by Dr. Gene Lindsey | Dec 19, 2017 | Health in America, Healthcare Policy, Inequality in Healthcare, Tax Reform and Healthcare
Recently I was walking along listening to an audiobook. My book ended before my walk did so I switched over to the playlist of my youngest son’s music. It’s quite a playlist. He has posted a new song on the Internet every week for over seven years. There are 370 songs...
by Dr. Gene Lindsey | Dec 12, 2017 | Benefits of the ACA, Competition, Costs, History of Healthcare Reform, Population Health Management, Presidential Politics, The Triple Aim
What will be left when the storm is over? It’s the sort of question you might have asked yourself if you were living in Puerto Rico on September 20 when Maria hit. I ask it of myself on a regular basis when I think of Donald Trump’s attack on healthcare, the...
by Dr. Gene Lindsey | Nov 28, 2017 | Featured Post, Healthcare Policy, Leadership, Strategy, The Triple Aim
I have been wanting to write about leadership skills for sometime. Leadership development is a personal growth process that never ends. The leadership learning curve did not begin until many years into my professional life. I followed a long and nontraditional path...
by Dr. Gene Lindsey | Nov 7, 2017 | Bipartisan Healthcare Process, Featured Post, Inequality in Healthcare, Social Determinants of Health, the healthcare debate
Living in a “purple state” I often meet interesting people with whom I share some possible connection that both of us choose not to explore because a little superficial exchange quickly reveals that we see the world through the lenses of different political...
by Dr. Gene Lindsey | Oct 31, 2017 | Featured Post, Health in America, Inequality in Healthcare, Life Expectancy, Process Improvement, Social Determinants of Health, The Triple Aim
Dr. Patty Gabow, the retired CEO of Denver Health has recently been making a presentation that begins with a rhetorical question, “Can the American Healthcare System Deliver Health?” Any rhetorical question is designed more to get the audience thinking than to...