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INFORMATION FOR

    “Research in Progress: The Primary Care Squeeze”

    January 15, 2026

    David Rosenthal, MD, Yale School of Medicine

    September 4, 2025

    Yale GIM Research in Progress Meeting presented by: Yale School of Medicine’s Department of Internal Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine

    ID
    13757

    Transcript

    • 00:08Okay. Well, good afternoon, everyone.
    • 00:10Welcome to the
    • 00:12new academic year.
    • 00:13Here we are.
    • 00:15There's an echo coming out
    • 00:16of my pocket.
    • 00:17Oh, that's all.
    • 00:21Figure this out here. Okay.
    • 00:24So,
    • 00:26welcome to our first research
    • 00:27in progress meeting for the
    • 00:28year. To those of you
    • 00:30here and those of you
    • 00:31online,
    • 00:33the,
    • 00:34CME code for today is
    • 00:36five four one zero two.
    • 00:37Five four
    • 00:39one zero two.
    • 00:43So mark your calendars.
    • 00:45Our retreats are
    • 00:47dates have been picked. December
    • 00:49ninth, we'll be having our
    • 00:50research and scholarship retreat on
    • 00:52the West Campus.
    • 00:54On February sixth, our professionalism
    • 00:56development retreat, led by Abba
    • 00:58Black on the West Campus.
    • 01:01And on May twenty ninth
    • 01:02of twenty twenty six,
    • 01:05our education retreat on West
    • 01:07Campus. That's a tentative date.
    • 01:09So book the first two.
    • 01:12If you're a clinic director
    • 01:14or program director, be sure
    • 01:15to
    • 01:16free up your faculty to
    • 01:17attend these retreats.
    • 01:21The other,
    • 01:22thing that won't require freeing
    • 01:24up your faculty to attend
    • 01:26is the
    • 01:27annual Yale GIM day at
    • 01:28the Yale ball. This year,
    • 01:30it's gonna be September twenty
    • 01:31seventh.
    • 01:33The Yale Bulldogs versus the
    • 01:35Cornell
    • 01:36big red.
    • 01:38And I know that, Susan
    • 01:40Kashif and, Chris Russo are
    • 01:42Cornell
    • 01:43folk. I'm not sure who
    • 01:44they'll be rooting for, but
    • 01:45they'll let us know.
    • 01:47And there are other Cornell
    • 01:48folk, on the section as
    • 01:49well. I'm quite certain.
    • 01:51Should be a great day.
    • 01:52Skybox opens at eleven o'clock.
    • 01:54Of course, families are invited,
    • 01:56and it's always fun to
    • 01:57see all the kids come.
    • 02:01Next week,
    • 02:02we're gonna have our grand
    • 02:03rounds. It's gonna focus on
    • 02:05genetic testing,
    • 02:07with two speakers here, doctor
    • 02:09Geary and doctor Healy,
    • 02:11as indicated on the,
    • 02:14slide.
    • 02:15And then,
    • 02:17at noon on next Thursday,
    • 02:18we'll we'll have our first
    • 02:20of the,
    • 02:21administrative
    • 02:23faculty and staff meetings.
    • 02:25Among other things that that
    • 02:26meeting will be introducing the
    • 02:27new faculty who just joined
    • 02:29us,
    • 02:29this year.
    • 02:32Here's our disclosure slides.
    • 02:34So David Rosenthal, a man
    • 02:36who needs no introductions, but
    • 02:37I'm gonna introduce him anyways.
    • 02:39David,
    • 02:40attended Harvard College in Northwestern
    • 02:42University.
    • 02:44Upon receiving his MD at
    • 02:46Northwestern,
    • 02:48he went on to the
    • 02:49Brigham,
    • 02:50to do his internal medicine
    • 02:51residency in their,
    • 02:53management and leadership track.
    • 02:56Fortunately for us, we snatched
    • 02:57them out of graduation and
    • 02:59brought them here to Yale,
    • 03:01where he joined us as
    • 03:02an instructor then promoted to
    • 03:03assistant professor in two thousand
    • 03:04thirteen.
    • 03:05And for,
    • 03:07ten years, he served as
    • 03:08the medical director of the
    • 03:09VA HPAC, which is the
    • 03:11homeless,
    • 03:12patient aligned care team.
    • 03:15And he did amazing job
    • 03:17addressing homelessness,
    • 03:19in veterans in Connecticut during
    • 03:20that period of time.
    • 03:23Unfortunately for us,
    • 03:25he left the full time
    • 03:26faculty in twenty twenty one,
    • 03:28during which he was chief
    • 03:29medical officer at two four
    • 03:31catalyzer companies in Guilford.
    • 03:33But fortunately,
    • 03:35once again, he joined the
    • 03:36full time faculty
    • 03:37in twenty twenty two.
    • 03:39He was subsequently promoted to
    • 03:40associate professor of medicine earlier
    • 03:42this year.
    • 03:43In addition to his roles
    • 03:44in medicine, David's careers
    • 03:47career experience spans roles in
    • 03:48technology, education, the arts, and
    • 03:50He has written on these
    • 03:51topics
    • 03:52in a variety of venues,
    • 03:53including the New England Journal
    • 03:54of Medicine,
    • 03:55JAMA Healthcare, and has published
    • 03:57his work in books and
    • 03:58other media formats.
    • 04:00His documentary
    • 04:01film entitled witnessing death, a
    • 04:03grandson's reflection on Alzheimer's
    • 04:05has been shown widely across
    • 04:06the country, and this gives
    • 04:07you a little hint that
    • 04:09David has a skill set
    • 04:10as a filmmaker. You're gonna
    • 04:12be hearing more about that
    • 04:13today with his new project.
    • 04:16So this week, he'll be
    • 04:17delivering a presentation entitled work
    • 04:19in progress,
    • 04:20the primary care squeeze. David,
    • 04:24the podium is yours.
    • 04:26Thank you very much.
    • 04:28Thank you all for coming
    • 04:29in person, and it looks
    • 04:30like we have, hopefully, a
    • 04:31bunch of people online. We
    • 04:33do indeed.
    • 04:35So really excited to be
    • 04:37here. Let's see if this
    • 04:38switches over.
    • 04:40I have a number of
    • 04:40roles and I'm really excited
    • 04:42to be back here in
    • 04:43front of a very friendly
    • 04:44audience here at Yale. I
    • 04:46have a couple of different
    • 04:47hats.
    • 04:48I will just say I
    • 04:49have a bunch of disclosures
    • 04:50as an advisor, consultant,
    • 04:52shareholder, or even an investor
    • 04:53in a bunch of things
    • 04:54that are pretty not relevant
    • 04:56to what we're gonna talk
    • 04:57about.
    • 04:58The bottom though, I do
    • 04:59get grants for this film.
    • 05:00I'm gonna show a thirty
    • 05:01minute cut from two organizations
    • 05:03I just like to highlight.
    • 05:04The Gimme a Luth Casita
    • 05:05of Greater New York and
    • 05:06the Minky Family Funds who
    • 05:08have supported this this work.
    • 05:11So the last time,
    • 05:12in front of you, this
    • 05:13group
    • 05:14was a few years ago.
    • 05:16And the two things that
    • 05:17I remember from the previous
    • 05:19ones, one was about tackling
    • 05:20the innovation chasm, where I
    • 05:22sort of was talking about
    • 05:23some of the innovation work
    • 05:24here at Yale,
    • 05:25broadly with the work that
    • 05:27we do at,
    • 05:28Center for Biomedical Innovation and
    • 05:30Technology or Yale CBET, where
    • 05:32I'm a,
    • 05:33I have a role, which
    • 05:34is now part of Yale
    • 05:35Ventures, and we do a
    • 05:36lot of hackathons.
    • 05:38And then before that, the
    • 05:39previous one was about our
    • 05:40home induction
    • 05:41buprenorphine app, which still exists,
    • 05:44for those of you who
    • 05:45are interested,
    • 05:46in learning how as a
    • 05:47clinical decision support tool for,
    • 05:50prescribing buprenorphine starting people on
    • 05:52that first seven days. It
    • 05:53still exists in the App
    • 05:54Store.
    • 05:55And,
    • 05:57you know, today, just briefly
    • 05:59I mean, I think Patrick
    • 06:00mentioned it, but just for
    • 06:02the relevant folks who don't
    • 06:03know me, you know, I
    • 06:04actually started as a documentary
    • 06:05filmmaker.
    • 06:07I was
    • 06:09fell into filmmaking at, as
    • 06:11an undergraduate at Harvard, studied
    • 06:13visual environmental studies,
    • 06:15and ended up,
    • 06:17in interviewing and doing work
    • 06:18for a documentary about my
    • 06:20grandfather and Alzheimer's.
