Thursday, June 18, 2026

A Pixar Animator Painted His Doctors After Brain Surgery—What If Physicians Started Seeing Their Own “Invisible System” the Same Way?

 



“The real challenge in medicine is not always knowing what to do, but making sure it reliably gets done for every patient, every time.” — Don Berwick emphasizes reliability, standardization, and reducing variation in care delivery: Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI)


The Story Most Physicians Will Feel—but Rarely Say Out Loud

A Pixar animator wakes up and cannot see clearly.

Within days, he is in surgery for a brain tumor pressing on his optic nerve.

Two surgeries later, he survives.

Then comes something unexpected.

Twenty days in the ICU.

Machines. Silence. Uncertainty.

And a question that quietly changes everything:

“If I make it out of here… who do I even thank?”

He eventually answers it in the only way he knows how.

He paints 40 portraits.

Not one hero.

Not one savior.

But an entire invisible ecosystem:

surgeons, nurses, technicians, support staff, recovery teams.

Each face becomes a reminder:

Survival is never individual. It is distributed.

And that is where the story stops being about art.

And starts being about medicine.


The Uncomfortable Parallel Medicine Doesn’t Talk About

Now translate that ICU scene into a clinic.

Replace portraits with workflows.

Replace caregivers with systems.

Replace gratitude with revenue flow.

And suddenly, physicians are also surrounded by an invisible ecosystem.

But here is the uncomfortable truth:

Most physicians can name the doctors involved in care.

Very few can clearly see:

  • where claims are lost
  • who touches the billing process
  • why revenue gets delayed
  • how denials actually happen
  • what happens after submission

Because in modern healthcare, there is another “ICU-level system” running silently in the background:

Medical Billing

Not as paperwork.

Not as administration.

But as a hidden decision layer between care delivered and care paid for.


The Contrarian Truth: Physicians Are Not Losing Revenue at the Clinic Level

They are losing it in the invisible layer between:

clinical action → documentation → coding → claim → payment

And the hardest part?

Most of this loss is not dramatic.

It is quiet.

It looks like:

  • “minor” coding mismatches
  • “routine” claim delays
  • “temporary” denials
  • “resubmissions in progress”
  • “system adjustments”

Individually harmless.

Collectively devastating.

This is how clinics slowly leak margin without noticing.


The Real Problem Isn’t Billing Complexity

That’s the common explanation.

But it’s incomplete.

The real problem is:

Lack of visibility

Physicians are trained to see:

  • patient physiology
  • diagnostic pathways
  • treatment outcomes

But billing systems are designed as:

post-event black boxes

You don’t see what happened.

You receive a summary.

Weeks later.

Sometimes months later.

At that point, the clinical context is gone.

And correction becomes reactive, not preventive.


A Hard Question Most Clinic Owners Never Ask

If a patient outcome depended on invisible processes you couldn’t monitor in real time…

Would you trust it?

Yet that is exactly how most clinics operate financially.

Care is real-time.

Revenue is delayed.

And the gap between them is widening.


The Emerging Shift (And Why It’s Disruptive)

Something is changing quietly in healthcare infrastructure.

We are moving from:

Old model:

  • outsourced billing
  • retrospective reporting
  • fragmented accountability

New model:

  • real-time revenue intelligence
  • AI-assisted coding support
  • transparent claim lifecycle tracking
  • direct clinic-level financial visibility

This is not incremental improvement.

It is structural change.

Because for the first time, clinics can see:

“What is happening to every dollar tied to care—while it is still happening.”


Insight: Why This Feels Uncomfortable for Many Physicians

Because it challenges a long-standing assumption:

“Billing is a back-office function.”

In reality, billing is:

the financial nervous system of the clinic

And when a nervous system is fragmented:

  • signals delay
  • feedback weakens
  • responses become reactive
  • decisions drift

Clinics don’t fail because of lack of patients.

They fail because of broken feedback loops between work and value.


Practical Reality Check: Where Revenue Actually Leaks

Most clinics underestimate leakage from:

  • undercoded visits
  • missing modifiers
  • eligibility mismatches
  • delayed claim submission
  • payer-specific rule changes
  • denial rework delays
  • incomplete documentation loops

Individually small.

But industry data consistently shows:

even 3–10% revenue leakage can occur in small to mid-sized practices due to process inefficiencies alone.

And most of it is preventable.


The Myth Most Clinics Still Believe

Myth: “We just need a better billing company.”

Reality:

You don’t need a better intermediary.

You need system visibility and control.

