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	<title>Comment Feed for Channel 9 - Doctor Google and Doctor Microsoft; if not them, who?</title>
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		<title>Channel 9 - Doctor Google and Doctor Microsoft; if not them, who?</title>
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	<description> The Internet is abuzz today following a New York Times&amp;nbsp;article by Steve Lohr about Microsoft&#39;s and Google&#39;s designs to change the game in healthcare.&amp;nbsp; Readers who follow this Blog will understand very well where I come down on all of this.&amp;nbsp; As a country, maintaining the status quo in our broken healthcare system (which really isn&#39;t a system at all) just isn&#39;t a viable option.&amp;nbsp; We spend about twice as much money&amp;nbsp;per capita on health than any other nation on earth, yet the US ranks far behind other&amp;nbsp;countries in many of the ways we measure the overall health status&amp;nbsp;of a population. Do I think that some kind of universal, government-run healthcare&amp;nbsp;fix is the answer to all of our problems? Absolutely not!&amp;nbsp; One of the things I have learned as I have traveled around&amp;nbsp;the world these past few years is that providing&amp;nbsp;timely, cost-effective, equitable&amp;nbsp;healthcare for an entire&amp;nbsp;population of people is&amp;nbsp;challenging&amp;nbsp;no matter what payment system is in place.&amp;nbsp; Healthcare is expensive and it doesn&#39;t matter whether&amp;nbsp;the payor is government (we pay), employers (we pay) or private citizens (again, we pay); many of&amp;nbsp;the&amp;nbsp;miracles&amp;nbsp;of modern healthcare have become&amp;nbsp;so&amp;nbsp;expensive and so out of the reach&amp;nbsp;for people of ordinary&amp;nbsp;means,&amp;nbsp;there&#39;s just not enough money in any system to&amp;nbsp;apply them&amp;nbsp;universally and&amp;nbsp;equally&amp;nbsp;to every citizen.&amp;nbsp; Therefore, healthcare always has been and always will be rationed in some way. So, if how we pay for&amp;nbsp;healthcare has flaws no matter what system is in place, we must find better ways&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;better systems&amp;nbsp;to deliver&amp;nbsp;more affordable and accessible care.&amp;nbsp; I&#39;ve taken a few hits for my positive stance on retail clinics,&amp;nbsp;home health,&amp;nbsp;patient self-service, physician-patient&amp;nbsp;e-mail,&amp;nbsp;personal tele-health services,&amp;nbsp;and other&amp;nbsp;modalities to provide health information and medical services in ways besides those that our current &amp;quot;system&amp;quot; provides.&amp;nbsp; Many of my&amp;nbsp;physician colleagues are on a war path&amp;nbsp;against&amp;nbsp;retail clinics.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;They are&amp;nbsp;calling every state legislator and pulling out&amp;nbsp;every tool in their regulatory armamentarium&amp;nbsp;in an attempt&amp;nbsp;squash the movement, but they will ultimately fail.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Prohibition doesn&#39;t work.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Retail clinics&amp;nbsp;will thrive or falter based on the quality of services they provide&amp;nbsp;and the value that their customers perceive.&amp;nbsp; The whole reason this movement has gained a&amp;nbsp;foothold&amp;nbsp;is because&amp;nbsp;medical professionals haven&#39;t been listening to their patients.&amp;nbsp; Patients want healthcare to behave like other industries.&amp;nbsp; It really doesn&#39;t matter who&#39;s paying the bill.&amp;nbsp; We are all paying the bill, and we expect more than we have been getting considering how BIG that bill has become.&amp;nbsp;  Doing something&amp;nbsp;about this will take more than coming up with new&amp;nbsp;ways to pay for healthcare as it is presently delivered.&amp;nbsp; We&amp;nbsp;need new care delivery models,&amp;nbsp;staffing models, business models,&amp;nbsp;and&amp;nbsp;a bevy of contemporary information and communication technologies to truly revolutionize American medicine.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Neither Google, nor Microsoft nor&amp;nbsp;any of the other companies mentioned in&amp;nbsp;Lohr&#39;s article can&amp;nbsp;be your doctor, nor should they be.&amp;nbsp; But these&amp;nbsp;companies can and should help us with the technologies that will be needed to change the game.&amp;nbsp; If not Microsoft or Google, then who? Bill Crounse, MD&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Worldwide Health Director&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; Microsoft </description>
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	<pubDate>Fri, 24 May 2013 01:46:12 GMT</pubDate>
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