    • 06:21Got really interested in neuroscience
    • 06:24and and medicine, and,
    • 06:26did some work in patient
    • 06:28narratives,
    • 06:29for a few years and
    • 06:30actually,
    • 06:31worked on a a a
    • 06:33book chapter about using film
    • 06:34to teach, medical ethics, which
    • 06:36is called the picture of
    • 06:37health.
    • 06:38And then,
    • 06:40this sort of meandering generalist
    • 06:42view
    • 06:44through medical school got really
    • 06:46interested in digital
    • 06:47health and IT at Northwestern
    • 06:49in Chicago. And,
    • 06:51in between med school and
    • 06:52residency, started a company called
    • 06:54Keyas with the head of
    • 06:55Google Health and then was
    • 06:56working with some of those
    • 06:57groups out in California, the
    • 06:58Journal of Participatory Medicine
    • 07:00and a group called LodgeNet.
    • 07:02And then kind of got
    • 07:03interested in primary care. You're
    • 07:04gonna see this weird journey.
    • 07:06When I went to the
    • 07:07Brigham and did some work
    • 07:08at IDEO and, Harvard Business
    • 07:10School, thinking about primary care
    • 07:12redesign and human centered design,
    • 07:15then came here,
    • 07:17thirteen years ago and, had
    • 07:19the privilege to be on
    • 07:20the faculty and join the
    • 07:21the amazing folks. Hopefully, many
    • 07:23are are joining from the
    • 07:24VA,
    • 07:25helping to really start
    • 07:28a new program,
    • 07:29the HPAC program at the
    • 07:31Arrerra Center,
    • 07:33with
    • 07:34supportive
    • 07:35faculty and supportive,
    • 07:37colleagues in primary care and
    • 07:39in mental health.
    • 07:41And,
    • 07:42I think from that, I
    • 07:43I you know, I'm trying
    • 07:44to remember what happened first.
    • 07:45There was then there was
    • 07:46COVID that happened.
    • 07:48And, there was this weird
    • 07:50time for all of us
    • 07:51about five years ago,
    • 07:54and, you know, I think
    • 07:55it was a it was
    • 07:56a change for a lot
    • 07:57of us. And for me,
    • 07:58it kinda made me rethink
    • 07:59about sort of the next
    • 08:01kind of things that I
    • 08:02wanna learn and the next
    • 08:03things for growth. And so
    • 08:04for a couple months, I
    • 08:05was working at the,
    • 08:07mayor's office. We deployed from
    • 08:09the VA to go help
    • 08:10with their COVID response, and
    • 08:11we started up this career
    • 08:13high school facility, a sixty
    • 08:15bed facility for homeless individuals
    • 08:17who are experiencing COVID in
    • 08:18a medical respite there.
    • 08:20And then when that was
    • 08:21over, I realized I couldn't
    • 08:22go back to my normal
    • 08:23job at the VA. Not
    • 08:24that I couldn't, but it
    • 08:25just things needed to evolve.
    • 08:28And so in the evolution,
    • 08:30I got recruited away to
    • 08:31this group called four catalyzer,
    • 08:33which is really focused on
    • 08:34sort of democratizing,
    • 08:36medical devices. They've got a
    • 08:38couple public companies. Butterfly Ultrasound
    • 08:40is the one that's most
    • 08:41well known. There's a new
    • 08:42one called Hyperfine, which is
    • 08:44FDA approved in our hospital,
    • 08:45which has built a portable
    • 08:47MRI product.
    • 08:48And, I'll explain I'll take
    • 08:50two seconds just before we
    • 08:51show the the the film
    • 08:53days to talk about one
    • 08:54of the projects I'm working
    • 08:55on with that group.
    • 08:57And then as Patrick said,
    • 08:59I came back. I realized
    • 09:00that doing that full time
    • 09:02in industry was not, you
    • 09:04know, going from homelessness care
    • 09:05and the VA to full
    • 09:07time industry and Wall Street
    • 09:08stuff did not,
    • 09:10sit well,
    • 09:11internally with my value system,
    • 09:12and so I have come
    • 09:13back.
    • 09:14And so, you know, for
    • 09:15the last really, two and
    • 09:17a half years back on
    • 09:17the faculty or three years,
    • 09:19I've sort of had this,
    • 09:20what I call as a
    • 09:21portfolio approach to career where
    • 09:23I'm seeing patients at Cornell
    • 09:24Scott,
    • 09:25with residents and in the
    • 09:26hospital here at York Street
    • 09:27as well as at the
    • 09:28VA,
    • 09:29and doing some work as
    • 09:30an investor at a group
    • 09:31called AllyCorp,
    • 09:33which is a venture
    • 09:34capital company in New York.
    • 09:36And then, for the last
    • 09:37three years, I'll I'll talk
    • 09:38about the work I'm doing
    • 09:39at the Aspen Institute, and
    • 09:40that's what this talk is
    • 09:41gonna be about, that venture.
    • 09:43Okay. So just a quick
    • 09:45update, and then I'm gonna
    • 09:45get to the film in
    • 09:46a second here on the
    • 09:47medical device work. So how
    • 09:48it started was seven years
    • 09:50ago through
    • 09:51the CBIT hackathon. You can
    • 09:52see there. I'm a part
    • 09:53of this group called IAI,
    • 09:55which we won second place
    • 09:56at the hackathon for an
    • 09:58idea about using the retina
    • 09:59as a new platform for
    • 10:00biomarker
    • 10:01development.
    • 10:03We won a little bit
    • 10:03of a check. And if
    • 10:04you can see interestingly in
    • 10:05the corner of that screen,
    • 10:07the front the, over here,
    • 10:09it's for catalyzer. And so
    • 10:10I met one of the
    • 10:11folks,
    • 10:13ended up realizing that we
    • 10:14couldn't start a company here
    • 10:15within Yale, and so we
    • 10:17ended up starting that company
    • 10:18outside of Yale through the
    • 10:19Fort Catalyzer network.
    • 10:21And we were able to
    • 10:22raise a lot of money
    • 10:23in twenty twenty one. So
    • 10:24we raised twenty eighty million
    • 10:25dollars for that company
    • 10:27at that time, and I
    • 10:28joined as when I joined
    • 10:29as a chief medical officer.
    • 10:31And I'll just mention it
    • 10:32only because how it's going
    • 10:33last week. Little plug, and
    • 10:35I have to be careful
    • 10:35of my conflicts of interest
    • 10:37that we did launch our
    • 10:38retinal screening platform for diabetic
    • 10:39retinopathy last week.
    • 10:41So if anybody's interested,
    • 10:43I will say they are
    • 10:44actively looking for implementation partners
    • 10:46for diabetic retinopathy screening in
    • 10:48primary care settings.
    • 10:49For conflict of interest reasons,
    • 10:50I need to stay at
    • 10:51arm's length, but this is
    • 10:52the device that we created.
    • 10:55And it's a, FDA cleared
    • 10:56medical device.
    • 10:58And you can reach out
    • 10:59to the CEO, Vicky, who's
    • 11:01wonderful.
    • 11:02Last little plug is, on
    • 11:04September twenty fifth, for those
    • 11:05people who are interested through
    • 11:06Yale Ventures and CBIIT, we
    • 11:07have our Yale Health
    • 11:09Tech pitch night,
    • 11:11which is coming up at
    • 11:12one zero one College Street.
    • 11:13This is a picture from
    • 11:14last year. You're gonna scan
    • 11:16those cards. There's a couple
    • 11:17different activities we have throughout
    • 11:19the fall.
    • 11:20But if anyone wants to
    • 11:21pitch, they can reach out
    • 11:22to Michelle Nantel.
    • 11:24And these are quick pitches,
    • 11:25three minute pitches of an
    • 11:27idea and looking for help.
    • 11:28Right? I need help. I
    • 11:29need business school folks. I
    • 11:31need engineers to help build
    • 11:32an idea.
    • 11:33I have an idea. I
    • 11:34have a pain point. I'd
    • 11:35like someone to help me
    • 11:36solve it. And that's and
    • 11:37we have a lot of
    • 11:37students who come to that
    • 11:38to come help. So and
    • 11:40then we have our large
    • 11:41health care hackathon in January.
    • 11:43Okay.
    • 11:44So today, I'm gonna talk
    • 11:45about something very different.
    • 11:47In some ways, I'm gonna
    • 11:48go back to our my
    • 11:49original roots as a filmmaker
    • 11:51because because I still haven't
    • 11:51lost that, and I'll explain.
    • 11:53So the learning objectives are
    • 11:54quickly to just talk about
    • 11:55the historical and structural factors
    • 11:57contributing to the underinvestment in
    • 11:59primary care, which I think
    • 12:00will be relevant to this
    • 12:02group, deconstruct the strategies employed
    • 12:03to translate a complex bureaucratic
    • 12:05and often opaque health care
    • 12:07system into an engaging and
    • 12:08accessible film noir narrative,
    • 12:10and maybe analyze a documentary's
    • 12:12role as an investigative tool
    • 12:13and a catalyst for systemic
    • 12:15change,
    • 12:16aiming beyond mere information dissemination
    • 12:18influence public perception and policy.
