Category Archives: Corporate healthcare

Corporate Healthcare is Not Medicine: III. The Myth of “Patient Relations”

“The practice of medicine is an art, not a trade; a calling, not a business.”   William Osler

It began in the 1970s, the decade of human rights – the rights of minorities, of women, of pregnant women, of children, of the physically and mentally disabled.  Inevitably, the rights of medical patients came into focus, with New York’s Mt. Sinai Hospital leading the charge.  In 1967, it created the country’s first Patient Representative Department.  Five years later, in 1972, the American Hospital Association, drawing on a preliminary brief on patient rights prepared by the National Welfare Rights Organization, adopted a Patient Bill of Rights.  At decade’s end, in the service of such rights, Sarah Lawrence College established the first master’s degree program in health advocacy.[1]

Patient rights, embracing hospitals, managed care, HMOs, and group insurance plans, gained traction throughout the 1980s and 90s.  In 1990, Harold P. Freeman, a surgical oncologist at Harlem Hospital, introduced the notion of “patient navigation” in the hope of eliminating barriers to screening, diagnosis, and treatment of minority cancer patients.  Four years later, Nancy Davenport-Ennis founded the Patient Advocate Foundation; its mission was to provide case management services and financial assistance to Americans with debilitating and life-threatening illnesses.[2]  In1996, Congressional passage of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA), with its emphasis on doctor-patient communication and the protection of sensitive patient information, shored up these private initiatives.

By century’s end, the medical landscape was filled with patient helpers:  patient advocates, patient experience specialists, patient navigators, healthcare educators, and, most recently, patient relations departments.  Summit Health, the product of the merger of Summit Medical Group and CityMD in 2019, established a patient relations department sometime after the merger.  Cigna Healthcare waited until February 3, 2025 to establish its patient relations department.  Well, better late than never.

Perhaps.  The very concept of “patient relations” is problematic for several reasons.  Notions of patient advocacy, navigation, and education have a strongly dyadic connotation:  the assumption is that a particular patient is in need of assistance, and that someone with the requisite knowledge is available to advocate for the patient, to help the  patient navigate a maze-like hospital or health plan environment and acquire information on how to proceed.  It may involve issues of evaluation, testing, and/or diagnosis, along with the pros and cons of different treatment plans.  According to the Journal of Patient Experience, some 70% of health care organizations now have a senior executive devoted to overseeing this cluster of patient advocacy services.[3]

Patient relations, on the other hand, is amorphous.  There is a patient, yes, but with whom or with what is the patient relating?  A physician?  An office staff?  The relations department itself?  Or perhaps the relation in question is with a  hospital, insurance company, or health plan in general.  Or perhaps none of the above.

In the case of my unhappy saga with the Summit Health Patient Relations Department  this past September, the answer is the final option:  none of the above.  I am a diabetic, and the saga began with the office staff of the endocrinologist who supplies my insulin.  Having barely avoided running out of insulin, and anxious to reestablish my regular three-month supply, I placed three phone calls, morning, afternoon, and closing time, to the provider’s office.  Each time, I indicated that I needed to speak with my physician that day about an important matter.  But I heard nothing – not from my physician, not from a medical colleague or member of the office staff, and not via the health plan’s patient portal.

The reason, it turned out, was because, unknown to me,  a “patient relations” staff member, responding to a complaint from a member of the office staff about the tone of my phone calls, advised the physician not to return my calls.  The patient relations staffer herself  would take care of the matter at hand.

But the promised contact never happened.  I only heard from the staffer by phone four days later.  She had tried to reach me sooner, she averred, but the office phone system was being upgraded and was apparently down at the time she placed the call.  The notion of trying again from a “live” phone apparently never occurred to her.  Withal, having finally contacted me by phone four days later, the human relations staffer listened to me, and then proceeded to the point of her call:  She informed me that concern had been expressed about my behavior (viz., my phone manner) in requesting a return call from my physician.  Absent so much as an allusion to the reason I sounded agitated, she added, gravely, that I may have acted inappropriately.

A call from the department manager a few days later was more conciliatory in nature.  She suggested there had been “miscommunication” on the part of the office staff, adding that the office staff required further training on how to respond to patients who called the office in a less than happy state of mind.  And she acknowledged as well that it would indeed be upsetting for an insulin-dependent diabetic to have barely avoided running out of  insulin and not reassured that his regular supply of a life-sustaining drug had been reestablished.

