PODCAST · health
Healthcare is Stupid
by Rahul Parikh & Jonathan Mates
Physicians Rahul Parikh and Jonathan Mates explore the absurdities of modern American healthcare—what it’s like, how we got here, and what practical steps might move it in a better direction.
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7
When Your Results Go Viral
People are sharing medical results from their online portals, just like they do with college acceptances and baby gender reveals. How did we get to this point? And what are the real effects on how patients understand their medical records and how doctors document them? In this episode, we explore how technology and regulatory changes have shaped our relationship to healthcare from the inside and out.Links:Why am I Watching People Get Their Medical Results?Why Reading Your Doctor’s Notes Can Be Painful
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6
Why is Your Doctor's Website so Terrible?
We’ve all had this experience: you go to your doctor or hospital’s web page to do something. Maybe you want to make an appointment. Maybe you want to refill a prescription. Maybe you just want to know when the lab opens. What should be a simple task—something you can easily do on any other website—instead turns into a frustrating ordeal that leaves you yelling: “Why?!” Why is something so simple so hard to do? Why can’t they make this better? Why is this so stupid?In this episode we dig into that very question, sharing our own experiences working with these technologies from both inside and outside of healthcare, and shedding some light on how we all got here.
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5
Should you get that test your doctor ordered?
Doctors’ ability to see inside their patients with lab and imaging tests is one of the miracles of modern medicine. Without tests, we’re just guessing! But the unsaid truth is that doctors overtest patients, and that may be doing more harm than good to patients, doctors, and the entire health care system. In this episode, we sit down with cardiologist Dr. Jeff Sobel to understand the forces behind overtesting and how he is taking on the problem in his system.Show Notes: Overuse of diagnostic testing in healthcare: a systematic review The Landscape of Inappropriate Laboratory Testing: A 15-Year Meta-Analysis Why Doctors Test Too Much Projected Lifetime Cancer Risks from Current Computed Tomography Imaging Getting to “No”
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4
Why Telehealth is Both Brilliant and Stupid
Nothing says 'quality care' like showing a stranger your throat via a grainy webcam while your cat walks across the keyboard.Telehealth — or medical care without the doctor and patient being in the same room — has exploded, partly enhanced by the COVID pandemic. Some say that this is the beginning of a new paradigm in medical care. For others, the experience feels more like putting more technology between them and their doctor. When you need to talk to your doctor, should you email them? Schedule a visit? Meet with them on video?We chat with Dr. Matt Sakumoto, a virtual care veteran, to answer those questions and more, as we uncover both the brilliant and stupid truth of telehealth.Show Notes:The Lancet on the Telephone (1977)
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3
The Concussed State of the Primary Care Medicine
If a Primary Care physician is the quarterback of our healthcare system…OUCH!…they’re getting sacked time and time again by some burly bureaucratic linebackers.Primary care medicine is meant to be the foundation for a high-functioning health system. Yet why do so many primary care physicians and their patients experience angst and disappointment with that system? In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Eugene Lee, a primary care physician who has practiced in several systems, to understand the gap between the promise and reality of primary care and what doctors and patients can do to make it better.
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2
Why "Healthcare is Stupid" Exists
In this short trailer, pediatrician Rahul Parikh and radiologist Jonathan Mates introduce Healthcare is Stupid.We’ll explore the absurdities of American healthcare—how we got here, the incentives and structures that quietly shape it, and what practical, incremental improvements might actually move things in a better direction.If you work in healthcare, depend on it, or simply wonder why so much of it feels unnecessarily complicated, this podcast is for you.
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