Review of Redefining Health Care, by Porter and Teisberg

Looking back through my records, it appears that I began Porter and Tesiberg’s Redefining Health Care last November, so it’s a bit embarrassing that I’ve only now, in March, managed to finish it. In my defense, about halfway through it, I left it on a plane, and that initiated a bit of an odyssey to get it back, but really it’s just a long book and I’ve gotten a bit sidetracked with other books over the last two months. But enough excuses…

Coming clean about health care reform

This blog is a place to think about the challenges facing all kinds of leaders: corporate, government, nonprofit, education, and personal. And over the last 24 months, I’ve had many clients and projects in the health care space, where leaders of all stripes are facing historical challenges that have implications for individuals, organizations, and U.S. society as a whole.

Although I’ve enjoyed my work with these health care organizations tremendously, lately I’ve found myself feeling sheepish and guilty that I’ve all but withdrawn from following the raging debates in the U.S. over the future of health care. Honestly, the complexity of the debate combined with the vitriol and narrow-mindedness exhibited on all sides has really discouraged me from even trying. I’m not the kind of person who’s going to write his Senator or picket outside a government building, so what’s the use of getting wound up over an issue that will be decided in places far, far removed from my world of family, friends, and work?

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.