And then the pièce de resistance.   On September 26th, the morning after the department manager’s effort at conciliation, or at least shared responsibility, I received a letter dated September 20th from the “Summit Health Patient Relations Department,” absent any personal signatory.  The letter came from the patient relations staffer who had called me several days earlier on a disconnected phone line.   It began, “I have tried reaching out to you,” and then, flying in the face of her manager’s remarks the preceding evening, she became nakedly accusatory.  Now, simply because I had made three phone calls requesting a callback from my physician, and absent any relational exchange about the matter at hand, I stood guilty of behavior both “inappropriate” and “disruptive.”  The second paragraph reads:

Please know that as an employer, Summit Health has a responsibility to provide a safe and civil environment for our employees and providers.  We take this responsibility very seriously.  In the future we ask that you be courteous to all whom you encounter. Any further disruptive behavior could result in your discharge from this office.

The unsigned letter makes serious allegations that are unfounded and potentially libelous.  It threatens me with expulsion from the endocrinology office simply because I placed three phone calls to my physician’s office on September 18th, asking each time that the physician call me back about an important matter.  Apparently, in some preternatural way, three brief phone calls, during which I neither raised my voice nor used inappropriate language, impeded the work flow of the office.   The letter elides the particulars of the situation, skirting entirely the reciprocal obligation of physicians and  staff personnel to be responsive to patients, especially patients who reach out in times of  need.  I subsequently learned that the letter I received was in fact a template, and that equally impersonal  letters of rebuke had been sent to other Summit patients who, for one reason or another, elicited the disapproval of an office staff member.  All such letters were simply signed, “Summit Patient Relations Department.”

Taking the signatory of the letter at face value, I stand accused of “disruptive behavior” by a patient relations department that was uncomprehending of  relationality, especially the relationality that inheres in doctor-patient-office staff interactions.   Absent any relational engagement of  the particulars of  doctor-patient-staff interactions, what exactly is the raison d’être of a patient relations department?

_______________________

A broader issue that arose in my exchanges with the patient relations manager concerns the prerogative of a patient relations department to intrude into the doctor-patient relationship.  In this instance, it was a matter of advising a Summit  physician not to return multiple phone calls from a patient in distress.  When I posed the question directly to the manager, she replied that patient relations personnel were not medically trained and could not interfere in strictly medical matters.  By implication, intrusion in ostensibly non-medical matters (as to patient “behavior” and the like), was entirely acceptable.

But, how can a medically untrained administrative employee determine what is not medically relevant when a patient asks, repeatedly, that his physician return his phone calls?  In point of fact, I sought to discuss several salient medical matters with my provider; it wasn’t simply a matter of reestablishing a regular supply of insulin.  How could the young staffer who advised my physician not to return my phone calls have known this?  It would be another four days before she herself felt impelled to contact me, this time on a working phone system.

In this instance, and no doubt in countless others, a patient relations department was relationally destructive:  It pulled a health plan physician, a corporate employee, still further away from the physician’s Hippocratic obligation to privilege the patient’s needs above all else, viz., above office protocols, electronic monitoring of time spent with each patient, office staff sensibilities, et al.  In the mantle of “patient relations,” the doctor-patient relationship was flattened by the iron fist of corporate bureaucracy.

And here’s the rub.  In my case, there was no “behavior” at all.  There was no action involving others, no unannounced visit to the office, no contentious confrontation with the physician or a staff member.  There were three brief phone calls, pure and simple.  Yes, the calls conveyed a mounting sense of urgency and, by the third call, exasperation.  I regret that my tone was upsetting to endocrinology office staff.  But it should not have been.

Patients call their doctors for any number of  reasons.  Sometimes they are happy, sometimes confused, sometimes upset.  Often they are simply calling to schedule or reschedule appointments.  In this instance, my tone was entirely appropriate to the circumstances I related.  Why else would the department manager volunteer that the endocrinology office staff needed instruction on how to handle phone calls of a nonroutine nature?  Why else would she remark in a subsequent conversation that, had she placed three phone calls about an important matter and received no response, she would have felt the same way.

What have we here?   My experience suggests that, at Summit Health, patient relations is profoundly nonrelational.  A letter of rebuke was sent out  before the letter writer, the “Summit Health Patient Relations Department,” had even made contact with the patient.  Nor did anyone in the department, including the patient manager, even mention the plight of an elderly diabetic fearful of being without insulin.  It was simply a matter of  “behavior” in placing phone calls that betrayed frustration and, in the final call, anger.