Because outsourcing does not eliminate complexity.

It hides it.


What High-Performing Clinics Are Starting to Do Differently

They are shifting focus from:

  • “Who is doing billing?”

to

  • “How fast can we see and correct revenue events?”

They are prioritizing:

  • real-time dashboards
  • automated claim validation
  • denial prediction systems
  • integrated clinical + financial workflows

Not because it is trendy.

Because it reduces uncertainty.

And uncertainty is expensive.


A Simple Reframe That Changes Everything

The Pixar animator saw 40 people behind his survival.

Most physicians only see:

  • patient
  • diagnosis
  • outcome

But in between those endpoints is a system that decides:

how care is translated into value

And right now, that system is mostly invisible.

The next evolution of healthcare will not be defined only by better medicine.

It will be defined by:

making the invisible visible


Why This Matters Now

Three forces are converging:

  • Rising administrative burden on physicians
  • Increasing payer complexity
  • Rapid AI adoption in healthcare operations

Together, they are forcing a shift:

From fragmented billing processes
to integrated revenue intelligence systems

Clinics that adapt early will:

  • reduce leakage
  • stabilize cash flow
  • reduce burnout
  • regain operational control

Those who don’t will continue operating in partial blindness.


Closing Reflection

The Pixar animator didn’t just paint doctors.

He made something invisible visible.

That is what healthcare now needs.

Not more complexity.

Not more intermediaries.

But clarity.

Because in medicine—and in medical billing—

what you cannot see will eventually cost you.


Final Thought

If medicine is about saving lives…

Then the systems around medicine should be about protecting the sustainability of that work.


Call to Action — Get Involved

What if the biggest inefficiency in your clinic is not clinical—but invisible?

  • What part of your revenue cycle do you not fully see today?
  • What would change if you had real-time clarity on every claim?
  • Are we optimizing medicine—or just reacting to broken systems?

Share your thoughts in the comments.
And if this resonates, share it with another physician who is navigating the same invisible complexity.


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant specializing in healthcare technology, clinical operations, and medical billing systems. He focuses on helping healthcare professionals navigate the intersection of medicine, efficiency, and financial sustainability in modern practice. Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Disclaimer / Note

This article is intended to provide a high-level perspective on healthcare systems and does not constitute medical or legal advice. Readers should consult appropriate professionals for specific guidance.


Continue the Conversation

Explore insights, practical strategies, and behind-the-scenes perspectives on healthcare innovation, clinical operations, and revenue systems.

Knowledge drives progress. Start your journey here.


References

1. Rising Administrative Burden in U.S. Healthcare

A landmark analysis showing that administrative costs consume a significant portion of U.S. healthcare spending, with billing complexity being a major driver of inefficiency.

2. Physician Burnout and Administrative Load

This study highlights how administrative tasks, including documentation and billing-related work, are strongly associated with physician burnout and reduced clinical efficiency.

3. AI and Automation in Revenue Cycle Management

A forward-looking overview of how AI-driven systems are reshaping medical billing, denial management, and revenue cycle workflows in modern healthcare systems.

#HealthcareInnovation #MedicalBilling #PhysicianLeadership #HealthTech #AIinHealthcare #PracticeManagement #HealthcareAI #ClinicManagement #RevenueCycleManagement #FutureOfHealthcare

 

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

If an Embryo Can Be Misplaced, What Exactly Makes You Think Your Revenue Cycle Is Safe?



“Every system is perfectly designed to get the results it gets.” W. Edwards Deming (quality and systems thinking pioneer)


Healthcare doesn’t fail because people stop caring. It fails because systems assume caring is enough.

The IVF embryo mix-up made global headlines for one reason:

It feels unthinkable.

A couple gives birth to a child they believed was theirs.

Genetic testing reveals otherwise.

Another family realizes their embryo was implanted elsewhere.

A custody agreement follows.

Lives permanently altered.

And the public reaction is always the same:

“How could this happen in modern medicine?”

But that question assumes something important:

That healthcare is supposed to be safe because it is advanced.

That assumption is wrong.


The uncomfortable truth nobody wants to say

Healthcare is not a reliability-optimized industry.

It is a heroism-dependent industry.

It survives on three beliefs:

  • Highly trained people prevent catastrophic failure
  • Attention and vigilance are sufficient safeguards
  • “Best practice” reduces risk to near zero

None of these are structurally true.

They are cultural comfort stories.

And the IVF incident didn’t expose a rare failure.

It exposed a universal design flaw in healthcare systems.