    • 12:20And so the origin of
    • 12:21this was a confluence of
    • 12:22three things. One was I
    • 12:23was doing this Aspen Institute,
    • 12:26fellowship venture project.
    • 12:28So as part of this
    • 12:28fellowship, I had to come
    • 12:29up with something that was
    • 12:30uniquely something that I was
    • 12:32interested in and skilled at
    • 12:33and passionate about.
    • 12:35It could be a for
    • 12:36profit, a nonprofit, could be
    • 12:37an arts thing.
    • 12:38And through that
    • 12:40making process or thinking process,
    • 12:42I realized I had to
    • 12:43do a film.
    • 12:45That was something that I
    • 12:46still sort of I feel
    • 12:47like is an important way
    • 12:48to disseminate information in a
    • 12:50unique way.
    • 12:51It's also I have a
    • 12:53deep friendship,
    • 12:54with I'll talk about in
    • 12:55a second with, and then
    • 12:56three important publications that are
    • 12:58relevant.
    • 12:59So first was this Aspen
    • 13:00Institute HIF Fellowship or the
    • 13:01Health Innovations Fellowship. So I
    • 13:03was in the class six,
    • 13:05go sixers from twenty twenty
    • 13:06two to twenty twenty four.
    • 13:07The only, I think, other
    • 13:09Yale person who's in the
    • 13:10fellowship was, Megan Rainey, who's
    • 13:12now the dean here at
    • 13:14Public Health School.
    • 13:15And it's a pretty amazing
    • 13:16group of people. There's about
    • 13:18a hundred and fifty of
    • 13:18us now around the country,
    • 13:20a network that's really doing
    • 13:21incredible work all over the
    • 13:23place.
    • 13:24And so I mentioned the
    • 13:25venture that we needed to
    • 13:27create as well, and so
    • 13:28that was the impetus for
    • 13:30this film.
    • 13:32This deep twenty five year
    • 13:33friendship that I've had with
    • 13:34a a friend of mine
    • 13:35and a filmmaker collaborator who's
    • 13:37a professor,
    • 13:38associate professor at Miami University
    • 13:40in Ohio, he and I
    • 13:42started making films together, at
    • 13:44Harvard,
    • 13:45in film classes. We then
    • 13:46worked together as a film
    • 13:47production company a little bit
    • 13:48after college.
    • 13:50We made a TV pilot
    • 13:51for a travel channel,
    • 13:53and he does tremendous documentary
    • 13:55work,
    • 13:57Really sort of interesting things
    • 13:59around performative
    • 14:00documentaries and reenactments,
    • 14:02and that will come up
    • 14:03in the film that you
    • 14:04will see the preview.
    • 14:06And we had been noodling
    • 14:08on ideas that we said
    • 14:09we, you know, he doesn't
    • 14:10know anything about health care
    • 14:11except that it costs a
    • 14:12lot.
    • 14:13And then there were these
    • 14:14three important publications that kept
    • 14:16coming back into my, into
    • 14:18the brain and and one
    • 14:19is Elizabeth Rosenthal's An American
    • 14:21Sickness,
    • 14:22which is how health care
    • 14:23became big business and how
    • 14:24you can take it back.
    • 14:26The other is this book
    • 14:27that most people haven't heard
    • 14:28of, which is fixing medical
    • 14:29prices, how physicians are paid,
    • 14:32by Miriam Logison, who's at,
    • 14:34public is at Columbia on
    • 14:35faculty.
    • 14:36And then more recently,
    • 14:38a publication in twenty twenty
    • 14:39one that kinda got buried
    • 14:41in its announcement because it
    • 14:42was COVID time by the
    • 14:44National Academy,
    • 14:46called Implementing High Quality Primary
    • 14:48Care,
    • 14:49Rebuilding the Foundation of Health
    • 14:51Care. And,
    • 14:53you know, it came to
    • 14:53this idea that, you know,
    • 14:55as a primary care doc
    • 14:56and for most of the
    • 14:56folks in this room who
    • 14:57are doing general internal medicine,
    • 15:00it comes down to this
    • 15:01idea of, like, how do
    • 15:02what do we value in
    • 15:03health care?
    • 15:04And,
    • 15:06I was walking one day
    • 15:07next to Smilow Cancer Center
    • 15:08right out front, and you
    • 15:10look at this beautiful building,
    • 15:12gorgeous,
    • 15:13right? Glass,
    • 15:14beautiful building
    • 15:16that we have constructed for
    • 15:19folks who are experiencing cancer.
    • 15:21And then you look literally
    • 15:22across the street at the
    • 15:23Connecticut Mental Health Center,
    • 15:26and you see that.
    • 15:27And you just say, what
    • 15:29are we valuing?
    • 15:30What have we done in
    • 15:32this country, and what is
    • 15:33the underlying reason for that
    • 15:35structural
    • 15:36difference. And when you start
    • 15:37asking five levels deep, why
    • 15:38does this happen and why
    • 15:39does this happen and why
    • 15:41is that the case?
    • 15:43You get to some really
    • 15:44uncomfortable conclusions.
    • 15:46And that's what this documentary
    • 15:48is about.
    • 15:50And I was in many
    • 15:50ways inspired by,
    • 15:52Al Gore's work in An
    • 15:53Inconvenient Truth
    • 15:55because
    • 15:56what wasn't a really wonky
    • 15:58film, something that's really kinda
    • 15:59hard policy to digest, he
    • 16:01made it very,
    • 16:03translatable and digestible by a
    • 16:04general public and audience.
    • 16:06So
    • 16:07with that said, that's the
    • 16:09point of this film.
    • 16:10I'm gonna just show real
    • 16:11quick. This is rough cut.
    • 16:13I literally got it this
    • 16:14at twelve fifteen in the
    • 16:16morning last night from my
    • 16:17from my friend Andy in
    • 16:18Ohio.
    • 16:19It represents some ideas we're
    • 16:21working on. I'd love any
    • 16:23gut reactions, good, bad, ugly,
    • 16:25clear, unclear.
    • 16:26There's gonna be rough things
    • 16:27that you're gonna see, some
    • 16:28black stuff, you know, in
    • 16:29terms of, like, cuts and
    • 16:30jump cuts. The goal is
    • 16:32to handle a wonky topic,
    • 16:33educate a little, entertain a
    • 16:35little bit, but definitely, we
    • 16:37want the general audience to
    • 16:38care.
    • 16:40We've done this with about
    • 16:41eighteen thousand dollars,
    • 16:42money. We've filmed about a
    • 16:44hundred hours so far over
    • 16:45the last two years,
    • 16:47and we're gonna show about
    • 16:48thirty minutes. We think it's
    • 16:49gonna be probably ninety minutes
    • 16:50eventually when it's done. We're
    • 16:51not sure. It could be
    • 16:52longer. It could be a
    • 16:53docuseries. But, anyway,
    • 16:56that's what I'm gonna do.
    • 16:57So I'm gonna stop and
    • 16:58switch over,
    • 16:59and, hopefully, you'll be a
    • 17:00little entertained here. So so
    • 17:01if I share screen,
    • 17:05I'll go replace
    • 17:06current share
    • 17:08with time player.
    • 17:11Okay. And, hopefully thank you
    • 17:13so much.
    • 17:14This shall work.
    • 17:17Alright. And, actually, can we
    • 17:18dim the lights in here?
    • 17:20We can't.
    • 17:21We can turn them off.
    • 17:22Stop share. What's that? Stop
    • 17:24share. Stop share for a
    • 17:25second. Okay.
    • 17:26Then share. Yep.
    • 17:29For sure.
    • 17:31There we go. Okay.
    • 17:33Yeah. The lights. Okay. Here
    • 17:35we go.
    • 17:37It's a good day in
    • 17:38New Haven, Connecticut.
    • 17:41I'm a primary care doctor
    • 17:43who teaches at Yale Medical
    • 17:44School.
    • 17:45And today,
    • 17:46I get to see my
    • 17:47students become doctors.
    • 17:49So this is the town
    • 17:50green of New Haven.
    • 17:52A lot of our patients
    • 17:53will go here because it's
    • 17:54a safe space, certainly at
    • 17:55night, during the day,
    • 17:57to be around other people.
    • 17:59For the past decade, I've
    • 18:00been a primary care doctor
    • 18:02for veterans experiencing homelessness
    • 18:04and now care for a
    • 18:05diverse population of adults at
    • 18:07a federally qualified health center
    • 18:08in Connecticut.
    • 18:11The US needs more doctors,
    • 18:13especially those who choose to
    • 18:14work in primary care.
    • 18:16We're often the first doctors
    • 18:18you see when you get
    • 18:19sick, need a vaccine,
    • 18:21or when you or your
    • 18:22loved one needs help managing
    • 18:24complex problems over time.