My experience suggests that at Summit Health, patient relations is simply an arm of administration, charged with keeping patients in line, literally and figuratively, so that the wheels of office practice coast along smoothly and, of course, profitably.  But patient relations – as opposed to practice administration – is interpersonal and interactive, often messy, always time-consuming.  If Summit Health is serious about patient relations, it should assemble teams of professionals capable of engaging the messy interpersonal issues that enter into doctor-patient-staff relations.[4]

Such a staff would include the very type of professionals who emerged from the patient rights movement of the 1970s and 80s – trained health educators, trained patient advocates, trained system-wide navigators.  I wonder if any members of the Summit patient relations department have completed training programs in health advocacy.  I wonder if any have been certified by the Patient Advocacy Certification Board or the Professional Patient Advocate Institute.[5]  Who among them has training in healthcare ethics, with its core subject areas of patient autonomy, malfeasance, and beneficence?  Absent such training and the professional identity it cultivates, patient relations staffers are incapable of representing distressed patients when it matters most, viz., in the face of insensitivity and rank incompetence that leave patients muddling through medical purgatory.

Some insurers and health plans provide patient advocacy without the encumbrance of patient relations departments.  Aetna, for example, provides patient advocacy through “Aetna One Advocate” (A1A), an integrated clinical and service support program launched in 2018.   It provides health concierge services and a network of member advocates for plan members.  The network comprises teams of nurses, pharmacists, and others available to patients in need of support.[6]  In 2023, Elevance (formerly Anthem) launched “My Health Advocate,” a support model in which plan members are assigned a personal advocate to represent their interests when problems arrive.  Via connection with a single person, navigation and advocacy become “simple, guided, and intuitive.” [7]

At Summit Health, judging from my experience, patient advocacy is not even a component of patient relations.[8]  Far from it.  But absent a commitment to patient well-being through patient advocacy, patient relations is no more than empty rhetoric, a sop to data-obsessed marketers intent on giving health plans the mere semblance of patient-centered caregiving.  In short, if patient relations is not about patients in relation to their caregivers, including the failure of caregivers and support staffs to act beneficently on behalf of patients, then it is about nothing.

____________________

[1] Saint Michael’s Medical Center, “They’re a Hospital’s Best Kept Secret. How Patient Advocates are Changing Health Care in N.J.” 14 July 2022.

[2] “About National Patient Advocate Foundation” (https://www.patientadvocate.org/learn-about-us/about-npaf/).

[3] Melanie A. Meyer, “Qualifications and Skills Required for Patient Experience Positions,” Journal of Patient Experience, 7:1535-1542, 2019, citing J. Wolf , The State of Patient Experience in 2017:  A Return to Purpose.  Nashville, TN:  Beryl Institute, 2017 (https://theberylinstitute.org/product/the-state-of-patient-experience-2017-a-return-to-purpose-2/),

[4] On the evolution of  doctor-patient relations in the 19th and 20th centuries, including the changing meaning of the knotty, messy, time-consuming issues mentioned herein, see Paul E. Stepansky, In the Hands of Doctors:  Touch and Trust in Medical Care (Santa Barbara:  Praeger, 2016; Montclair:  Keynote Books, 2017pbk).

[5] Samna Ghani,  “What Does a Patient Advocate Do? (Duties and Salary),” 19 March 2025  (https://www.indeed.com/career-advice/careers/what-does-a-patient-advocate-do).

[6] Aetna, “Care Management Support for Individuals and Families” (https://www.aetna.com/individuals-families/health-insurance-through-work/care-management.html).

[7] Elevance Health, “My Health Advocate:  A Trusted Health Advisor” (https://www.elevancehealth.com/annual-report/2023/my-health-advocate-a-trusted-advisor.html).

[8] There is, be it noted, a “Summit Health Advocates,” a private fee-for-service advocacy firm located in Seattle.   It provides the type of personal advocacy that Summit Health, as best I can determine, does not provide as a member service.  The Summit Health Advocates website does not stipulate any relation with Summit Health, with headquarters in Berkeley Heights, NJ.   See “Summit Health Advocates” (https://www.summithealthcareadvocates.com/services).

Copyright © 2025 by Paul E. Stepansky.   All rights reserved.  The author kindly requests that educators using his blog essays in their courses and seminars let him know via info[at]keynote-books.com.

 

Corporate Healthcare is not Medicine: II. Who Cares?