Here’s the contrarian take

This is not an IVF problem.

This is not a fertility clinic problem.

This is a healthcare operating model problem.

Because the same structural weakness exists in:

  • Revenue cycle management
  • Medical billing workflows
  • Prior authorization pipelines
  • Lab specimen tracking
  • Radiology reporting loops
  • EHR documentation systems
  • Referral handoffs

Most physician practices don’t have fewer risks than IVF clinics.

They just have less visible failures… for now.


The pattern nobody tracks: process debt

Healthcare talks constantly about clinical quality.

But almost never about process debt.

Process debt is what happens when:

  • Workarounds become standard practice
  • Humans become error correction layers
  • Systems depend on memory instead of structure
  • “We’ve always done it this way” replaces design

It accumulates silently.

Until it doesn’t.

Then it becomes:

  • A lawsuit
  • A denied claim spiral
  • A compliance audit failure
  • A patient safety event
  • A revenue collapse no one saw coming

The IVF case is simply process debt at maximum visibility.

Most clinics are operating with the same debt.

Just smaller consequences.


The billing system is not safe either (this is the uncomfortable parallel)

If you are a physician-owner, consider this:

Your revenue cycle likely depends on:

  • Manual coding interpretation
  • Staff memory of payer rules
  • Faxed or fragmented documentation
  • Delayed eligibility verification
  • External clearinghouse logic you don’t control
  • Human follow-up on denial queues

Now ask a harder question:

If one person leaves tomorrow, what breaks?

If the answer is “a lot,” then you don’t have a billing system.

You have a people-dependent financial assembly line.

That works… until it doesn’t.

Just like IVF labs assumed their chain-of-custody was “good enough.”


The myth healthcare still believes

Myth: Safety comes from expertise.

Reality: Safety comes from design.

Expertise catches errors.

Design prevents them from happening.

And here is the uncomfortable gap:

Healthcare invests heavily in expertise.

It underinvests in error-proof systems.


What AI is getting wrong in healthcare right now

Everyone is racing toward AI:

  • AI scribes
  • AI coding
  • AI billing optimization
  • AI prior auth automation

But most of the conversation is shallow.

It focuses on:

  • Efficiency
  • Speed
  • Cost reduction

Not reliability.

Not system failure modes.

Not structural risk elimination.

So the real question is not:

“Can AI make healthcare faster?”

It is:

“Can AI make healthcare less dependent on fragile human chains?”

Because speed without reliability is just accelerated failure.


Expert insight #1 — James Reason (systems safety theory)

Most catastrophic errors occur when multiple small failures align.

Healthcare tends to fix the last visible error.

High-reliability systems fix the structure that allowed it.


Expert insight #2 — Atul Gawande

Checklists don’t reduce intelligence.

They reduce reliance on memory under pressure.

That is the real point.


Expert insight #3 — Peter Pronovost

Safety improvements don’t come from more effort.

They come from better defaults.

Defaults beat vigilance.

Every time.


Statistics physicians should not ignore

  • Medical error remains a leading contributor to preventable harm globally
  • Administrative burden consumes a significant portion of physician time
  • Revenue cycle inefficiencies cost practices billions annually
  • Denials and documentation gaps remain a major financial leakage point in outpatient medicine

But the most important statistic is not measured:

How many failures are quietly absorbed before they become visible?

That number is always larger than reported harm.


Pitfalls in modern physician-owned practices

Most clinics fail in predictable ways:

  • Over-reliance on single staff members
  • No structured audit loops
  • Reactive denial management instead of prevention
  • Lack of real-time revenue visibility
  • Fragmented communication between clinical and billing systems
  • No system-level accountability for “silent errors”

These are not staffing problems.

They are architecture problems.


Insights most physicians underestimate

  1. Small errors are not small
    They are signals of structural weakness
  2. Revenue leakage is often invisible before it is significant
    It accumulates like clinical risk
  3. Most “billing problems” are actually workflow design problems
  4. The biggest threat to practice stability is not competition
    It is internal fragility

Recent news lens (why this matters now)

The IVF incident is part of a broader shift:

Healthcare systems are under increasing scrutiny for:

  • Chain-of-custody failures
  • Documentation traceability gaps
  • Liability exposure from operational breakdowns
  • Data integrity across clinical workflows

At the same time, clinics are rapidly adopting AI tools without redesigning underlying processes.

That combination is dangerous:

New tools on old systems do not reduce risk. They amplify it.