    • 18:26We build relationships with patients
    • 18:27over years.
    • 18:29Move down, move down, move
    • 18:30down.
    • 18:32Ideally, about fifty percent or
    • 18:34more of these a hundred
    • 18:35and three talented students would
    • 18:37go into primary care fields.
    • 18:38I need a couple of
    • 18:39people to
    • 18:41Thank you. Yeah. Nice to
    • 18:42see you. So nice to
    • 18:43see you so much for
    • 18:43doing this. For you. But
    • 18:45this year, there are only
    • 18:46three going into primary care
    • 18:47fields, Lina and Akhil here
    • 18:49and Jessica. So I'm Jessica
    • 18:50Cedrena. I'm originally from North
    • 18:52Jersey, right outside New York
    • 18:53City, and I am going
    • 18:54into family medicine at Middlesex
    • 18:55Hospital. And there's so much
    • 18:57of a need for primary
    • 18:58care physicians. In family medicine,
    • 18:59I feel so convinced. It's
    • 19:00just like the heart and
    • 19:02soul. We get to see
    • 19:04babies when they're born. We
    • 19:05get to care for moms
    • 19:06when they're producing those babies.
    • 19:07We get to see older
    • 19:09folks when they're, you know,
    • 19:10at the end of their
    • 19:11life. I think we all
    • 19:12come in bright eyed and
    • 19:13bushy tailed to some degree.
    • 19:15I think we all have
    • 19:16some sort of sobering exposure
    • 19:17to the medical system. But
    • 19:18to see it play out
    • 19:19in the hospital can be
    • 19:20can be really disheartening.
    • 19:22The reason isn't exactly a
    • 19:23mystery.
    • 19:25I actually remember having a
    • 19:26resident in the clinic who
    • 19:27said, I love this. I
    • 19:28will do this, but I
    • 19:29have two hundred fifty thousand
    • 19:31dollars in debt.
    • 19:32The students were actually making
    • 19:33a rational choice.
    • 19:35They were seeing
    • 19:37how hard it is to
    • 19:38do primary care well
    • 19:40in the current environment.
    • 19:42They were
    • 19:44seeing that other choices,
    • 19:46choices of other specialties could
    • 19:47lead them to a career
    • 19:48with more prestige
    • 19:50and certainly more money. There's
    • 19:52this story in here or
    • 19:53a lesson in here for
    • 19:54gender equity, but beyond that,
    • 19:55it actually says a lot
    • 19:56about how backwards and and
    • 19:59insufficient fee for service payment
    • 20:00is. Right? Because not just
    • 20:02women, all PCPs, all doctors
    • 20:04want more time with their
    • 20:05patients.
    • 20:07Residents are often,
    • 20:09placed into situations where they
    • 20:12are caring for really complex
    • 20:14patients both medically and biopsychosocially,
    • 20:17and oftentimes with limited
    • 20:19resources.
    • 20:20The National Academy of Sciences,
    • 20:22Engineering, and Medicine committee thought
    • 20:24a lot about whether there
    • 20:26was even a need for
    • 20:27another primary care report. There
    • 20:29had been one
    • 20:30in nineteen ninety six. It
    • 20:32had thirty something recommendations.
    • 20:35Very little had been implemented
    • 20:37from the report.
    • 20:38And the bigger structural problems
    • 20:40aren't exactly a mystery either.
    • 20:43Costa Rica
    • 20:44has a single public payer,
    • 20:47spends about nine hundred dollars
    • 20:48per person per year on
    • 20:50health care.
    • 20:52And they have a life
    • 20:53expectancy
    • 20:54of eighty one or eighty
    • 20:55two, which is way higher
    • 20:57than the US,
    • 20:59that spends about twelve thousand
    • 21:00a year on health care
    • 21:02per person.
    • 21:04But given that so many
    • 21:05other countries have figured out
    • 21:06how to provide health care
    • 21:07more effectively for less money,
    • 21:10the question is why? Why
    • 21:11does the US pay five
    • 21:12thousand dollars per person more
    • 21:14than any other wealthy country
    • 21:16for results that consistently rank
    • 21:17around thirtieth?
    • 21:19I was gonna build a
    • 21:20new primary care practice from
    • 21:22scratch.
    • 21:23As we grew, we started
    • 21:24getting a little press coverage.
    • 21:25And then, maybe as not
    • 21:28unexpectedly,
    • 21:29we started getting opposition.
    • 21:31I got a call from
    • 21:32the CEO of the health
    • 21:33plan that they wanted to
    • 21:34meet with me and said,
    • 21:35we hear about this practice
    • 21:36you're doing. Yeah. I don't
    • 21:38like it. I was like,
    • 21:39why?
    • 21:40And he said, well, patients
    • 21:41might think
    • 21:42you're working for them and
    • 21:44not for me.
    • 21:47And while health care is
    • 21:48complicated, it turns out that
    • 21:50the answer might not be.
    • 21:52We just need to follow
    • 21:53the
    • 21:54money. And now the problem
    • 21:55with Medicare,
    • 21:56in general, it's got a
    • 21:57fee schedule. It's fee for
    • 21:59service. And that fee schedule
    • 22:00is set by congress, a
    • 22:01thing called the RUC. And
    • 22:02by the way, it completely
    • 22:03undervalues primary care. Have you
    • 22:05heard of the RUC? No.
    • 22:06No. No. Do you know
    • 22:07what the RUC is? Have
    • 22:08you heard of the RUC?
    • 22:08I have not heard of
    • 22:09the Ruck. Okay. Alright. Imagine
    • 22:11that's next in my residency.
    • 22:12Have you heard of something
    • 22:13called the Ruck?
    • 22:15No. I haven't heard of
    • 22:16the Ruck. What's the Ruck?
    • 22:18That committee has a lot
    • 22:19of power.
    • 22:19The Ruck is a secretive
    • 22:22committee of the AMA
    • 22:24that has thirty one members,
    • 22:26and twenty six of them
    • 22:27are specialists and the other
    • 22:29five are primary care.
    • 22:31They said, we'll we'll put
    • 22:32together this group for you,
    • 22:34and we'll figure out the
    • 22:35value of every medical procedure
    • 22:38with a coefficient that became
    • 22:40relative value units.
    • 22:42Do the multiplication
    • 22:44and that's how you get
    • 22:44the money. It became a
    • 22:46horse trading operation.
    • 22:48It's completely opaque.
    • 22:50You can't attend a meeting.
    • 22:53And if you do attend
    • 22:54a meeting, you've got to
    • 22:55sign a nondisclosure
    • 22:56agreement that you can never
    • 22:58talk about anything that happened
    • 22:59at the meeting.
    • 23:00It's a star chain. Be
    • 23:02because of the structure of
    • 23:03it, it adds about a
    • 23:04trillion dollars a year extra.
    • 23:07And the goal is to
    • 23:08get people around primary care
    • 23:10directly to the more lucrative
    • 23:12services
    • 23:13in the specialties
    • 23:14specialty sector. What is a
    • 23:16star chamber?
    • 23:17Or A star chamber is
    • 23:19a small group of people
    • 23:21who who have control
    • 23:23invisibly
    • 23:24over an immense operation.
    • 23:26And this is why nobody
    • 23:28else in the world can
    • 23:29understand why the American
    • 23:31system is built like it
    • 23:33is.
    • 23:34It's just because it's crazy.
    • 24:26Where's the other part to
    • 24:27the if this is trachea
    • 24:29or is it the bronchus?
    • 24:30I won't see the rest
    • 24:32of it. That's okay.
    • 24:35How was your night?
    • 24:37Yes. Why do we start
    • 24:38every day with the same
    • 24:40words? Can you guys say
    • 24:41it with me? Ready? Today.
    • 24:43Today.
    • 24:44Today. Not tomorrow.
    • 24:46Thank you.
    • 24:47Hi, everybody. You can call
    • 24:48me doctor Jazz. I am
    • 24:50a pediatrician,
    • 24:51and I'm excited to share
    • 24:52with you guys today all
    • 24:53about the respiratory system. When
    • 24:55I think about Black MedConnect,
    • 24:56I think more of the
    • 24:58pre meds, medical students, and
    • 25:00upwards, you know, residents, fellows,
    • 25:01attendings. But iDream is all
    • 25:03about the younger generation. So
    • 25:05college students, high school students,
    • 25:07getting them excited about health
    • 25:08care.
    • 25:09One thing is missing is
    • 25:10there's a lack of role
    • 25:11models.
    • 25:12When you don't have enough
    • 25:14black and brown professionals around,
    • 25:15that means communities
    • 25:17don't necessarily have role models
    • 25:18to show the younger generation
    • 25:20what it's like to be
    • 25:20in medicine.
    • 25:22Exactly. So we got a
    • 25:23dilemma going on. Right?
    • 25:25Michelle was just going to
    • 25:26visit family.
