Health Reform Too Complicated to
Explain
the universe is too complicated
for me to explainthe universe is too complicated
Do not tell me
said warty bliggens
that there
is a purpose
in the
universe
the thought
is blasphemy
Don Marquis
(1878-1937), “Warty Bliggens, the Toad,” From Archy and Mehitabel, 1927. Warty Bliggens was a toad who considered
himself the center of the universe that existed to grow toadstools for him to
sit under by light of day and moon among the wheeling constellations.
I wish he
would explain his explanation.
Lord Byron (1778-1824), Don Juan
April 10, 2012 - Two health care items caught my eye today.
·
One,
“Complexity Is Bad for Your Health: if Even Supreme Court J Justices Can’t
Fathom Obamacare, Where Does That Leave the Rest of Us? (Gordon Crovitz, Media
and Information Industry Executive, Wall Street Journal , April 10, 2012
·
Two,
“Health Care Hustle: Patients Caught in Middle of High Stakes Numbers Game,”
Scott Cohn, CNBC Senior Correspondent CNBC Report, April 10
The WSJ
piece explains that the 2700 page health reform law is too complicated for
ordinary mortals to grasp, even Supreme Court Justices,
The CNBC
piece explains that the biggest and most overlooked factor behind rising health
costs may be Medicare and Medicaid fraud, estimated at $80 billion and possibly
twice that amount, and government seems helpless to stop it.
The two news
releases bought to mind a favorite book of mine Edgeware: Insights from
Complexity Science for Health Care Leaders, VHA Inc, 2998) by three complexity
experts, Brenda Zimmerman, Curt Lindberg,
and Paul Pisek
Their thesis
is that the health system is so complex that is produces chaos. The maintain the system lends itself better
to incremental bottom-up reform than top-down centralized all-at-once reform.
They
maintain, to reform “complex adaptive systems” like stock markets, human bodies,
forest ecosystems, manufacturing businesses, immune systems, termite colonies,
and health systems, you should follow these nine principles.
1. Veiw your
system through the eyes of complexity.
2. Build a
good-enough system with minimum specifications.3. Lead from the edge, not the center or the top.
4. Tune from
the edge with just the right amount of information flow, diversity and differences,
connections inside and outside the system, power differentials and anxiety.
5. Uncover
and work with paradox and tension.
6. Go with multiple actions at the fringes; let
your direction arise from what you see.
7. Pay attention to informal relationships;
listen closely to gossip, rumors, and hallway conversations.
8. Grow complex
systems by chunking, one step at a time.
9. Mix
cooperation and competition.
Otherwise
reform results will be chaotic, incomprehensible, and impossible to carry out.
Tweet:
Present national heath reform efforts are too complicated to explain, comprehend, and implement.
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