Legal implications

When systems fail:

  • Liability often follows documentation gaps
  • “Human error” is not a legal shield
  • Lack of audit trails increases exposure
  • Inadequate workflow controls can be interpreted as negligence

In court, the question is rarely:

“What happened?”

It is:

“Was this preventable?”


Ethical considerations

Healthcare ethics increasingly extends beyond bedside care:

  • Transparency of systems
  • Responsibility for operational design
  • Disclosure of preventable failures
  • Equity in administrative burden

Ethical healthcare is not only about outcomes.

It is about how predictable failure is managed before harm occurs.


Step-by-step: how physician clinics reduce structural risk

  1. Map every revenue and clinical workflow
  2. Identify single points of failure
  3. Replace memory-based steps with system triggers
  4. Build audit trails for critical events
  5. Introduce denial prevention, not just denial management
  6. Standardize documentation inputs upstream
  7. Measure near-misses, not just losses

Tools, metrics, and operational signals

Track:

  • Denial rate by category
  • Time-to-resolution for claims
  • Missing documentation frequency
  • Rework percentage in billing cycles
  • Referral leakage rate
  • Staff dependency concentration (who knows what)

If you cannot measure fragility, you cannot improve it.


Future outlook

Healthcare will split into two categories:

  1. Organizations that digitized chaos
  2. Organizations that redesigned it

AI will not fix the gap.

It will expose it.

The winners will not be the most automated clinics.

They will be the most operationally disciplined systems with the least hidden dependency on human heroics.


Final Thoughts

The IVF embryo mix-up is not a story about fertility medicine.

It is a story about healthcare’s structural blind spot:

We assume highly trained people can compensate for poorly designed systems forever.

They cannot.

At some point, the system fails in a way that cannot be quietly absorbed.

The question for physician-owners is not whether your clinic is safe today.

It is:

Where are you currently relying on perfection without realizing it?

That is where the real risk lives.


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant specializing in healthcare technology, clinical operations, and medical billing systems. He focuses on helping physician-owned practices improve financial and operational performance through practical, systems-based thinking at the intersection of medicine and technology.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Disclaimer

This article is intended for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical, financial, or legal advice. Readers should consult qualified professionals for guidance specific to their clinical, operational, or legal circumstances.


Continue the Conversation

Healthcare changes when operators question assumptions.

Not when they accept defaults.

Explore deeper insights into clinical operations, revenue cycle design, and healthcare system reliability.

Knowledge drives progress. Start your journey here.


Call to Action

What part of your practice depends on memory instead of systems?

Drop a comment with one workflow you suspect is more fragile than it should be.

Share this if you think healthcare needs fewer heroes and more reliable systems.

♻️ Repost if this perspective resonates and could help another physician rethink their practice operations.


Hashtags

HealthcareLeadership, MedicalBilling, PhysicianEntrepreneur, HealthcareInnovation, AIinHealthcare, RevenueCycleManagement, PracticeManagement, PatientSafety, HealthTech, ClinicalOperations, HealthcareSystems, MedicalAI, HealthcareStrategy

 

 

References

1. Patient Safety and System Failure (Core Framework)

Reason, J. (2000). “Human error: models and management.” BMJ

This foundational paper explains how errors in healthcare are rarely caused by individuals alone, but by latent system failures aligning across workflows (Swiss Cheese Model). It is widely used in patient safety science and directly supports the idea that healthcare failures are systemic, not personal.

2. Surgical Safety and Checklist-Based Reliability

Gawande, A. et al. (2009). “A Surgical Safety Checklist to Reduce Morbidity and Mortality in a Global Population.” New England Journal of Medicine

This landmark WHO-supported study demonstrated that structured system interventions (checklists, verification steps) significantly reduce complications and deaths across global hospitals, reinforcing that design beats memory and vigilance.

3. Healthcare Quality and System Design Philosophy

Berwick, D. M. (1991–present body of work, Institute for Healthcare Improvement)

Don Berwick’s work on healthcare quality emphasizes that most medical harm is not due to bad actors but poorly designed systems, and that improvement requires redesign of processes rather than blame-based approaches. 

The Standing Ovation That Exposed Healthcare's Biggest Lie

 



"If you have an opportunity to fix a problem, it gives you more hope than if you think the issue is terminal. We're definitely not terminal." Mehmet Oz, speaking at the HFMA Annual Conference, June 2026.

Healthcare Doesn't Have a Technology Problem. It Has a Meaning Problem.

Hundreds of students lined the hallways.

They cheered.

They applauded.

Some cried.