    • 25:28A new cat shows up,
    • 25:30and now she's having trouble
    • 25:31breathing. Right? What do we
    • 25:32think is going on?
    • 25:35She
    • 25:37allergic to cats. Here we
    • 25:37go. She's allergic to cats.
    • 25:38That's what
    • 25:40it sounds like. That's what
    • 25:40it sounds like. Sounds like
    • 25:42a.
    • 25:43I'm trying to keep listening.
    • 25:44Yeah. See what's going on.
    • 25:49Y'all hear that?
    • 25:51That's what it sounds like.
    • 25:53It sounds like an elephant.
    • 25:55Right? Yeah. Very
    • 25:57really rough sound. Right?
    • 26:01What's the name of that
    • 26:02sound? We already talked about
    • 26:03it a little bit. Go
    • 26:04ahead.
    • 26:05It's wheezing. Right? That weird
    • 26:07whistling noise,
    • 26:09that's wheezing.
    • 26:10Right? And
    • 26:11why is Michelle short of
    • 26:13breath and wheezing?
    • 26:14She was diagnosed with a
    • 26:16asthma attack.
    • 26:18I'll tell you a little
    • 26:19secret. That's Michelle is me.
    • 26:22My auntie had a cat
    • 26:23that she brought home for
    • 26:24Christmas, and then I got
    • 26:26sick and had to go
    • 26:26to the hospital. Right? This
    • 26:28is how I found out
    • 26:29I had asthma.
    • 26:30And so some patients find
    • 26:32out when they're really little,
    • 26:34some patients find out a
    • 26:35little bit older, but ultimately,
    • 26:37the coughing and the wheezing
    • 26:38and the shortness of breath
    • 26:40is what really challenged my
    • 26:41asthma. Does anybody here have
    • 26:42asthma? Do you mind sharing?
    • 26:44Being with an asthmatic, I
    • 26:46remember missing about a week
    • 26:47of school, almost every year
    • 26:49for a while in elementary
    • 26:50school. So being home with,
    • 26:52you know, nebulizer treatments every
    • 26:54few hours, my parents were
    • 26:56being respiratory therapists and didn't
    • 26:58know it.
    • 26:59And so, for me, that
    • 27:01really connected me to
    • 27:02the pediatricians, and that's why
    • 27:04I chose pediatrics because I
    • 27:05knew they have a huge
    • 27:07impact on kids. They really
    • 27:08do. It doesn't feel so
    • 27:09good. You had a you
    • 27:11have asthma too? Tell me
    • 27:12what it feels like for
    • 27:13you. It kinda feels like
    • 27:15something's clogged kinda in my
    • 27:17throat.
    • 27:17Mhmm. And and it feels
    • 27:20weird.
    • 27:21It does. Right? Like, your
    • 27:22airways and narrow Wanna be
    • 27:23a pediatrician
    • 27:25because I like kids.
    • 27:27And,
    • 27:29and I don't really wanna
    • 27:30be, like a surgeon because
    • 27:31it would scare me.
    • 27:34So now we're gonna use
    • 27:35our stethoscope. Who's who's fair
    • 27:37enough?
    • 27:38We're gonna listen to each
    • 27:39other's lungs. Okay?
    • 27:42As an African American woman
    • 27:43seeing, you know, the disparities
    • 27:45in health, always wanted to
    • 27:47think about how can we
    • 27:48improve upon those, and I
    • 27:49think
    • 27:50increasing the diversity within the
    • 27:51workforce is one way in
    • 27:52which to do that.
    • 27:54I worry that, especially with
    • 27:56even urban and rural, that's
    • 27:58a huge thing. There's a
    • 27:59lot of rural counties that
    • 28:00don't have enough primary care.
    • 28:03I think some of the
    • 28:04solutions to that are making
    • 28:05sure you're reaching back into
    • 28:06those communities at a young
    • 28:08age, hence I dream to,
    • 28:09like, get them excited about
    • 28:11medicine. And a lot of
    • 28:12times, they wanna return to
    • 28:14their communities because they know
    • 28:15the disparities that exist there.
    • 28:17Oh my god. Hard. Sounds
    • 28:19weird?
    • 28:20Yes.
    • 28:46Nice out. So in here,
    • 28:47we got to see all
    • 28:48of the Medical College of
    • 28:49Georgia. Yes. Okay. CPC was
    • 28:51started thirty years ago, and
    • 28:53we have grown to, I
    • 28:54wanna say, eight offices.
    • 28:56We are the primary care
    • 28:58provider for this area.
    • 29:00The building and the layout
    • 29:01was sort of the brainchild
    • 29:03of my dad's.
    • 29:05How many providers
    • 29:07of these? Thirty ish. Thirty
    • 29:09ish? Mhmm. In this space
    • 29:11or across No. No. No.
    • 29:12Across all the offices, eight
    • 29:13offices. So we're in, the
    • 29:15CSRA, which encompasses north and,
    • 29:17North Augusta,
    • 29:19South Augusta.
    • 29:21So we're in South Carolina
    • 29:22and Georgia and all the
    • 29:22spaces in between. Okay. Yeah.
    • 29:24Which I guess was, like,
    • 29:25almost fifty thousand maybe. That's
    • 29:26a lot of people. Okay.
    • 29:27That's a lot of people.
    • 29:29As a kid, I,
    • 29:31was employed at CBC.
    • 29:33I did filing a patient
    • 29:35charts back when we had
    • 29:36paper charts.
    • 29:38I wrote the newsletter. So
    • 29:39it's what is sun care?
    • 29:41How do you look for
    • 29:42skin cancer?
    • 29:43Yeah. I've basically grew up
    • 29:45in this clinic. I've known
    • 29:47people here for a very
    • 29:48long time. It's funny when
    • 29:49I have patients who used
    • 29:51to see dad who see
    • 29:52me now,
    • 29:54because they will call me
    • 29:55Shereen, but to them, I'm
    • 29:57doctor Moore.
    • 29:58But, you know,
    • 30:00he told them about my
    • 30:01potty training and when I
    • 30:02went to college and all
    • 30:03these sort of things. So
    • 30:04they have a long history
    • 30:06of who I was before
    • 30:07I was doctor Moore. So
    • 30:14Around the dinner table,
    • 30:16we,
    • 30:18play difficult diagnosis every night.
    • 30:20You know, and this is
    • 30:21a thirty seven year old
    • 30:23woman that comes in complaining
    • 30:24of,
    • 30:25being tired all the time.
    • 30:27And
    • 30:28it was just fun to,
    • 30:32see her develop as a
    • 30:34diagnostician.
    • 30:35But, you know, after she
    • 30:37was
    • 30:38in high school, she was
    • 30:39making all these, you know,
    • 30:42great
    • 30:56which
    • 30:57would be I think,
    • 30:59an unusual thing to figure
    • 31:01out, you know, in high
    • 31:02school.
    • 31:06Do you have a shirt
    • 31:07that says I suit the
    • 31:08rock?
    • 31:08Do you have that here?
    • 31:10Do you have that here?
    • 31:11No. I have four of
    • 31:12them. You have four of
    • 31:12them. You can take one
    • 31:13off. To see one.
    • 31:15I mean, I have a
    • 31:16lot of show and tell
    • 31:17things we
    • 31:19Oh, man.
    • 31:25Somewhere.
    • 31:27I ended up in court
    • 31:28with RJ Reynolds for two
    • 31:30and a half, three years.
    • 31:32At the time, my,
    • 31:34son was about three
    • 31:36and I took him out
    • 31:37to dinner one day and
    • 31:39he was taking his straw
    • 31:41and playing with it and
    • 31:42he pretended to smoke it
    • 31:43and I said, what are
    • 31:44you doing? And he said,
    • 31:45dad, when I grow up,
    • 31:46I wanna be a man.
    • 31:47I wanna drive fast cars
    • 31:48and I wanna smoke cigarettes.
    • 31:50And in my mind, that
    • 31:52really crystallized,
    • 31:54something that I had never
    • 31:55thought about before because most
    • 31:57of our research had been
    • 31:58looking at teenagers.
    • 32:00The two biggest studies that
    • 32:02we did, one was where
    • 32:03we used eye tracking and
    • 32:04we had children looking at,
    • 32:06advertisements.
    • 32:08And in particular, did they
    • 32:09look at the surgeon general's
    • 32:10warning or not?
    • 32:12That pretty conclusively showed that
    • 32:13the warnings were ineffective.
    • 32:16Most people would have guessed
    • 32:17that, but it was the
    • 32:18first time that it was
    • 32:19documented in a really thorough
    • 32:21way.
    • 32:21The other tobacco study that
    • 32:23got a lot of attention
    • 32:24was we had
    • 32:26three, four, and five year
    • 32:27old children play a game,
    • 32:31match logos from products
    • 32:33with the products themselves.
