It was with some dismay that I read Modern Healthcare’s article called, “The 30 events that rocked healthcare’s world in 2015.” I jumped into the piece, confident that I would, indeed, find some developments that have made a difference in the quality and safety of patient care, that would introduce transparency, and that would encourage a greater partnership between clinicians and patients and families.
What I found instead was a version of The Nightly Business Report–a series of stories mainly about the corporate and financial interests of pharma, insurance companies, big hospitals, and big government. These stories have nothing to do with what actually happens on the floors and units of America’s hospitals or in the offices of local physician practices. There is nothing in the stories that is motivational to the doctors, nurses, and other health care professionals who have devoted their lives to taking care of us. There is nothing in the stories that presents an empathetic view of what happens to us when we interact with the health care system as patients or families.









