Posts Tagged ‘Media’

This is Not a Political Post

Friday, July 29th, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

Government can be like the weather – everyone complains about it but no one does anything about it.

At Best Doctors we like to look at obstacles as opportunities to make things better.  In this case, I had the chance to help change an old law in Florida that made it hard for companies like ours that serve the international health insurance markets to do business.

It’s exciting to report that we got the law changed.  Now, I can also tell you that a major Florida paper, the St. Petersburg Times, published my story yesterday.

Read the story here, it’s a reminder that government really can work.

Best Doctors Grilled on the Radio

Monday, June 20th, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

What’s Best Doctors all about?

The Mind Your Own Business radio show finds out.  Tune in to my recent interview where I’m talking about misdiagnosis, rising health care costs, and how important it is to bring the minds of the top 5% of medical experts to your employees and their families.

Listen to the recording here.

Misdiagnosis and How to Protect Yourself

Friday, June 17th, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

WBAI in New York interviewed me about the alarming rates of cancer misdiagnosis.  As you’ll hear, there are no simple solutions except one: ask questions, and insist that you get the right care.

You can listen to the interview here.

Superficial Drivel!

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

My post last week, The Worst Health Care System in the World Is…. was picked up today in the terrific The Health Care Blog.

Go read it there — and check out the lively comments, in which my post is called “superficial drivel” by one commenter.

True?  You decide!

Don’t Miss: Fast Company Webinar with Best Doctors

Monday, January 24th, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

At noon ET today, I’ll be on a live webinar with Kaihan Krippendorff of Fast Company magazine.

Here’s my post explaining what it’s all about – or you can just go here to register.

Remember, it’s free – so don’t miss it!

Best Doctors: Fast Company

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

By Evan Falchuk

Kaihan Krippendorff of Fast Company magazine has written two interesting profiles of Best Doctors for Fast Company.

Kaihan is an expert in business strategy, keenly interested in what it takes to build a successful business.   We talked about how the work we do at Best Doctors impacts people’s lives, and how those stories inspire us to make a great company.

One of those stories was the woman I talked about in the article.  She was one of the first cases I learned about when I joined Best Doctors.

She was in her 30s, and over the course of a few months, she started to lose her vision.  Specialists diagnosed her with a brain tumor.   It seemed that a tumor had grown in an area of her brain that was pressing on the optic nerve.  As it grew, her vision got worse.  She was scheduled for surgery to remove the tumor.

She had Best Doctors as a benefit of her job, and called for help, asking the questions many people ask us.  Is this the right treatment for me?  Are there other alternatives?

We reviewed all of her medical information.  It raised some important questions about the original diagnosis, and our team thought it was important to involve an expert in differentiating brain tumors from other kinds of problems.  He agreed something might not be right.

It was possible, he said, that what appeared to be a tumor was actually an inflammatory disease called sarcoidosis.  It’s a chronic illness that can create the kinds of problems the woman was facing.  His recommendation: before taking her into surgery, treat her with anti-inflammatory medication, and see what happens.  If it’s sarcoidosis, the “tumor” will shrink, and her vision will come back.  If not, then, you know the original diagnosis was correct.

We delivered this information to her and to her doctor.  They agreed to follow this recommendation – and in a short time, her sight started to come back.  A follow-up study confirmed the expert’s suspicion – she had sarcoidosis.

Now, she still had a disease needed treatment.  But she avoided an unnecessary surgery, that carried great risks, and a painful recovery.

It’s stories like these that inspire us, and it’s what Kaihn calls building “moral force:”

Stories like this move people. They give your employees a sense of meaning and pull the community to cheer for your success. They also show your clients that you exist for a bigger purpose than making profit.

I will be speaking with Kaihan on a free executive briefing, hosted by Fast Company on Monday, January 24 at noon ET.  Kaihan is a terrifically insightful person, so it promises to be an interesting conversation that you won’t want to miss.  

Click here to register and listen in.

UPDATE: Don’t miss Kaihan’s third piece on Best Doctors, which you can read here.

Things You Should Read

Friday, August 28th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

AllBusiness’ Nancy Germond writes about health care quality in her Risk Management for the 21st Century column.  Best Doctors gets prominent billing:

Employers are buying Best Doctors services as an employee benefit to ensure their employees receive a higher quality of medical care, according to Falchuk. “If you feel unsure about your diagnosis or treatment, you are entitled to feel confident.”

