x
Black Bar Banner 1
x

Alert!  New Secured Wallets are installed! new Blog system with AI  power and auto blog curation coming soon  Alert! 

Ads by Markethive - View All
Blogs
The Blog Feed
Write a New Blog Post
Search Blog Status
Most Viewed
Most Recent
Most Shared
Alphabetical
Blog Main Menu
Markethive Blog (default)
All Blogs
My Blog Posts
Friends' Blogs
Blog Categories
All
Advertising
Blockchain & Cryptocurrency
Business Development
Diet & Weight Loss
Environmental
Health and Wellness
History and Culture
Home and Garden
Marketing
Mentoring & Training
Money & Finance
Other
Political
Prayer & Religion
Programming & Technical
Real Estate
Search Engine Optimization
Social Media
Spirituality
Sports & Recreation
Transport
Travel & Events
Website Design
Blogging Tools & Assets
My Blog Info
Members Subscribed to You
Blogs You Are Subscribed To
Website Widget
Wordpress Plugin

Health Care 2023

Posted by Bobby Brown on January 31, 2023 - 7:28pm


Healthcare will look very different in 2033 as the workforce evolves and systems incorporate digital technology to improve access to care.

 

The trends we are seeing today will be the same, but they will reach tipping points/breaking points in the next 10 years that necessitate action by the hospitals and health systems. The populations we serve will get older and sicker. Our service utilization will decline, but when used, patients will be more complex and have longer lengths of stay. Younger, healthier patients will seek care through new delivery channels. Margin pressures on health system P&Ls will become thinner, necessitating new care models to maintain sustainability. 

Workforce constraints for physicians and nursing will force changes in how care is delivered. New technologies will emerge with new care models/staffing. Funding new capabilities and offsetting the cost of supplies will likely cause the need for larger and larger economies of scale. Pressure to reduce healthcare costs and the availability of some new information may force employers to take actions related to benefits design (more readily accepting of narrowing networks despite the war on talent). However, this will likely happen via brokers and insurance companies versus direct-to-health system relationships [market dependent]. Lastly, new players will emerge in this space. 

Continuing to tweak the current model and waiting for the payment system to be the reason we change is a leadership failure in our profession. However, those that have courage and manage well the glide path to the future will be those that succeed.