More appeals.

More wasted time.

The healthcare system keeps adding more people and more tools to fix problems that should have been prevented earlier.


What Physicians and Clinic Owners Can Do Now

1. Protect Clinical Reasoning

Do not allow technology to replace curiosity.

The best physicians are not simply information processors.

They are pattern recognizers.

Ask better questions.

Listen carefully.

Pay attention to small changes.

 

2. Audit Where Your Time Goes

Every physician and clinic owner should ask:

Where is my team spending time?

Is it improving patient care?

Or is it compensating for broken systems?

Identify:

  • Repetitive tasks
  • Manual workflows
  • Administrative bottlenecks
  • Preventable errors

 

3. Fix Problems Earlier in the Process

Healthcare often waits until something breaks.

A claim is denied.

A patient returns.

A workflow fails.

A document is missing.

The better approach is prevention.

Improve the process before failure occurs.


The AI Question Healthcare Must Answer

Artificial intelligence will transform medicine.

But the biggest mistake healthcare can make is believing AI itself is the solution.

AI is not magic.

AI is leverage.

It amplifies the quality of the systems around it.

A poorly designed workflow with AI becomes a faster poorly designed workflow.

A fragmented healthcare system with AI becomes a more complicated fragmented healthcare system.

The organizations that succeed will focus on:

Better data.

Better workflows.

Better human-machine collaboration.


Myth vs Reality

Myth: More technology means fewer healthcare problems.

Reality:

Technology solves specific problems.

It does not fix broken processes.

 

Myth: Physicians resist innovation.

Reality:

Most physicians do not resist innovation.

They resist tools that create more work without improving patient care.

 

Myth: Healthcare needs more information.

Reality:

Healthcare needs better interpretation of information.


Ethical Considerations: The Future Must Remain Human

As healthcare becomes increasingly digital, ethical questions become more important.

Who controls patient data?

How transparent are algorithms?

How do we prevent technology from increasing disparities?

How do we ensure efficiency does not replace empathy?

The purpose of innovation should never be replacing the human connection.

It should strengthen it.


Future Outlook: The Next Era of Medicine Will Be Built Around Less Friction

The future physician will not be replaced by technology.

But physicians who effectively use technology will have an advantage.

The next generation of healthcare will focus on:

Precision medicine
Treating patients based on individual characteristics.

Preventive healthcare
Identifying risks before disease progresses.

Connected systems
Improving communication between patients, providers, and organizations.

Intelligent automation
Reducing administrative burden.

The goal is not a healthcare system with more technology.

The goal is a healthcare system with more time for humans.


Final Thoughts: What Medicine Cannot Afford to Forget

Katie Couric’s experience was frightening.

But it was also a reminder.

Medicine is not just about identifying disease.

It is about understanding people.

A scan can show the brain.

A laboratory result can show numbers.

An algorithm can show patterns.

But only human beings can understand meaning.

The future of healthcare depends on remembering this:

Technology should make physicians more human, not less.

Data should improve decisions, not replace judgment.

Innovation should remove friction, not create more obstacles.

The question healthcare leaders must answer is:

Are we building systems that help physicians care for patients — or systems that force physicians to care for the system?


Get Involved: Help Shape the Future of Healthcare

Healthcare is changing rapidly.

The conversation cannot only happen inside technology companies, hospitals, or boardrooms.

Physicians, nurses, patients, entrepreneurs, and healthcare leaders all have a role.

My question:

What is one healthcare process you believe is unnecessarily complicated and should be redesigned?

Share your perspective in the comments.

If this article resonates with you, share it with colleagues who believe healthcare innovation should create better experiences for both patients and physicians.

The future of medicine will be shaped by those willing to question the status quo.

Let’s build it together.


Continue the Conversation

Explore practical insights, healthcare innovation strategies, and perspectives on improving the future of medicine.

Knowledge drives progress — start your journey today.

Check my LinkedIn Featured section for free resources designed for physicians and healthcare professionals. No signup required.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.

If this perspective resonates, consider reposting to help other physicians and clinic owners rethink how healthcare systems impact patient care.


References

1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) — Transient Global Amnesia Overview

A trusted neurological resource explaining the causes, symptoms, diagnosis, and clinical considerations of transient global amnesia.

Transient global amnesia is a rare neurological condition characterized by sudden temporary memory loss. Understanding the condition helps clinicians differentiate it from more serious emergencies such as stroke or seizure-related events.

2. American Stroke Association — Recognizing Stroke Warning Signs and Acting Quickly

A leading patient and physician education resource emphasizing the importance of rapid evaluation when neurological symptoms appear.

Sudden confusion, memory changes, difficulty speaking, weakness, or other neurological symptoms require urgent assessment because early intervention can significantly affect outcomes.

3. National Academy of Medicine — The Future of Health Care: Artificial Intelligence, Data, and Human-Centered Innovation

A healthcare systems perspective on balancing technology advancement with patient-centered care and responsible innovation.

As healthcare adopts artificial intelligence and digital tools, experts emphasize the importance of improving clinical workflows, maintaining trust, and ensuring technology supports rather than replaces human judgment.


#HealthcareInnovation #PhysicianLeadership #DigitalHealth #MedicalTechnology #HealthcareAI #PatientSafety #FutureOfMedicine #PrecisionMedicine #HealthTech #PhysicianEntrepreneur #HealthcareTransformation #MedicalInnovation

 

 

Medicine Saved Her. Who Will Save Physicians?

  “AI has enormous potential in healthcare, but it cannot replace physician judgment. Patients deserve care decisions that are informed by...