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

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


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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

 

 

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Medicaid Cuts Are Not the Healthcare Crisis. They Are the Warning Signal.

 


“The good physician treats the disease; the great physician treats the patient who has the disease.” — William Osler


A 33-Year-Old Woman, Her Family, and the Healthcare System Failure Nobody Wants to Discuss

Every morning, 33-year-old Alexia Flory faces a challenge most of us never think about.

Getting out of bed.

Not because she lacks determination.

Not because she lacks intelligence.

Not because she lacks ambition.

Alexia has cerebral palsy. Her condition affects her muscles and limits her ability to complete many daily activities independently.

But despite those challenges, she built a life.

She earned a college degree.

She continued her education.

She developed relationships.

She became an example of what is possible when the right support system exists.

That support system was not just medical care.

It was something much bigger.

It was a network of caregivers, family support, and Medicaid-funded services that allowed her to live at home, participate in her community, and maintain independence.

Then that system became uncertain.

Proposed Medicaid-related reductions threatened the caregiver support that helped make her independence possible.

Her family faced an impossible question:

What happens when the healthcare system that keeps someone independent becomes financially unstable?

For Alexia’s family, this was not an abstract policy debate.

It was not a political talking point.

It was not a number on a government spreadsheet.

It was their daily life.

Her parents worried about losing the support that allowed their daughter to remain at home.

They worried about caregiver shortages.

They worried about exhausting their own financial resources.

They worried about what happens when a system designed to protect vulnerable patients begins creating vulnerability itself.

And this is where physicians need to pay attention.

Because Alexia’s story is not only about Medicaid.

It is about the future of healthcare.


The Medicaid Debate Is Missing the Bigger Healthcare Problem

The public conversation often frames Medicaid as a question of government spending.

How much should we spend?

How much should we cut?

How do we control costs?

Those questions matter.

But physicians see another layer.

A deeper problem.

A more uncomfortable problem.

Healthcare has become a system where access depends not only on medical need, but on operational survival.

The patient needs care.

The physician wants to provide care.

The caregiver wants to support care.

But between those three points sits an increasingly complicated machine:

  • Insurance requirements.
  • Documentation rules.
  • Prior authorizations.
  • Coding requirements.
  • Claim submissions.
  • Appeals.
  • Compliance obligations.
  • Administrative delays.

The result?

The healthcare system spends enormous energy managing healthcare instead of delivering healthcare.


Healthcare Does Not Only Have a Funding Problem

It has a friction problem.

This is the conversation we rarely have.

When healthcare funding becomes tighter, most people immediately look at reimbursement rates.

But what if part of the problem is hidden waste inside the system?

What if billions of dollars disappear because healthcare processes are inefficient?

What if physician practices are losing resources not because physicians are providing poor care, but because the infrastructure supporting care is outdated?

A denied claim is not just a billing inconvenience.

It creates a ripple effect.

A denied claim can mean:

  • Less revenue for hiring staff.
  • Less investment in technology.
  • Longer patient wait times.
  • More physician burnout.
  • Less capacity for underserved communities.

The healthcare industry often treats administrative inefficiency as a business issue.

It is not.

It is a patient care issue.


The Physician Paradox: Doctors Are Responsible for Outcomes They Cannot Fully Control

Modern physicians carry an extraordinary burden.

They are expected to:

  • Deliver high-quality care.
  • Improve patient outcomes.
  • Reduce costs.
  • Document perfectly.
  • Navigate insurance rules.
  • Maintain compliance.
  • Manage financial sustainability.

The contradiction?

Many physicians have less control over the operational systems determining whether their care can continue.

A physician can make the right diagnosis.

Choose the appropriate treatment.

Provide excellent care.

And still face:

  • Delayed reimbursement.
  • Coverage restrictions.
  • Administrative barriers.
  • Claim denials.

The clinical decision may be correct.

The operational pathway may still fail.


The Healthcare Industry’s Biggest Blind Spot

We have spent decades asking:

“How do we create better medicine?”

But we have spent less time asking:

“How do we create a better system for delivering medicine?”

Healthcare innovation has often focused on visible problems:

  • New drugs.
  • New devices.
  • New procedures.
  • New digital platforms.

These are important.

But some of healthcare’s biggest problems exist in invisible infrastructure.

The workflow between:

Patient visit → Documentation → Coding → Claim → Payment → Sustainable care

That pathway determines whether a clinic survives.

Yet it receives far less attention than clinical innovation.


Why Medicaid Pressure Should Matter to Every Physician Owner

Some physicians may think:

“I do not treat Medicaid patients.”

“This policy issue does not directly affect my practice.”

But healthcare systems are interconnected.

When reimbursement pressure increases in one area, consequences spread.