Others waited patiently for one last fist bump.

The person receiving the standing ovation was not the principal.

Not a teacher.

Not a star athlete.

Not a wealthy donor.

It was the school janitor.

Mario Gonzalez spent 39 years cleaning classrooms, emptying trash cans, and quietly showing up every day.

When he retired, students created a surprise sendoff that became national news.

As I watched the story, one thought kept coming to mind:

If Mario worked in healthcare, many administrators would probably consider him low-value labor.

That sounds harsh.

But healthcare has become obsessed with measuring everything except what matters.

We measure:

  • Relative value units
  • Productivity
  • Throughput
  • Claim submission rates
  • Patient volumes
  • Cost per encounter

Yet we rarely measure:

  • Trust
  • Loyalty
  • Human connection
  • Team morale
  • Meaning

And that may be the biggest mistake modern healthcare is making.

The Lie Healthcare Keeps Telling Itself

The industry keeps insisting that its biggest problems are:

  • Staffing shortages
  • Physician burnout
  • Rising costs
  • Insurance complexity
  • Administrative burden

Those are real problems.

But they are symptoms.

Not root causes.

The deeper issue is that healthcare has slowly transformed physicians into production units.

Some organizations now measure doctors with the same philosophy Amazon uses to measure warehouse efficiency.

More patients.

More clicks.

More documentation.

More productivity.

More output.

Then leaders act surprised when physicians burn out.

Burnout is not always caused by working too hard.

Sometimes it is caused by working hard on things that no longer feel meaningful.

That's a completely different problem.

And technology alone cannot solve it.

My Unpopular Opinion About AI in Healthcare

Most people believe AI will save healthcare.

I disagree.

At least partially.

AI will not save healthcare.

AI will expose healthcare.

It will reveal which organizations were drowning in inefficiency.

It will reveal which workflows never made sense.

It will reveal which middlemen added value and which merely added cost.

Most importantly, it will reveal whether healthcare leaders actually want physicians spending more time with patients.

Because if artificial intelligence eliminates documentation burdens and administrative work, leadership faces a choice:

Will physicians gain more time with patients?

Or will they simply be assigned more patients?

That question may define the next decade of medicine.

What Mario Understood Better Than Most Healthcare Executives

Mario Gonzalez never generated revenue.

He never billed insurance.

He never increased margins.

He never improved EBITDA.

Yet an entire school loved him.

Why?

Because humans are not spreadsheets.

People remember how you make them feel.

Patients do not remember every diagnosis.

They remember whether someone listened.

Employees do not remember every meeting.

They remember whether someone cared.

Physicians do not remember every metric.

They remember whether their work mattered.

The irony is that healthcare talks endlessly about patient-centered care while increasingly designing physician-centered bureaucracy.

The Revenue Cycle Lesson Nobody Wants to Hear

As someone building an artificial intelligence-powered medical billing platform, I spend a lot of time thinking about revenue cycle management.

Here's the uncomfortable truth:

Most clinics do not have a billing problem.

They have a decision problem.

A workflow problem.

A documentation problem.

A visibility problem.

Everyone wants to talk about denied claims.

Few want to discuss why claims are denied.

Everyone wants higher collections.

Few want to address the broken systems creating leakage.

This is similar to treating hypertension without asking why blood pressure is elevated.

We manage symptoms.

We ignore causes.

Then we wonder why the disease progresses.

Healthcare's Dangerous Addiction to Complexity

Healthcare often mistakes complexity for sophistication.

Consider how many layers exist between a physician providing care and receiving payment:

  • Documentation
  • Coding
  • Compliance review
  • Claims submission
  • Clearinghouses
  • Payers
  • Prior authorizations
  • Appeals
  • Collections

Every layer was originally created to solve a problem.

Collectively, they created new problems.

The result?

Many physicians spend years becoming experts in medicine only to discover they must become experts in bureaucracy.

No wonder so many clinicians are exhausted.

Three Experts Who Saw This Coming

Atul Gawande

Gawande repeatedly argued that healthcare's greatest opportunities come from improving systems rather than demanding heroic effort from individuals.

His insight remains relevant today.

Healthcare does not need more heroes.

It needs better systems.

Eric Topol

Topol has long argued that artificial intelligence should restore the human side of medicine.

The goal was never replacing physicians.

The goal was freeing physicians.

Whether that happens remains an open question.

Peter Drucker

Although not a physician, Drucker understood organizations better than most healthcare executives.

His famous observation remains devastatingly relevant:

"What gets measured gets managed."