    • 32:38Most amazing children as young
    • 32:41as three were able to
    • 32:42match the old joke character
    • 32:44with a cigarette and by
    • 32:46age,
    • 32:47five, they were universally able
    • 32:49to make that match And
    • 32:50that was equivalent
    • 32:52to their ability to match
    • 32:53the Disney logos with, Mickey
    • 32:55Mouse.
    • 32:57That led to a great,
    • 33:00deal of attention
    • 33:05And eventually to the lawsuit
    • 33:07against the tobacco industry.
    • 33:10The tobacco industry came after
    • 33:12me and and the research.
    • 33:16The medical school
    • 33:17felt they were obligated to
    • 33:19do what the attorney general
    • 33:20for the state of Georgia
    • 33:21told them to do, which
    • 33:22was to side with the
    • 33:23tobacco company rather than me.
    • 33:26And that was pretty uncomfortable
    • 33:28time for me, and I
    • 33:29decided that I would leave
    • 33:31the medical school. So Augusta
    • 33:33was a community that needed,
    • 33:35primary care, and I said,
    • 33:37I'm a primary care doctor.
    • 33:38I can do that. So
    • 33:39I opened up a solo
    • 33:40practice.
    • 33:42Being a family doctor or
    • 33:44primary care doctor is one
    • 33:45of the most rewarding things
    • 33:46in the world to do.
    • 33:47I mean, I still hear
    • 33:48from my patients. I mean,
    • 33:50as when you care for
    • 33:51people for a long time,
    • 33:52save their life. You know,
    • 33:53I've saved many people's lives.
    • 33:57And they I mean, clearly,
    • 33:58I know it. They know
    • 33:59it. Their family knows it.
    • 34:01And so those are kind
    • 34:02of relationships that,
    • 34:06go on forever. I mean,
    • 34:07I got a whole stack
    • 34:08of letters and cards when
    • 34:10I left practice.
    • 34:14Dad, mom, and I are
    • 34:15forever grateful for the care
    • 34:17you have provided us over
    • 34:18the last twenty five plus
    • 34:19years.
    • 34:21You have been my physician
    • 34:22for eight years, and I'm
    • 34:23not sure many people can
    • 34:24say this, but I enjoy
    • 34:26going to the doctor.
    • 34:27You have always been precise,
    • 34:29kind, and compassionate to our
    • 34:30family. We are thankful for
    • 34:32your treatment, care, and advice
    • 34:34during the past twenty years.
    • 34:36I can't believe eighteen years
    • 34:38have passed with you as
    • 34:39my physician, The best doctor
    • 34:41anyone could have. You have
    • 34:42been a great listener, guide,
    • 34:44doctor, and more.
    • 34:46You are the epitome of
    • 34:47what we call the old
    • 34:48time doctor. Your immediate attention
    • 34:50and referral for doing a
    • 34:52stress test were instrumental in
    • 34:53saving my life.
    • 34:55I appreciated your advice or
    • 34:57sometimes drastic help, like doctor's
    • 34:59hospital two thousand seven to
    • 35:01ER with sepsis pneumonia that
    • 35:03you detected and saved my
    • 35:05life. It was you who
    • 35:06diagnosed my myeloma
    • 35:08and referred me to doctor
    • 35:09Hudson for treatment.
    • 35:11Thank you for saving my
    • 35:12life. Thank you for being
    • 35:13our doctor and friend.
    • 35:17People wanna be family doctors.
    • 35:19They love
    • 35:20taking care of patients. They
    • 35:21love being loved by their
    • 35:23patients. If it wasn't for
    • 35:24that, in America, nobody would
    • 35:26be a primary care doctor.
    • 35:28I've been practicing medicine thirty
    • 35:30years before I I heard
    • 35:31of the RUC,
    • 35:32and that whole time, I
    • 35:34felt and understood
    • 35:37the fact that primary care
    • 35:39was
    • 35:40not a valued service in
    • 35:42our health care system.
    • 35:44I was at a CDC
    • 35:46meeting, and one of the
    • 35:48speakers was Brian Klepper.
    • 35:50He talked about the rock.
    • 35:53And I just said, this
    • 35:54is this is wrong.
    • 35:57We decided to sue
    • 35:59Medicare
    • 36:01for basing these decisions on
    • 36:03the RUC.
    • 36:04We were turned down not
    • 36:06because we didn't have a
    • 36:07good argument, because they claimed
    • 36:08that we didn't have any
    • 36:09standing.
    • 36:12I figured the tobacco industry,
    • 36:13you know, is the big
    • 36:14evil force in America there
    • 36:15for a while that if
    • 36:17you could take them on
    • 36:18and win, you could certainly
    • 36:19take on the AMA and
    • 36:20the Ruck.
    • 36:23The tobacco industry was small
    • 36:24stuff in comparison.
    • 36:29So here are the rules
    • 36:31the economic rules of the
    • 36:32dysfunctional medical market. Number one,
    • 36:36more treatment is always better
    • 36:38default to the most expensive
    • 36:40treatment option.
    • 36:43Number two,
    • 36:44a lifetime of treatment is
    • 36:46preferable to a cure.
    • 36:48Number three,
    • 36:50amenities and marketing matter more
    • 36:52than good care.
    • 36:56In the nineties, if you
    • 36:57had insurance,
    • 36:58there weren't co pays, there
    • 37:00weren't deductibles,
    • 37:01your premiums were mostly paid
    • 37:03by your employer,
    • 37:04and you were
    • 37:06fine. And then everything had
    • 37:07gone haywire.
    • 37:12I needed to have my
    • 37:13first colonoscopy,
    • 37:15and I thought that should
    • 37:16be simple.
    • 37:17So I went to my
    • 37:18HR department. They said,
    • 37:20just go somewhere in network.
    • 37:24Then
    • 37:25I get this chirpy bill
    • 37:26from my insurer saying,
    • 37:29you know, they billed thirteen
    • 37:31thousand dollars.
    • 37:33Good news,
    • 37:34we paid ten thousand dollars
    • 37:37and, you know, great news,
    • 37:38you owe zero. And I
    • 37:40was like,
    • 37:42this is not really great
    • 37:43news. I mean, it may
    • 37:45be great news for me,
    • 37:46but it's terrible news for
    • 37:48a system.
    • 37:49I did a series at
    • 37:50the New York Times called
    • 37:52Paying till It Hurts.
    • 37:53And at the end of
    • 37:54it said, do you have
    • 37:55a bill you wanna share?
    • 37:57And we had, I think,
    • 37:59five hundred responses,
    • 38:01and we were off and
    • 38:02running.
    • 38:08And not because, you know,
    • 38:10we are we are in
    • 38:11the end,
    • 38:13journalists, the the,
    • 38:15solution of last resort. You
    • 38:17know, these are people who've
    • 38:19tried with their insurer, tried
    • 38:20with the hospital,
    • 38:22gone to the attorneys general,
    • 38:24done GoFundMe,
    • 38:25and when all else fails,
    • 38:27write to a journalist.
    • 38:33That's
    • 38:34a
    • 38:35symptom of a really broken
    • 38:36system.
    • 38:42I've done everything. You've done
    • 38:44everything? Oh, you're working. I
    • 38:45mean, when we started our
    • 38:46TikTok thing, I did a
    • 38:48ridiculous TikTok that I hope
    • 38:49no one ever sees. So
    • 38:51because it's sort of investigative
    • 38:52reporter, kind of, yeah Do
    • 38:54you want it on? I'm
    • 38:54sure if you don't mind.
    • 38:59Sure.
    • 39:01What? Do you wanna introduce
    • 39:03yourself one more? Sure.
    • 39:05Sure.
    • 39:06Hi, I'm Elizabeth Rosenthal. I'm
    • 39:09the author of An American
    • 39:10Sickness,
    • 39:11How Health Care Became Big
    • 39:13Business, and How You Can
    • 39:14Take It Back.
    • 39:15And welcome to this film
    • 39:17noir.
    • 39:27Ah, film noir. A style
    • 39:29of low budget cinema about
    • 39:30cynicism and urban decay
    • 39:32characterized by dark and rainy
    • 39:34nights, backroom deals,
    • 39:36corrupt officials,
    • 39:37calculating femme fatales, and of
    • 39:39course,
    • 39:40fedora wearing private eyes.
    • 39:42The convoluted plots, double dealing,
    • 39:45and bad endings feel, well,
    • 39:47kind of like our healthcare
    • 39:48system.
    • 39:58How's it going?
    • 40:02And since we don't have
    • 40:03access to the rock itself,
    • 40:05we kinda have to make
    • 40:06up the inside story.
    • 40:09Cut the money.
    • 40:11Cut the money.
    • 40:17So for this section, we've
    • 40:18hired actors to read lines
    • 40:20spoken anonymously
    • 40:22to author doctor Miriam Loguisson,
    • 40:24who interviewed dozens of RUC
    • 40:25members for her groundbreaking book,
    • 40:28Fixing Medical Prices, How Physicians
    • 40:30Are Paid. It was really
    • 40:31the mention that
    • 40:34the prices
    • 40:36were partly derived from the
    • 40:38American Medical Association
    • 40:41that caught my attention.
