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by killjoywashere
2418 days ago
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> There's no incentive for them to improve health care for the patients The healthcare systems they are collaborating with (e.g. Mayo) are strongly motivated to improve health of their patients, particularly in capitated models like accountable care organizations. Mayo is actually pretty famous for adopting the ACO model. Note the author on this article (1) from Mayo Clinic Proceedings is by David Shulkin, who went on to become the Secretary of Veterans Affairs. You may also be interested to know Ascension is another ACO (2). So why would an ACO be motivated to work with Google? Because they know reducing diagnostic variance is almost certainly identical to improving quality of diagnosis, which will reduce poor outcomes and reduce malpractice, cost of overtreatment, cost of undertreatment, and so on. (1) https://www.mayoclinicproceedings.org/article/S0025-6196(12)... (2) https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/acos-to-know-2019.html |
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Do we have any assurances that Google's efforts will be limited to improving care? Or are they being compensated by being able to use that data in other opportunities?