“Physicians are many in title but very few in reality.” — Hippocrates

Corporate advertising that puts the customer first hardly begins with VillageMD and its Summit Health and CityMD subsidiaries.  Of course, they “care” about their customers, otherwise known as patients.  How else could they gain market share in the furiously competitive world of retail health services.  Health plan advertising began in the mid-1970s and blossomed in the 80s, when the health industry became a buyer’s market in which consumers played a heightened role in the choice of hospitals, health plans, and even prescription medications.[1]

Boots Pharmaceuticals saw the handwriting on the wall.  In 1983, it undertook the controversial step of airing a TV commercial touting the pain-reliever Rufun (prescription ibuprofen).[2]  Healthcare plans were quick to follow.  In the mid-80s, as managed care plans, especially HMOs, entered the market, UnitedHealthcare (now UnitedHealth Group), sought a competitive edge.  An insurance company with a network-based health plan for seniors, it launched a nation-wide campaign of print advertising and 10- and 30-second TV spots.  The corner had been turned.

In the mid-90s, a new player intent on market share was not content to insist that the customer always came first.  It created an in-house culture of customer obsession.  Indeed, the workplace mantra, “customer ecstasy,” was so omnipresent that company meetings included an empty chair to bring the customer’s voice into the conversation.  Customer obsession, observed a senior executive of the time, “was our NorthStar.”

Was this a rival of UnitedHealthcare looking to bring customers into its fold?  No indeed.  It was Amazon, which opened the doors of its gigantic on-line bookstore in 1995.  Jeff Bezos, brimming with idealism and expansionary zeal, recruited employees who joined him, he later reminisced, in “totally obsessing over the customer experience.”[3]

But Amazon began its odyssey by selling books.  Its customers were book buyers pure and simple.  Amazon did not profess a culture of caring to lull book buyers into the on-line store.  It did not shower the internet with ads insisting that its mission was the intellectual and literary betterment of shoppers.  It was enough to offer them a virtually limitless range of titles, discounted prices, and a hassle-free shopping experience.  The only caring going on was the care of designers and programmers to ensure customers would be happy with the shopping experience and come back for more.

Now we have VillageMD and its affiliates, for whom “the customer comes first” becomes a pledge to provide care for life.  For its customers, book buying gives way to issues of sickness and health – customers who arrive at an office or clinic with preexisting conditions, troublesome symptoms, and, often enough, anxiety at the prospect of diagnoses.  Come to us, urges Summit Health, because our mission, above all else, is to care.  Commerce is  obscured by the radiant glow of beneficent intent. “Care at Every Connection” proclaims the firm’s 2021 advertising campaign.  “Absolute customer satisfaction” is the promise.  Go to summithealth.com and the light becomes blinding.  A Lifetime of Care is the solemn promise given on the homepage in oversized bold font.[4]

Really?   When Tim Barry co-founded VillageMD in 2013, he had a plan:  to use technology, population data, and a network of  health care professionals to provide quality primary care.  The results would be better patient outcomes and reduced costs.[5]  VillageMD would assume financial risk for the healthcare outcomes of its patients and would, he believed, garner market share across the nation.  Financial success was just around the corner.

But things didn’t go as planned.  Low primary care reimbursement schedules and staffing shortages were part of the problem.[6]  Barry stepped down as CEO in November 2024 after Walgreens, its majority stakeholder since 2021, had ploughed a staggering $12.4 billion into new VillageMD clinics adjacent to Walgreens pharmacies.  The main problem?  The primary care clinics simply weren’t drawing patients.

New leadership, in the person of CEO Tim Murray, was necessary to reposition Walgreens for growth and profit. To this end, Murray would help Walgreens reach an “endpoint” in its financially draining commitment to VillageMD.  After an operating loss of $13 billion in the first three quarters of 2024, $12.4 billion attributable to VillageMD, Walgreens apparently had had enough.  Its CEO, Tim Wentworth, was refreshingly blunt about the new plan:  reduce Walgreens’ stake in VillageMD.   Only by putting an end to astronomical losses could Walgreens unlock liquidity, focus on “value creation,” and resume its growth. [7]

When Walgreens became majority owner of VillageMD in 2021, it anticipated 500-700 such adjacent storefronts.  The plan was financially disastrous, and Walgreens began closing VillageMD clinics in 2023. 

   But where was the call to care in all this?  Caring for people, connecting with them throughout the lifecycle – was this not  VillageMD/Summit Health’s own NorthStar in the war for customers and market share.  It was nowhere.  But, then, where could it have been?  In the world of corporate healthcare, how can caring be assessed, much less leveraged to increase profits?