Healthcare has spent decades measuring transactions.

Perhaps it is time to measure relationships.

The Next Competitive Advantage

Most healthcare leaders think their future competitive advantage will be:

  • AI
  • Data
  • Analytics
  • Automation

I think they're wrong.

Those tools will become commodities.

Everyone will eventually have access to them.

The true competitive advantage will be trust.

Trust between:

  • Physicians and patients
  • Leadership and staff
  • Clinics and communities

Trust cannot be automated.

Trust cannot be outsourced.

Trust cannot be downloaded.

And trust becomes increasingly valuable in a world flooded with technology.

What Clinic Owners Should Do Now

Instead of asking:

"How can artificial intelligence replace people?"

Ask:

"How can artificial intelligence make people more effective?"

Instead of asking:

"How can we see more patients?"

Ask:

"How can we create better outcomes for patients?"

Instead of asking:

"How can we maximize productivity?"

Ask:

"How can we maximize meaning?"

Because the organizations that win the next decade will not be those with the most technology.

They will be the ones that use technology to amplify humanity.

Final Thoughts: The Real Lesson from a Janitor's Retirement

Mario Gonzalez spent nearly four decades doing work that many people overlook.

Yet when he left, hundreds of students lined the hallways to celebrate him.

That should make every healthcare leader uncomfortable.

Not because of what it says about Mario.

Because of what it says about us.

Healthcare spends billions trying to improve patient experience.

Mario improved lives simply by showing up consistently, treating people with dignity, and caring.

Maybe the future of healthcare is not about becoming more technological.

Maybe it is about becoming more human.

And perhaps the greatest irony of all is this:

The more advanced artificial intelligence becomes, the more valuable authentic human connection will become.

That is the opportunity.

That is the challenge.

And that may be the most important healthcare trend nobody is talking about.

Continue the Conversation

What do you think healthcare is measuring today that matters least?

And what is healthcare failing to measure that matters most?

Share your perspective in the comments.

If this article challenged your assumptions, consider sharing it with another physician, clinic owner, healthcare executive, or entrepreneur.

Sometimes the most important conversations start with uncomfortable questions.

About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant with expertise in medical technology, healthcare management, and medical billing. He focuses on delivering practical insights that help professionals navigate complex challenges at the intersection of healthcare operations and innovation.
Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.

Explore practical insights, evidence-based strategies, and behind-the-scenes perspectives that help physicians and clinic leaders navigate complex challenges.

·        Connect professionally on LinkedIn

Knowledge drives progress — start your journey today.

 

 

#HealthcareLeadership #PhysicianLeadership #HealthcareInnovation #MedicalBilling #RevenueCycleManagement #ArtificialIntelligence #HealthTech #HealthcareStrategy #PracticeManagement #DigitalHealth #PhysicianBurnout #HealthcareOperations #MedicalPractice #FutureOfHealthcare #PhysicianEntrepreneur

References

1. American Medical Association: Physician Burnout Rates Are Falling, But the Problem Is Far From Solved

The latest AMA data found that 41.9% of physicians reported at least one symptom of burnout in 2025, with significant variation across specialties, highlighting that administrative burden, workflow inefficiencies, and organizational support remain critical challenges.

Source: American Medical Association – Physician Burnout Rates Are Falling, Specialty Gaps Remain

2. Eric Topol: How Artificial Intelligence Can Bring Humanity Back to Medicine

Cardiologist and digital health expert Eric Topol argues that the greatest promise of artificial intelligence is not replacing physicians but reducing administrative work so doctors can spend more time with patients and restore the physician-patient relationship.

Source: TIME – Cardiologist Eric Topol on How AI Can Bring Humanity Back to Medicine

3. Vox Interview: Can Artificial Intelligence Make Healthcare More Human?

In a recent discussion, Eric Topol emphasized that artificial intelligence should automate documentation, paperwork, and other administrative tasks while preserving clinical judgment and strengthening human connection in healthcare. He also cautioned that the benefits depend on how health systems choose to deploy these technologies.

Source: Vox – Can AI Make Healthcare More Human?

 

Monday, June 15, 2026

Banning Social Media Won't Fix the Youth Mental Health Crisis. Here's the Conversation Healthcare Leaders Should Be Having.

 


"It is much more important to know what sort of patient has a disease than what sort of disease a patient has." — Sir William Osler


The United Kingdom is considering restrictions that would ban children under 16 from social media platforms.

Australia has already moved in that direction.

More countries are likely to follow.