    • 40:43How does that actually work?
    • 40:45Because studying political science, you
    • 40:47get
    • 40:48interested in in how different
    • 40:50interests shape policy.
    • 40:54It can all fit in
    • 40:55the screen, and then I'm
    • 40:56just gonna move it down
    • 40:57just a little bit.
    • 40:59Perfect.
    • 41:00Perfect.
    • 41:02Yeah.
    • 41:10Who made what comment that
    • 41:11led the panel to a
    • 41:12certain recommendation or not?
    • 41:14It's all part of the
    • 41:15game.
    • 41:19Now it is. Now it's
    • 41:21going.
    • 41:21Action.
    • 41:24At a very fundamental level,
    • 41:26the rock is an example
    • 41:27of the fox guarding the
    • 41:28hen house.
    • 41:32It's about the money. It's
    • 41:33about the power, and that's
    • 41:35where the party line comes
    • 41:36in. Because the way it
    • 41:37is currently constructed, the proceduralist
    • 41:40can do what they want,
    • 41:41basically. They can push through
    • 41:43anything they want.
    • 41:45We're pretty sure it looked
    • 41:47something like this.
    • 42:14So what's the angle?
    • 42:16Two angles, doctor. AC.
    • 42:19We've got doctor. Sober in
    • 42:20here from vascular surgery
    • 42:22with news of a new
    • 42:23device,
    • 42:24maybe a new procedure,
    • 42:26and more RVUs.
    • 42:29Here.
    • 42:34It's an eight centimeter radio
    • 42:35frequency ablation catheter. It closes
    • 42:38up the varicose veins using
    • 42:39a new heat element.
    • 42:41What's the market?
    • 42:43Same as before.
    • 42:44People don't like the way
    • 42:45varicose veins look. They say
    • 42:47they're in a little discomfort.
    • 42:49Medicare pays out.
    • 42:52We get a new RVU
    • 42:53for every vein we find
    • 42:54once we're in there. The
    • 42:56additionals are where the money's
    • 42:57at. It's another minute or
    • 42:59two of work, but I'm
    • 43:00guessing we can add another
    • 43:02code to push the RBUs.
    • 43:04And we can make the
    • 43:05argument that patients feel less
    • 43:06pain after.
    • 43:09So there's social
    • 43:11value. The rock is all
    • 43:12about time intensity, not value.
    • 43:14They don't care, so we
    • 43:15don't care.
    • 43:16The RVUs are good, though.
    • 43:18The dogs will use this
    • 43:20thing.
    • 43:22Do we know who makes
    • 43:23the device? Do we own
    • 43:26that?
    • 43:27Wonderful.
    • 43:28Wonderful.
    • 43:29The PCPs and cognitives won't
    • 43:31go for it, but if
    • 43:32we get the surgery block,
    • 43:34we secure the vote.
    • 43:37Alright. What else?
    • 43:39Doctor Miller's urology clinic has
    • 43:41a new way to treat
    • 43:43Peyronie's
    • 43:44disease.
    • 43:45The FDA just approved an
    • 43:46injection for clients who say
    • 43:48they're in pain. It removes
    • 43:49the,
    • 43:51kinks, and there's evidence that
    • 43:52the procedure thus elongates the
    • 43:54penis.
    • 43:55The market's
    • 43:56huge for this one.
    • 43:58I bet. And it alleviates
    • 44:00the pain.
    • 44:02Right.
    • 44:04What RVUs can we get?
    • 44:05Well, to be honest, it's
    • 44:07not a time consuming procedure.
    • 44:08It takes maybe two, three
    • 44:10minutes to inject the drug.
    • 44:12But it's high stress and
    • 44:13it's high liability given the
    • 44:16sensitivity of the area. Plus,
    • 44:18potentially, we can bill for
    • 44:19four different injections.
    • 44:21What can we do with
    • 44:22that?
    • 44:28I'm guessing
    • 44:29three point two RVUs for
    • 44:30each injection.
    • 44:32Three point two RVUs?
    • 44:34That's more than a fifty
    • 44:35five minute visit with my
    • 44:36primary care doc.
    • 44:39Will they shut us down?
    • 44:41They don't have the numbers.
    • 44:44I think it'll slide by
    • 44:45if we give radiology a
    • 44:46pass on their old base
    • 44:48codes and cut a deal
    • 44:49with the heart guys.
    • 44:52It's hard to measure stress,
    • 44:55and I don't think the
    • 44:56PCPs know the time on
    • 44:57this one.
    • 44:59How many of these can
    • 45:00you do in a day?
    • 45:02I don't know exactly.
    • 45:03We're growing. If it's the
    • 45:05procedure alone, maybe fifty, eighty,
    • 45:07we can delegate to physician's
    • 45:09assistants and charge
    • 45:11the same rate. No wonder
    • 45:12all you
    • 45:14urologists are millionaires. We do
    • 45:15alright.
    • 45:16You get our votes for
    • 45:17the rest for the rest.
    • 45:19I bet we do.
    • 45:21What's the target, JJ?
    • 45:23We go for three point
    • 45:25five RVUs for each Peyronie's
    • 45:27injection.
    • 45:27A six three split for
    • 45:29radio frequency ablation for the
    • 45:31varicose veins.
    • 45:33Work the pre facilitation
    • 45:34committee.
    • 45:35Get the proposals clean.
    • 45:37Keep it quiet outside of
    • 45:39surgery.
    • 45:40Maybe they adjusted down ten
    • 45:41percent to three point two.
    • 45:43We still make a killing.
    • 45:45I think it'll pass.
    • 45:48You two will find a
    • 45:49way to cut me in
    • 45:50here. AC
    • 45:52likes the cuts.
    • 46:24The idea
    • 46:25that these guys think that
    • 46:27they have the right to
    • 46:28decide a hundred and fifty
    • 46:29billion dollars of federal spending
    • 46:31in a closed room,
    • 46:32financed and organized and staffed
    • 46:34by the AMA,
    • 46:35in my opinion, is a
    • 46:37disgrace.
    • 46:38And the only reason it
    • 46:39goes on is because nobody
    • 46:40understands it.
    • 46:42But if you took away
    • 46:43the rough, the AMA would
    • 46:45probably implode.
    • 47:02So a little different,
    • 47:03than the normal.
    • 47:06So I'll just stop because
    • 47:07I realize we have a
    • 47:08few minutes,
    • 47:10for time.
    • 47:11You can all see that.
    • 47:14Love,
    • 47:15any reactions
    • 47:17at all? Good, bad, ugly,
    • 47:19pristine?
    • 47:20General love.
    • 47:22And what's really?
    • 47:28You know, as big, you
    • 47:29know so so the audience
    • 47:31for the same depends. Right?
    • 47:32I I think the ideal
    • 47:33would be something like Netflix,
    • 47:34a general audience.
    • 47:38My only concern is that
    • 47:39it feels like it's an
    • 47:41awesome,
    • 47:44And I don't think it's
    • 47:46really in our interest to
    • 47:48alienate
    • 47:49surgery and
    • 47:50specialty medicine and procedural medicine.
    • 47:53I think it's just more
    • 47:54if you want the primary
    • 47:56to drive, you gotta follow
    • 47:57the money and money's not
    • 47:58there. Mhmm.
    • 47:59I don't think anybody would
    • 48:01argue that observation.
    • 48:03Right. But the the way
    • 48:05you set it up, it's
    • 48:06kind of like it's their
    • 48:07fault. It's a zero sum.
    • 48:08Right. Well, it's more than
    • 48:10a zero sum. It's their
    • 48:11fault,
    • 48:12which is the part that
    • 48:13I think is maybe problematic.
    • 48:15I
    • 48:16I appreciate that feedback. That's
    • 48:18definitely a concern that that
    • 48:20I certainly have,
    • 48:21on our production teams
    • 48:24of of creating that.
    • 48:25I'll just I'll just respond
    • 48:26to that, which is, I'd
    • 48:28encourage you to read Miriam
    • 48:29Logison's book about that, about
    • 48:31sort of
    • 48:32Disagree. That that that no.
    • 48:34I know. I've I've what
    • 48:35the future of, like, how
    • 48:36how it's become co opted
    • 48:37and sort of who sits
    • 48:38on that committee in terms
    • 48:40of how it is it
    • 48:41is set up currently as
    • 48:42a zero sum game.
    • 48:44And,
    • 48:45that committee I mean, there's
    • 48:47a lot in here that's
    • 48:48not that you know, I
    • 48:48think that that's a reaction
    • 48:49that I I know and
    • 48:51a lot of we have
    • 48:51lots of specialty colleagues and
    • 48:53friends and relatives.
    • 48:56It doesn't look at least
    • 48:57the way it's portrayed now,
    • 48:58it doesn't look very good.