The same forces affect:

  • Independent practices.
  • Specialty clinics.
  • Primary care offices.
  • Community health providers.
  • Hospital systems.

The pattern is familiar:

More complexity.

More administrative workload.

More pressure on margins.

Less time for patients.


The Real Healthcare Technology Opportunity: Reduce Friction

The healthcare industry does not need more technology for technology’s sake.

Physicians are not asking for another login.

Another dashboard.

Another complicated workflow.

They want something much simpler:

Help me spend more time caring for patients and less time fighting the system.

The next generation of healthcare technology should focus on:

1. Better Data Capture

Many downstream problems begin upstream.

Incomplete information creates:

  • Coding errors.
  • Claim delays.
  • Documentation problems.

Better data quality creates better outcomes.

 

2. Intelligent Automation

Automation should remove repetitive administrative work.

Not replace physician judgment.

The goal is not:

“Make healthcare more robotic.”

The goal is:

“Make healthcare more human by removing unnecessary tasks.”

 

3. Transparent Operations

Physician owners need visibility.

They need to understand:

  • Where revenue is lost.
  • Why claims fail.
  • Where workflows break.
  • Which processes need improvement.

You cannot improve what you cannot see.


The AI Healthcare Debate Is Focused on the Wrong Question

Many discussions about AI ask:

“Will AI replace doctors?”

That question attracts attention.

But it may not be the most important question.

A better question:

“Can AI remove the administrative friction preventing doctors from doing what only doctors can do?”

Healthcare has no shortage of intelligence.

It has a shortage of efficient systems.

AI’s greatest opportunity may not be replacing expertise.

It may be protecting expertise.


Three Expert Perspectives on the Future of Healthcare Operations

Expert Perspective #1: Patient Access Depends on Sustainable Systems

Healthcare leaders consistently emphasize that access requires more than insurance coverage.

Patients need:

  • Available providers.
  • Functional systems.
  • Reliable support services.

A healthcare benefit that cannot be efficiently delivered becomes a promise without execution.

 

Expert Perspective #2: Administrative Burden Has Become a Workforce Crisis

Healthcare experts have increasingly recognized administrative overload as a contributor to physician burnout.

The issue is not simply workload.

It is unnecessary workload.

Physicians expect hard work.

They do not expect spending hours solving preventable administrative problems.

 

Expert Perspective #3: Healthcare Innovation Must Move Upstream

The next generation of healthcare innovation will focus less on fixing problems after they occur.

It will focus on preventing problems before they happen.

Examples:

Instead of fixing denied claims:

Improve information quality before submission.

Instead of chasing missing documentation:

Create better documentation workflows.

Instead of reacting:

Predict.

Prevent.

Simplify.


The Lesson From Alexia’s Story

Alexia did not need more complexity.

She needed a system that worked.

Her family did not need another healthcare barrier.

They needed reliability.

Her caregivers did not need uncertainty.

They needed support.

And physicians do not need more administrative weight.

They need infrastructure that allows them to practice medicine.

This is the healthcare conversation we should be having.

Not only:

“How much money are we spending?”

But:

“Are we building a healthcare system that can actually deliver the care we promise?”


The Numbers Behind the Crisis: Why Healthcare Operations Matter More Than Ever

Stories like Alexia’s remind us that healthcare is personal.

But healthcare systems also operate on numbers.

And those numbers reveal a difficult reality:

A healthcare system can fail patients even when the people inside it are trying their best.

The challenge is not always a lack of compassion.

The challenge is often a lack of alignment between:

  • Patient needs.
  • Physician capacity.
  • Financial sustainability.
  • Administrative infrastructure.

Healthcare Access Is More Than Having an Insurance Card

One of the biggest misconceptions in healthcare is that coverage automatically equals access.

It does not.

A patient may technically have insurance coverage but still experience:

  • Long appointment delays.
  • Difficulty finding accepting providers.
  • Transportation barriers.
  • Administrative delays.
  • Interrupted services.

For vulnerable populations, especially individuals with disabilities, chronic conditions, and complex medical needs, continuity matters.

A disruption in services can create consequences far beyond a single missed appointment.

It can lead to:

  • Emergency room visits.
  • Hospitalizations.
  • Functional decline.
  • Increased caregiver burden.

The lesson:

Healthcare access is not created by policy alone. It is created by functioning systems.


Statistics Physicians Should Understand

1. Medicaid Is a Critical Healthcare Infrastructure

Medicaid supports tens of millions of Americans, including:

  • Children.
  • Low-income adults.
  • Seniors requiring long-term services.
  • Individuals with disabilities.

For many populations, Medicaid is not simply an insurance program.

