Healthcare in a Post-COVID Era

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Healthcare in a Post-COVID Era

Healthcare workers talking in hallway 
September 10, 2021


What has COVID-19 taught the healthcare industry? This is the essential question Marty Makary, MD, MPH, will address while kicking off Virtual OR Excellence during the conference’s opening keynote on October 12 from 10:35 -11:35 a.m. ET. He'll tackle what surgical professionals should take away from the pandemic and the important role they can play moving forward in designing a more responsive, expandable, and patient-centered healthcare system.

Health care became the largest business in the United States in January 2018, according to Dr. Makary, a professor at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine & Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. “But despite spending $3 trillion dollars a year, our rigid system was unable to pivot quickly for a health emergency,” he says. “Research infrastructure, medical journals and capacity management struggled with legacy systems that could not move fast enough.”

Dr. Makary sounded the alarm on the pandemic before many believed it was going to be a problem and will discuss how he became deeply involved in fighting for preparedness, urgency, and equity during the greatest pandemic of our generation.

“COVID-19 has taught us some valuable lessons,” he says. “Our challenge will be to implement them quickly and never forget the obstacles that hurt us.” Dr. Makary will also discuss his latest book, The Price We Pay, an honest and eye-opening look at America’s damaged healthcare system, the people who are trying to fix it and a road map for Americans and business leaders to get a better deal on their health care.

The book explains how a new business model based on price gouging, middlemen and a series of elusive money games desperately needs to be revamped. In fact, Dr. Makary details how so much of healthcare spending is allocated to things that have nothing to do with patient care.

He untangles medical bills that are so confusing most doctors cannot interpret them and challenges the medical establishment to remember medicine’s noble heritage of caring for vulnerable patients. Dr. Makary is also the author of Unaccountable, a New York Times best-seller about the effort to make the nation’s healthcare system more transparent and safer for patients, which was eventually turned into a TV series called “The Resident.”

He is also the author of “Mama Maggie,” a story about one woman’s mission to love the overlooked children of Egypt’s garbage slums. Dr. Makary is one of the nation’s leading health policy experts and a frequent contributor on cable news channels. His current research focuses on the underlying causes of disease and relationship-based medicine.

Join Dr. Makary for his OR Excellence conference opening keynote session on October 12 from 10:35 a.m.- 11:35 a.m. ET. Register today for early-bird pricing through September 20.

This article originally appeared in Outpatient Surgery Magazine.

 

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