    • 49:00But
    • 49:01I think your goal is
    • 49:03to make people aware of
    • 49:04the rock and how crazy
    • 49:05that
    • 49:08is. Mhmm.
    • 49:11And I think you can
    • 49:11achieve that goal
    • 49:14without portraying
    • 49:15specialty medicine and proceduralists as
    • 49:18the villains.
    • 49:20Yes. Appreciate it. Yeah.
    • 49:22Just, like, also curious around
    • 49:25timing because I think I've
    • 49:27heard seen in the media
    • 49:30that there is some attention
    • 49:31about There is. Administration.
    • 49:34There is. Doctor Oz and
    • 49:35RFK are looking at the
    • 49:36RUC right now. Yep.
    • 49:37The AMA and RUC. And
    • 49:39so I think there's a
    • 49:41specific
    • 49:42potential for a timing
    • 49:44For sure.
    • 49:45In terms of influencing public
    • 49:48opinion. So much other
    • 49:49There is. I mean, I
    • 49:51I think you know? And
    • 49:52and just to your point,
    • 49:53there's some recent,
    • 49:54so so it's not it's
    • 49:56been published in stat and
    • 49:57some other places that that
    • 49:58RFK and and doctor Oz
    • 49:59are looking very significantly and
    • 50:01have sort of pushed back
    • 50:02a little bit against some
    • 50:03of the from Medicare side
    • 50:05about taking all of the
    • 50:06rucks.
    • 50:07That that one of the
    • 50:09challenges around that is that
    • 50:10the ruck and not just
    • 50:11the ruck, but the CPT
    • 50:12code,
    • 50:14like industry, which is about
    • 50:16seventy percent of the AMA
    • 50:17dollars. So of the four
    • 50:19hundred or five hundred million
    • 50:20dollars
    • 50:21a year that the AMA
    • 50:22has, about ten percent
    • 50:24I mean, area about maybe
    • 50:25thirty million is is,
    • 50:27membership a little bit from
    • 50:28JAMA, but seventy percent of
    • 50:30the dollars come from royalties
    • 50:32from the CPT codes and
    • 50:33the RUCs.
    • 50:35So about three hundred million
    • 50:36to four hundred million. Yeah.
    • 50:37So,
    • 50:38my father's actually,
    • 50:40was a urologist,
    • 50:41but never made parts like
    • 50:43this.
    • 50:45I I can testify to
    • 50:46that.
    • 50:47I I actually thoroughly enjoyed
    • 50:49this, but I think Amy's
    • 50:50got a great point.
    • 50:53You could show the the
    • 50:54film noir,
    • 50:56Separate that from the other
    • 50:58parts of what you're showing.
    • 51:00I don't see any problem.
    • 51:02You just you know, you
    • 51:03don't necessarily wanna know that
    • 51:05a primary care doc
    • 51:07is disparaging
    • 51:08all these
    • 51:09grubby specialists.
    • 51:11And but I I think
    • 51:13that's the kind of thing
    • 51:15that would get a lot
    • 51:15of attention.
    • 51:16It's just a question of
    • 51:18how much attention you wanna
    • 51:19bring to
    • 51:21your authorship.
    • 51:23Appreciate that. Yeah. Rashma?
    • 51:25As a suggestion, there's a
    • 51:27American Public Health Association has
    • 51:29a public health film festival
    • 51:30every year that's sponsored by
    • 51:32the Pulitzer Center.
    • 51:34That might be something to
    • 51:35consider in terms of a
    • 51:36submission even if of, like,
    • 51:37the
    • 51:38this.
    • 51:39And also to get,
    • 51:42it and to this kind
    • 51:43of point, I'm wondering if
    • 51:45instead of kind of talking
    • 51:46about the specialty is the
    • 51:47institution.
    • 51:48Right? Like, focusing more on
    • 51:50how it's been set up
    • 51:51by the AMA. There's pros
    • 51:52and cons of this. Right?
    • 51:53Because right now, we're also
    • 51:55in administration
    • 51:56that is, like, calling out
    • 51:58medical professional societies,
    • 52:00at in various ways that
    • 52:01are not productive.
    • 52:03But in terms of talking
    • 52:04about, like,
    • 52:06you know, how the institution
    • 52:07has has set this up
    • 52:09that initially excluded primary care
    • 52:11physicians. That was, right, one
    • 52:12of the big things that
    • 52:13was not allowed in the
    • 52:14rough before they allowed it
    • 52:15six seats. Later on,
    • 52:17maybe more of a comment
    • 52:18on that and, like, opportunities
    • 52:20for reform and improvement. Right?
    • 52:21That's right. Trying to portray
    • 52:23this towards, like, a positive
    • 52:24agenda.
    • 52:25That's good. I appreciate that.
    • 52:27And, actually, the reason they
    • 52:28opened up more seats for
    • 52:29primary care was because of
    • 52:30Paul Fisher's lawsuit
    • 52:31in twenty twelve, and they've
    • 52:33now published who is on
    • 52:35the rock. It was not
    • 52:36published. It was not open.
    • 52:37None of the minutes were
    • 52:38public until twenty twelve in
    • 52:40that lawsuit.
    • 52:41Yeah.
    • 52:42Yeah. I I really enjoyed
    • 52:43it, as well.
    • 52:45I do get the point
    • 52:46that there has to be,
    • 52:47like, a a bad guy,
    • 52:48and the bad guy can't
    • 52:49just be, like, opacity
    • 52:51per se. But, like, why
    • 52:52is that the case? I
    • 52:53mean, there's sort of a
    • 52:54punching bag, but congress set
    • 52:56it up this way, and
    • 52:57and they, you know, set
    • 52:58the rules,
    • 52:59in the administration for the
    • 53:00medic for Medicare. So, I
    • 53:01mean, I think focusing more
    • 53:03a little bit more on
    • 53:03the government aspect of, like,
    • 53:05the policy as to what
    • 53:06the way it was set
    • 53:07up may be one way
    • 53:08to do it.
    • 53:10And the only problem I
    • 53:11had, which I really love
    • 53:12the film, the only thing
    • 53:13that felt slightly,
    • 53:15not in line with sort
    • 53:17of what the the idea
    • 53:18that you're you're getting across
    • 53:19there was the the sidetrack
    • 53:21to the woman after his
    • 53:22BMED. Yeah. Jasmine. Yeah. That
    • 53:24yeah. It's a little it's
    • 53:25got yeah. There's some other
    • 53:27parts. Yep. Off
    • 53:29the point of the I
    • 53:30agree with that. The other
    • 53:31issues. But, yeah, it was
    • 53:32great. Yeah. Thank you for
    • 53:33that point. Yeah. It it
    • 53:34is different, and there's some
    • 53:36other stuff that will come
    • 53:37back later. But yeah. I
    • 53:39I was gonna make the
    • 53:39same point that, you know,
    • 53:41I was expecting a more
    • 53:43linear focus on primary care,
    • 53:44but it looked like it
    • 53:45was basically three components.
    • 53:47You know, the earlier component
    • 53:48of
    • 53:49some overview of, primary care,
    • 53:52some examples of physicians who
    • 53:53seem to thrive in it.
    • 53:54Then there was the b
    • 53:55med segment,
    • 53:56and then there's the rock
    • 53:58segment.
    • 53:58So, you know, as you
    • 54:00I don't really think about
    • 54:01filmmaking, but
    • 54:03the the story arc, would
    • 54:04be important,
    • 54:07that fits under a a
    • 54:08clear theme that people have.
    • 54:10Yeah.
    • 54:11Understand. That's
    • 54:13spot on. And we haven't
    • 54:14actually you know, we we
    • 54:15have a lot more,
    • 54:17that we're still trying to
    • 54:18figure out where these things
    • 54:20fit. Some things will get
    • 54:21cut out. There's a there's
    • 54:22a lot more interviews.
    • 54:24As I mentioned, we have,
    • 54:24like, a hundred hours now.
    • 54:26We've shot different things all
    • 54:27over the country.
    • 54:29This is like a taste
    • 54:29of the first stuff that
    • 54:30they've kind of put together,
    • 54:32which is I agree though
    • 54:33that the BMED stuff feels
    • 54:35different.
    • 54:36But we'll we'll figure out
    • 54:38how to incorporate that.
    • 54:41It's a start. General public
    • 54:42here. And it's a great
    • 54:43opportunity
    • 54:44to to get them up
    • 54:45to speed on what's going
    • 54:46on.
    • 54:47I think this is gonna
    • 54:48be a it'd be very,
    • 54:50very impactful.
    • 54:51So thank you. I realize
    • 54:52we're out of time. So
    • 54:53if people wanna send me
    • 54:54emails or find other time,
    • 54:56I'd love any feedback. Good,
    • 54:57bad, ugly. I appreciate all
    • 54:59of the comments because I
    • 55:00think this is the first
    • 55:01we've shown anybody.
    • 55:03So thanks.