Also, at Wired magazine, Curtis Silver interviewed me for his blog, Geek Dad.  We talked about using social media in business and how important it can be for your family, too.

Everyone struggles with work-life balance.  We care deeply about our business and our families.  And the realization is this: you have as much of a moral obligation to build a successful business as you do to build a successful family life.  Technology and social media help make this possible.  I wish more people saw it that way.

In both cases, read the whole thing.

UPDATE: The Wall Street Journal reviews my brother’s new TV show, Glee. They like it.

The Boston Globe, too, with a mention of Best Doctors and the work we did to help my brother with his health crisis last year.

The Curious Case of Medical Tourism

Saturday, August 22nd, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

In our survey of major U.S. employers, we found very little interest in medical tourism.

But there is a great deal of interest in it among the major media – the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, and today, Forbes (via the Associated Press) have done major stories on it.

But here’s something curious.

All three stories have featured the exact same medical tourist – Ben Schreiner of Camden, South Carolina.

Back in March, I wrote about how curious this was.  I guess it’s curiouser now.

Are there this few patient stories?  Based on our survey, maybe.

Whether medical tourism becomes a trend in America remains to be seen.  But since he’s appeared three times, one thing is certainly a trend – Ben Schreiner’s role as the go-to guy for stories on it.

WELCOME Instapundit readers.

This blog is about health care.  It is from the perspective of someone actually in the health care business.  It is a perspective informed by the health care system as it actually works.

And what it is really about is this:  Health care has become focused on the unit cost of care – treating it like something that can be produced on an assembly line.

But it’s not.

It is about thinking, judging, and deciding what is wrong with a patient.

The trouble is, our system systematically undervalues this process.  When your doctor can only spend 15 minutes with you, why are we surprised when things go wrong?

Proposed reforms continue to see health care in this light, hoping that through ever-more clever ways to pay for care, we can fix a problem created in that very same way.

If you read this blog, you will see not just the reality of how this works, but also the good news – the stories of patients, doctors, employers and others who are doing real and meaningful things to put right what is wrong.  You won’t hear much about it in the media – well, sometimes you will – but there are people out there changing the face of health care even faster than the politicians can.  And perhaps you will see what politicians might learn about how to actually make change.

Please visit again, join the discussion, and add your voice to this most important debate.

Grand Rounds

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Welcome to Grand Rounds, Vol. 5, No. 36!

If you make the rounds of the blogosphere and the traditional media these days, you find lots of talk about health care. But it’s mostly abstract, and typically fixated on the politics of this or that plan.

However, there’s a whole other side to health care which isn’t seen or covered enough by traditional media or bloggers — the doctors, nurses, medical professionals and patients who actually are the health care system.

Blogs make it possible for these voices to be heard, and we’re very fortunate to have a great variety of blogs and bloggers to feature in this edition of Grand Rounds. These stories and these people need a more prominent place in the public mind, and I’m hopeful I can play a small part in that with this week’s edition.

The submissions this week come from as far away as Australia, South Africa and the UK, and as close to home as my hometown. But on the web these are all local calls, so I’ve categorized the more than 2 dozen submissions this week into a few topics.

Read on, click through and add all of these great bloggers to your RSS readers. (more…)

Sinuses and the Doctor Patient Relationship

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

By Evan Falchuk

In a previous post, Fritz referred to a case of a young patient, potentially facing sinus surgery. His post was timely because of what happened to me recently.

I have a history of chronic sinusitis and had some surgery a few years ago. Last week, I took a trip to Colorado. Before leaving, I was suffering from what felt like bad tooth pain. I saw my dentist, who said I had some decay in the suspected area and that I should come back on my return to have a filling put in.

While traveling, I suffered a very serious pain in my cheek and around the area of my tooth. On arriving in Colorado, the pain eased a little, but was still there. Over the next couple of days the pain got worse – I couldn’t sleep and the pain had spread to the side of my head and near my ear. I finally relented and called my dentist, who told me she thought I must have an infection and prescribed me an antibiotic. Within about a day of starting the antibiotic, the pain started to subside. (more…)

  • "Medicine is learned by the bedside and not in the class room. Let not your conception of manifestations of disease come from work heard in the lecture room or read from the book: see and then research, compare and control. But see first."
    - Sir William Osler, MD
    The Father of Modern Medicine
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