1. Healthcare, given that we have 325 million-plus people in the U.S. with an aging and growing population that is living longer, is a very complex problem.
2. When I hear any executive, technology person or sales person look at an audience and say, "If everyone would just use this type of coaching app for diabetes or behavioral health, we would cut billions of dollars in costs," I cringe, scoff, laugh and tend to get angry. I recently heard this in a speech I listened to.
3. Healthcare at its core is really taking care of individual patients. I see the theories behind population health and preventive health but I'm skeptical that it's a fix-all.
4. When people say there should be no fee for service, I tend to think they're representing some constituency. I assume at some level someone will still need to get paid to do something.
5. Hospitals and physicians and many providers will struggle as they become more reliant on governmental pay and as commercial patients are siphoned off. Government reimbursements will soften.
6. I'm not so dumb as to not see the irony in the campaign signs that said "get the government's hands off my Medicare."
7. Notwithstanding No. 6, whenever the government does place fingers on the scale, they are often wrong, and it often has massive unintended consequences.
8. The system costs with 325 million-plus people in the U.S. are crazy and insurance costs per family are insane.
9. Both parties are tone deaf as to the needs of the American people. Simply stated people that are poor need healthcare, and people that aren't poor need affordable healthcare. These people are both Republicans and Democrats.
10. Given the quasi-monopolies of insurance companies in certain areas and the lack of insurance options, it's likely we will need some sort of public option at some point.