"The enterprise of medicine has both scientific and moral dimensions, and they're inextricably balanced"
— Dr. Vikas Saini
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Dr Vikas Saini is a Cardiologist and President of the Lown Institute, where he leads a non-partisan think tank advocating bold ideas for a just and caring system for health. With a unique background combining philosophy and medicine, Dr. Saini has spent decades examining the intersection of ethics, evidence, and economics in healthcare. His work on the Social Responsibility Index challenges traditional hospital rankings by measuring what truly matters: equity, value, and patient outcomes rather than reputation and revenue.
Key Takeaways
Philosophy enables systemic healthcare thinking: A philosophical background provides tools to step back and examine healthcare's "water" - the invisible assumptions and frameworks that shape medical practice and policy decisions.
Healthcare is fundamentally a moral enterprise: While science guides medical decisions, the uncertainty inherent in complex human systems requires ethical frameworks. The profession exists to serve others, making moral dimensions inseparable from scientific ones.
20-30% of healthcare may be unnecessary: From procedures lacking evidence to system inefficiencies driving unnecessary hospitalisations, overuse represents a massive opportunity for improvement - but requires paradigm shifts, not just cutting services.
Hospital consolidation hasn't improved care: Despite promises of efficiency, consolidation has primarily raised prices while hospitals increasingly operate like businesses, with some running billion-dollar hedge funds rather than focusing on community health.
Where to Find Dr. Vikas Saini
In This Episode
00:08 - Philosophy's influence: learning to think about thinking in healthcare
02:45 - Healthcare as a moral and scientific enterprise: beyond the science
11:13 - The penicillin paradigm trap: why silver bullets fail for chronic disease
15:13 - Individual patients vs population means: the clinician's dilemma
19:15 - The culture of "doing something": when waiting is the hardest medicine
23:24 - Longitudinal care and efficiency: why more time means better outcomes
25:33 - Measuring overuse: from clear waste to uncertain benefits
30:36 - Why Choosing Wisely hasn't moved the needle significantly
34:28 - Policy opportunities: professional self-regulation over bureaucratic control
38:49 - Origins of the Social Responsibility Index: beyond reputation rankings
43:29 - Nonprofit hospitals acting like businesses: when mission meets margins
46:00 - Hospital consolidation: King Kong vs Godzilla, with patients trampled
50:58 - Advice for clinicians: taking up the cause of patients in systemic change
Referenced
Abraham Flexner and the 1910 Flexner Report (Original Report)
Dr. Bernard Lown (Profile)
Continuity in general practice as a predictor of mortality, acute hospitalisation, and use of out-of-hours care: a registry-based observational study in Norway (Paper)
Choosing Wisely (Website)
Lown Institute's Social Responsibility Index (Website)
Contact
Contact Information: If you have any feedback, questions or if you'd like to get in touch, reach out at jono@clinicalchangemakers.com
Music Attribution: Music by AudioCoffee from Pixabay
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