Many healthcare professionals are applauding.

Many technology companies are concerned.

I think both sides may be missing something important.

Social media is not the disease.

It may be a symptom.

A symptom of a deeper problem.

Because if banning social media were enough, we would already have solved many of the mental health challenges facing young people.

Instead, rates of anxiety, loneliness, burnout, and emotional distress continue to rise across multiple age groups—including adults.

That should make us pause.

Perhaps the issue is not simply what children are looking at.

Perhaps the issue is the environment we have created around them.


A Story That Made Me Rethink Everything

A physician friend recently told me about a teenager struggling with anxiety, sleep disruption, poor concentration, and social withdrawal.

The obvious suspect was social media.

The patient spent hours each day on TikTok and other platforms.

The family removed the apps.

Screen time dropped.

But something unexpected happened.

The symptoms improved only slightly.

The real breakthrough occurred later.

The teenager started exercising regularly.

Joined a sports team.

Spent more time with friends in person.

Improved sleep habits.

Reduced academic pressure.

Developed a stronger support network.

Mental health improved dramatically.

Social media mattered.

But it wasn't the entire story.

And that may be the most important lesson in this debate.

Healthcare professionals know better than anyone that complex problems rarely have a single cause.

Yet public discussions often search for a single villain.


The Contrarian View

Many people are asking:

"Should we ban social media for children?"

I think a better question is:

Why has social media become so central to childhood in the first place?

Children are not spending six hours per day online because they suddenly lost interest in real life.

Many are online because real-world alternatives have become increasingly limited.

Less outdoor play.

Less community involvement.

Less face-to-face interaction.

More structured schedules.

More academic pressure.

More isolation.

More stress.

Social media did not create all of these trends.

It stepped into the vacuum.

That distinction matters.

Because if the underlying conditions remain unchanged, children will simply migrate to the next digital platform.

The technology may change.

The problem may not.


What Physicians Understand That Policymakers Often Miss

Medicine teaches us a valuable lesson.

Treating symptoms without addressing root causes rarely works.

Imagine treating hypertension without addressing diet, exercise, obesity, sleep, stress, or smoking.

Would we expect meaningful long-term results?

Probably not.

Yet that is often how society approaches technology.

We focus on the platform.

We ignore the ecosystem.

Healthcare leaders should resist simplistic explanations.

The question is not whether social media affects mental health.

Evidence increasingly suggests that it can.

The more important question is:

Why are so many young people vulnerable to its effects?


Three Expert Perspectives

Dr. Vivek Murthy: Safety Cannot Be an Afterthought

Former U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy has repeatedly emphasized that children's wellbeing should be considered during technology design, not after harm has already occurred.

His message is clear:

When billions of users are involved, product design becomes a public health issue.


Dr. Jonathan Haidt: Childhood Has Been Rewired

Dr. Jonathan Haidt argues that smartphones and social media have fundamentally altered childhood experiences.

His work suggests that many developmental milestones traditionally achieved through in-person interaction are increasingly occurring through digital channels.

Whether one agrees fully or not, his central point deserves attention:

Technology is not simply changing communication. It may be changing development itself.


Dr. Jenny Radesky: Balance Matters

Developmental pediatrician Dr. Jenny Radesky offers a more nuanced perspective.

Technology is neither inherently harmful nor inherently beneficial.

Context matters.

Content matters.

Family engagement matters.

Boundaries matter.

This may be the most practical perspective for healthcare professionals working with patients today.


What Healthcare Leaders Should Really Be Concerned About

The biggest risk may not be social media itself.

The biggest risk may be normalization.

We have gradually accepted several troubling realities:

Children sleeping less.

Children exercising less.

Children socializing less.

Children reporting higher levels of loneliness.

Children spending increasing amounts of time online.

Each trend may appear manageable in isolation.

Together they create a concerning picture.

And healthcare leaders are seeing the consequences firsthand.


Statistics That Deserve More Attention

Most headlines focus on screen time.

I believe the more important metrics are:

Sleep quality.

Loneliness.

Physical activity.

Emotional resilience.

Social connectedness.

Research increasingly suggests these factors may predict long-term wellbeing more effectively than screen time alone.

A child spending two hours online and maintaining strong relationships, healthy sleep, and physical activity may face very different outcomes than a child spending the same amount of time online while struggling in all those areas.

The context matters.


The Myth That Needs Challenging

One of the most common assumptions is that technology companies alone are responsible.

That narrative is appealing because it identifies a clear villain.

But healthcare professionals understand that human behavior is rarely that simple.