It is the foundation supporting daily healthcare needs.

 

2. Administrative Costs Continue to Burden Practices

Physicians increasingly report spending significant time on administrative activities.

Common examples include:

  • Prior authorization requests.
  • Documentation requirements.
  • Insurance communication.
  • Billing corrections.
  • Appeals.

The hidden cost is physician attention.

Every hour spent navigating unnecessary complexity is an hour removed from:

  • Patient education.
  • Care coordination.
  • Clinical improvement.

 

3. Independent Practices Operate Under Increasing Pressure

Small and medium-sized clinics face unique challenges.

Unlike large healthcare organizations, many physician-owned practices operate without:

  • Large administrative teams.
  • Extensive technology budgets.
  • Dedicated operational departments.

This creates a dangerous imbalance:

The physician is expected to deliver excellent care while simultaneously managing a complicated healthcare business.


The Revenue Cycle Problem Nobody Wants to Discuss

Here is the uncomfortable truth:

Many healthcare organizations focus heavily on increasing revenue.

But fewer focus on preventing revenue loss.

Revenue loss often happens quietly.

A claim is delayed.

A code is incorrect.

A document is incomplete.

A payer requests additional information.

A denial sits unresolved.

One claim may seem insignificant.

Thousands of claims become a systemic problem.


The Hidden Tax on Physician-Owned Clinics

Independent physicians pay a hidden tax.

Not a government tax.

A complexity tax.

This tax comes from:

  • Manual processes.
  • Fragmented systems.
  • Poor communication.
  • Repetitive administrative tasks.

The cost is measured in dollars.

But also in something harder to replace:

Physician time.


The Biggest Pitfalls Healthcare Organizations Must Avoid

Pitfall #1: Treating Billing as an Afterthought

Many physicians view billing as something that happens after medicine.

That mindset creates problems.

The revenue cycle begins before the claim.

It begins at:

  • Patient scheduling.
  • Documentation.
  • Clinical workflow.
  • Data capture.

A billing problem is often a symptom of an upstream process problem.

 

Pitfall #2: Adding Technology Without Fixing Workflow

Healthcare has a history of purchasing solutions before understanding the problem.

More software does not automatically equal better healthcare.

A poorly designed process with new technology is still a poorly designed process.

The right question is:

“What friction are we removing?”

Not:

“What software are we buying?”

 

Pitfall #3: Ignoring Data Quality

Healthcare runs on data.

But many organizations focus on collecting more data instead of improving data quality.

Poor data creates:

  • Incorrect claims.
  • Delayed payments.
  • Compliance concerns.
  • Operational confusion.

The future belongs to organizations that treat data as infrastructure.


Myth Busters: Challenging Healthcare Assumptions

Myth #1:

“Medicaid problems only affect Medicaid providers.”

Reality:

Healthcare systems are interconnected.

Reimbursement pressure, workforce shortages, and administrative complexity influence the entire healthcare ecosystem.

 

Myth #2:

“Physician burnout is only caused by long hours.”

Reality:

Physicians expect demanding work.

The problem is spending excessive time on work that does not require physician expertise.

 

Myth #3:

“Artificial intelligence will replace doctors.”

Reality:

The near-term opportunity is not replacing physicians.

It is removing unnecessary friction around physicians.

AI should amplify human expertise.

Not eliminate it.


A Practical Framework for Physician Owners: The Healthcare Resilience Checklist

Physician leaders should ask five questions.

Step 1: Understand Your Revenue Leakage

Measure:

  • Claim denial percentage.
  • Days in accounts receivable.
  • First-pass claim acceptance rate.
  • Unresolved claim volume.

You cannot improve invisible problems.

 

Step 2: Identify Administrative Bottlenecks

Map your workflow:

Patient appointment.

Clinical encounter.

Documentation.

Coding.

Claim submission.

Payment.

At each step ask:

Where does friction occur?

 

Step 3: Improve Data Quality Before Automation

Before implementing AI or automation:

Review:

  • Documentation consistency.
  • Coding accuracy.
  • Missing information.
  • Staff workflow.

Automation magnifies existing processes.

Good processes create better automation.

 

Step 4: Protect Physician Attention

The most valuable resource in healthcare is not software.

It is physician expertise.

Every unnecessary administrative task steals attention from the patient.

 

Step 5: Build Systems That Can Survive Change

Healthcare will continue to experience:

  • Policy changes.
  • Reimbursement changes.
  • Workforce changes.
  • Technology disruption.

The goal is not predicting every change.

The goal is building adaptable systems.


Legal Considerations: Why Healthcare Operations Matter

Healthcare organizations operate under significant regulatory requirements.

Changes involving Medicaid, reimbursement, and documentation can create compliance challenges.

