A man died last week.
He was assassinated on a sidewalk in downtown Manhattan at 7am. A family lost a husband and a father in cold, brutal fashion.
It sparked a flurry of conversation. I saw some notes of support, encouragement, sympathies. But then I noticed shocking posts shared online, containing abhorrent stuff. Like a poll questioning whether he deserved it, a majority of respondents answering 'yes,' along with some…off-color headlines from traditional media players day-of I was not expecting.
A non-zero number of people are celebrating an objectively cruel act as a win against health insurance, claiming it was deserved. This sensationalism, these posts, the assassination itself…these things are not the way to invoke change, fam. I can't believe I even have to type that out. There's a better path forward, and it doesn't involve the deaths of insurance executives.
It's okay to call out bad actors and abuses in healthcare. The business of health insurance (ahem…the business of healthcare) is rampant with them, and needs significant improvement. We've seen countless stories of unfair denials driven by AI, or shady business practices leading to delayed care. People are perfectly valid in calling out problematic practices in healthcare - whether those are from insurance, life sciences, hospitals, physicians, private equity, or any other stakeholder within.
But no, a man does not deserve to die for any of the above - it's a false equivalency:
- Thompson's Death: A tragic and unjustifiable act of violence that raises questions about the role of public outrage and its consequences.
- Health Insurance Practices: A systemic issue requiring reform to ensure patient well-being and ethical accountability.
I get it. People are angry. When you hear about systemic issues, like patients suffering or dying because of corporate decisions, it's easy to feel like someone deserves to pay for that. But let's slow down for a second and unpack this. Anger at the system is valid, but targeting an individual with violence doesn't fix the system - it just adds another tragedy to the pile.
Even if you truly believe Brian Thompson was personally responsible for harmful policies, what does killing him achieve? It doesn't bring justice to the patients who were harmed, it doesn't change the policies, and it certainly doesn't dismantle the system that allowed those policies to exist. All it does is perpetuate a cycle of violence and distract from the actual work of holding these companies accountable.
Conflating justice with vengeance just muddies the water. If we want to change the system, we've got to stay focused on solutions that don't make us complicit in the same kind of harm we're fighting against. We've got to be better than the system we're trying to fix.
The real power we have is in changing the rules of the game. Shifting the paradigm.
That means…
- Pushing for regulatory reforms;
- Supporting whistleblowers where appropriate;
- Exposing unethical practices; and
- Creating a more open, transparent discourse around what's actually happening in healthcare.
It also means stepping away from bullshit marketing fluff. Ending the constant outrage over the same high-level issues we've been complaining about for decades—and preventing grifters from building audiences off the chaos. More transparency means better data. Better reporting and understanding of how healthcare silos interact. Holding stakeholders accountable. And within your own organizations…having some integrity to do the right thing in the first place to restore public trust in healthcare institutions.
On the Role of Health Insurance
This essay isn't a defense of health insurance. You guys know I'm generally on the provider side of the equation! But I also try to recognize nuance and gray areas as much as possible to understand how the system works. And there's a simple truth in our system today: someone has to be the gatekeeper - the villain, more or less. Health insurance holds this role, and they get trashed for it - by providers, patients, and the media (and don't get me wrong - justifiably so in many instances).
Some of the stuff insurers have done on the denials front is indefensible and scummy. There's no doubt about that. But health insurance as counteracting force needs to exist in some capacity. We can differ in opinion on what the scope of that role is, and what should even be covered.
Still, whether by the government or private entities, checks and balances will never go away - and therefore neither will insurance games with patients and providers. Health insurance in any capacity works with finite resources, and they have to (ethically) weigh rising drug costs, hospital prices, flag overutilization or unnecessary care, balancing input costs all while trying to prove they're still valuable to employers or the government. And they have to do so without truly, actuarially measuring a patient's risk.
I asked a colleague to write up their thoughts on the current situation and tend to agree with this line of thinking. It holds some uncomfortable truths about healthcare, and I welcome your feedback in the replies.
The United States at its core has a healthcare price problem. Ignore the administrative costs. Ignore the higher median per capita utilization. The United States pays higher prices for everything it "consumes" (whether that be drugs, hospital admissions, testing, and more.) United States physician incomes are the highest in the world - as are every other professional service including lawyers, bankers, engineers - so we can't fixate on that.
At the bottom line, there are a litany of variables contributing to this outcome but ignoring its reality is just plain ignorant. The ACA addressed one of our country's greatest shortcomings – healthcare access. But that access came at cost… Why did preexisting condition denials exist in the first place? It probably had to do with how costly these patients were to treat. When you decide to cover expensive things (like preexisting conditions) everyone else in the risk pool must pay more (this is why premiums and out of pocket costs have exploded higher since the ACA)…
Anyway, because of the fragmented nature of the US Healthcare system, UnitedHealth Group is probably the only entity large (and sophisticated) enough to push back on price. The fact that healthcare system executives and surgeons fear UNH above everyone else (not named CMS) signals to me they are doing their job. Until we address the 80/20 reality in healthcare expenditure healthy people are going to revolt and sick people are going to pick up the tab.
We want American healthcare access at European prices. Good luck with that. European prices are cheaper because they lack American access… Nobody seems to want to accept rudimentary math anymore.
TL;DR - tradeoffs are required.
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