Parents matter.

Schools matter.

Communities matter.

Healthcare systems matter.

Policymakers matter.

Technology companies matter.

Responsibility is shared.

Which means solutions must be shared too.


Practical Advice for Physicians

Rather than debating legislation, physicians can act today.

Ask Better Questions

Instead of asking:

"How much screen time do you have?"

Ask:

"What are you doing online?"

"How are you sleeping?"

"When was the last time you spent time with friends in person?"

"What activities bring you joy offline?"

The answers may reveal far more.


Focus on Sleep First

If I could recommend only one intervention, it would be improving sleep hygiene.

Poor sleep amplifies nearly every mental health challenge.


Promote Real-World Connection

Human connection remains one of the most powerful protective factors in medicine.

Technology should supplement relationships, not replace them.


Avoid Extremes

Blanket bans rarely work.

Unlimited access rarely works either.

The goal is thoughtful balance.


Recent News and Why It Matters

The UK's proposed social media restrictions are attracting global attention.

Supporters view the legislation as a public health intervention.

Critics argue that determined teenagers will find workarounds.

Both perspectives may be partially correct.

The legislation may reduce exposure for some children.

It may also fail to address broader social and environmental factors contributing to mental health challenges.

Healthcare leaders should watch these developments carefully.

The outcome could influence future policy discussions worldwide.


Legal and Ethical Considerations

Several important questions remain unanswered.

How should age verification be implemented?

How much privacy should individuals sacrifice for protection?

What responsibilities should technology companies bear?

What role should governments play?

What rights should parents retain?

These questions extend beyond technology.

They touch ethics, public health, law, and personal freedom.


The Bigger Insight

The debate over social media bans may ultimately reveal something much larger.

We are entering an era where healthcare and technology can no longer be separated.

Every major digital platform now influences:

Behavior.

Attention.

Sleep.

Mental health.

Social interaction.

That means technology policy is increasingly healthcare policy.

And healthcare leaders deserve a seat at the table.


Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ 1: Should physicians support social media bans?

Physicians should evaluate the evidence objectively and advocate for policies that promote patient wellbeing.

FAQ 2: Does social media directly cause depression?

Current evidence suggests a complex relationship rather than a simple cause-and-effect connection.

FAQ 3: What is the biggest concern?

Many experts point to sleep disruption, cyberbullying, and excessive social comparison.

FAQ 4: Can social media provide benefits?

Yes. Education, support communities, and social connection can be valuable when used appropriately.

FAQ 5: What can healthcare organizations do today?

Promote digital wellness education, screening, and evidence-based guidance.


Continue the Conversation

Here's my question for physicians, clinic owners, educators, and parents:

Are we facing a social media problem, or are we facing a broader societal problem that social media merely exposes?

Share your perspective in the comments.

If you found this insight valuable, consider sharing this article with your colleagues.

The conversation is too important to keep to ourselves.

If this perspective resonates, consider reposting to help other physicians, healthcare leaders, and clinic owners rethink one of the most important public health discussions of our time.


Final Thoughts

Perhaps the most dangerous assumption is believing this conversation is about social media.

It isn't.

It is about childhood.

It is about human development.

It is about mental health.

It is about what happens when powerful technologies evolve faster than society's ability to understand their consequences.

Banning social media may help.

Education may help.

Parental involvement may help.

Better product design may help.

But none of these solutions alone will solve the problem.

The future belongs to those willing to address systems, not symptoms.

And that is a lesson healthcare professionals have understood for generations.


References

1. United Kingdom Social Media Restriction Proposal

Overview of proposed age-verification requirements and restrictions aimed at protecting children online.
https://www.gov.uk

2. U.S. Surgeon General Advisory on Social Media and Youth Mental Health

Guidance regarding risks, research gaps, and recommended safeguards.
https://www.hhs.gov

3. American Academy of Pediatrics Digital Media Guidance

Evidence-based recommendations for healthy technology use among children and adolescents.
https://www.aap.org


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician and medical consultant with expertise in medical technology consulting, healthcare management, and medical billing. He focuses on delivering practical insights that help professionals navigate complex challenges at the intersection of healthcare, innovation, and medical practice.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Important Note

This article is intended to provide educational information and a broad overview of the topic. It should not be interpreted as medical, legal, or professional advice. Readers should consult qualified professionals regarding specific medical, legal, regulatory, or operational questions.


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If this perspective resonates, consider reposting to help more physicians, healthcare leaders, and clinic owners join the conversation.

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