Physicians and practice owners should pay attention to:

  • Accurate documentation.
  • Appropriate coding.
  • Record retention.
  • Billing compliance.
  • Patient privacy requirements.

Operational improvement should never come at the expense of compliance.

The goal is:

Efficiency with integrity.


Ethical Considerations: The Human Cost Behind Healthcare Decisions

Healthcare discussions can become dominated by financial language.

Budgets.

Costs.

Savings.

Efficiency.

But behind every number is a person.

A patient.

A family.

A caregiver.

A physician.

The ethical challenge is balancing sustainability with compassion.

A financially unstable healthcare system cannot protect patients.

A financially focused healthcare system that ignores humanity also fails patients.

The answer is not choosing between economics and empathy.

The answer is designing systems where both can exist.


The Future of Healthcare: From Reactive to Predictive

The next decade of healthcare innovation will likely move toward prevention.

Not only preventing disease.

Preventing system failure.

Imagine a healthcare environment where:

  • Documentation problems are identified before claims are submitted.
  • Revenue leakage is predicted before losses accumulate.
  • Administrative tasks are automated before they burden clinicians.
  • Physicians receive actionable insights instead of more alerts.

This is where AI can create meaningful value.

Not replacing the human connection.

Protecting it.


Three Actions Physician Leaders Can Take Today

1. Audit Your Hidden Friction

Look beyond clinical performance.

Review your operational workflow.

Where are delays happening?

Where is revenue lost?

Where is staff time wasted?

 

2. Stop Accepting Complexity as Normal

Healthcare has normalized unnecessary difficulty.

A process being common does not mean it is efficient.

Ask:

“Why do we do it this way?”

 

3. Design Healthcare Around Physicians and Patients

The best systems serve the people using them.

Technology should adapt to healthcare.

Healthcare should not constantly adapt to technology.


Final Thoughts: The Healthcare Crisis Is Also an Opportunity

Alexia’s story is about Medicaid.

But it is also about something bigger.

It is about what happens when systems fail the people depending on them.

The future of healthcare will not be built only through new treatments.

It will be built through better systems.

Three ideas matter:

First: Healthcare access depends on operational strength, not only financial resources.

Second: Physicians cannot solve tomorrow’s challenges using yesterday’s administrative systems.

Third: The greatest healthcare innovations will remove friction so clinicians can return their focus to what matters most — patients.


Join the Conversation

Healthcare is changing rapidly.

The question is not whether change is coming.

The question is:

Will physicians help design the future healthcare system, or will they continue adapting to systems designed without them?

I would like to hear your perspective:

What is the biggest source of unnecessary friction affecting your practice today — reimbursement, documentation, staffing, technology, or something else?

Share your experience in the comments.

Your insight may help another physician or clinic owner facing the same challenge.

If this perspective resonates, consider sharing this article with another healthcare professional who believes medicine deserves better systems.

Healthcare improves when we stop accepting broken processes as inevitable.


Continue the Conversation

Healthcare innovation requires more than new ideas.

It requires practical strategies, operational insight, and honest conversations about the challenges facing physicians, patients, and healthcare organizations.

Explore additional perspectives on healthcare technology, medical operations, and innovation:

Knowledge drives progress — start your journey today.

Start your journey by continuing to learn, question existing systems, and explore new possibilities for the future of healthcare.


About the Author

Dr. Daniel Cham is a physician, medical consultant, and healthcare technology entrepreneur focused on improving the intersection between clinical care, healthcare operations, and innovation.

As the founder of OnnX, an AI-powered medical billing SaaS platform designed for small and medium-sized physician practices, Dr. Cham focuses on solving operational challenges that prevent clinicians from spending more time delivering patient care.

His work explores healthcare transformation through better workflows, improved data quality, and practical technology solutions that support independent physicians.

Connect with Dr. Cham on LinkedIn to learn more.


Disclaimer

This article provides general educational information about healthcare operations, policy discussions, and technology trends. It is not intended to provide medical, legal, financial, or regulatory advice. Healthcare professionals and organizations should consult qualified experts when making decisions specific to their circumstances.


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References

1. Medicaid and disability advocates continue highlighting the impact of potential Medicaid reductions on vulnerable populations and community-based care services.
KFF Medicaid Policy Resources

2. Healthcare administrative burden remains a major concern for physicians and healthcare organizations seeking greater efficiency.
American Medical Association Administrative Simplification Resources

3. Federal Medicaid information and program updates provide ongoing guidance regarding coverage, eligibility, and healthcare access.
Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Medicaid Information


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♻️ If this perspective resonates, consider reposting it to help physicians, clinic owners, and healthcare leaders rethink how operational systems influence patient care.

 

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