July 18, 2026 - 04:49

The leaders of four major American healthcare systems have outlined a concrete plan to overhaul the struggling industry. Jefferson Health, Northwell Health, Banner Health, and SimonMed Imaging are pushing four specific reinventions they believe will pull the system back from the brink of collapse.
First, the CEOs argue for a radical shift from fee-for-service to value-based care. Instead of paying for every test and procedure, they want payment tied to patient outcomes. This would force hospitals to keep people healthy rather than just treating them when they get sick.
Second, they call for aggressive integration of artificial intelligence into diagnostics and administration. AI can catch early signs of disease on scans and automate the endless paperwork that burns out doctors. The goal is to let physicians spend time with patients instead of screens.
Third, the group demands a complete rethinking of primary care. They propose embedding mental health services, nutrition counseling, and preventive screenings into routine checkups. This would treat the whole person rather than separate physical and mental health.
Fourth, they want to break down the walls between hospitals and homes. Telemedicine, remote monitoring, and hospital-at-home programs can keep people out of expensive beds. The CEOs believe most routine care should happen in living rooms, not waiting rooms.
The four leaders admit this will require massive upfront investment and regulatory changes. But they insist the current path is unsustainable. Without these reinventions, they warn, American healthcare will continue to price out millions while delivering mediocre results. The blueprint is ambitious, but they say the alternative is worse.
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