VillageMD, with Summit Health and CityMD by its side, aspired to be a corporate juggernaut swallowing private practices and clinics wholesale in pursuit of profit.  The caring predisposition of its providers and support staffs could not be further from its mind.  It could hardly be expected to screen prospective physicians and nurses for the personality traits and professional orientation that make for caring providers.  Does Summit Health, for example, seek out primary care physicians whose residencies included training in the skill set associated with narrative medicine and clinical empathy?[8]  Does it provide newly hired personnel with any preliminary training, seminar-style, on the type of caring medicine VillageMD/Summit Health/CityMD physicians and staffs are expected to provide?   And further, have practices or clinics in regions of expansion ever been passed over because providers were judged deficient in the psychological and interpersonal prerequisites of the brand’s ethos of care?

Did it occur to VillageMD and its affiliates that the inability of its office practices and clinics to draw customers (read: patients) related to some deficiency in the caring ethos celebrated by its advertisers?  No, of course not.  Merely to pose the question underscores the ridiculousness of a corporate healthcare entity training its gaze on the quality of caregiving in assessing the performance, financially speaking, of its clinics and practices.

You want a healthcare company that subordinates profits to care?   Look to Blue Cross/Blue Shield prior to 1994, when its state plans became for-profits with access to the stock market to raise urgently needed cash.  Prior to then, it was a nonprofit that, in accord with the charitable mission set forth in its charter, accepted anyone who sought enrollment – and hemorrhaged money in the process.[9]  Today, the ethos of care for all lives on, but only outside the healthcare industry.  You’ll find it among nonprofits that make it their business, literally, to care for the underserved, the handicapped, the abused, the homeless and hungry.  Don’t look to corporate giants like VillageMD.

Don’t get me wrong. There are plenty of caring providers among those employed by healthcare corporations.  VillageMD/Summit Health may not take steps to staff its facilities with empathic caregiving, but neither does it chase them away.  One finds very caring physicians in all venues of clinical practice, corporate and otherwise.  But in corporate healthcare, the caring impulse is hardly facilitated by corporate handlers.  For the latter, physician engagement of patient narratives, followed by explanations and interpretations of the stories patients tell, are time-consuming indulgences.  They are the stuff of corporate advertising – and of psychiatry – not the fast-paced realities of frontline primary care under corporate aegis

Yes, many VillageMD and Summit Health physicians care about patients.  Far be it for me to suggest otherwise.   But now more than ever, their caring is hemmed in by protocols, regulations, and lay monitoring.  Time-consuming caring is not part of the corporate gameplan.  Physicians labor under the weight  of lay oversight and “rate” expectations.  The start and stop time of a patient visit is electronically monitored; it is right there in front of them on their computer screens.  To make matters worse, they must yield to “patient relations” personnel who may intrude into the doctor-patient relationship to the point of advising physicians not to contact patients who have reached out to them.  This, in any event, was my experience when I called the Summit Health endocrinology office three times this past September 18th, requesting, with some urgency, that my physician return my call that day.  It was a patient relations staffer who advised my physician not to return my phone calls.

________________________

Who cares?  Many physicians care.  During a period of ocular crisis when my eyesight rapidly deteriorated, my wonderfully caring retinologist returned almost daily phone calls for several weeks to explain newly arising symptoms and provide reassurance.  When I left a message with my ophthalmologist’s phone service  one Sunday evening, reporting symptoms suggestive of retinal detachment, she drove back from a weekend outing and opened her office in the evening to evaluate me.  When she determined I indeed had a detached retina, she went to the phone and made all the arrangements for a retinal evaluation early the next morning, with surgery later in the day.  Now, with limited vision and chronic eye discomfort, she has me come to the office whenever I wish to see her without making an appointment.  My hematologist, who appreciates my work in medical history, gives me all the time I need and encourages me to contact him whenever a medical issue arises, inside or outside his specialty.  He now provides excellent referrals to caring physicians in other specialties.

These physicians are Hippocratic caregivers in an age of corporate pseudo-care.  For them, the patient does indeed come first, and the Hippocratic injunction to practice “the Art” with compassion accompanies them throughout their careers.  None of these physicians, be it noted, practices within a healthcare corporation.

My father, William Stepansky, whose inspiring life story is related in The Last Family Doctor:  Remembering My Father’s Medicine, had a copy of the Hippocratic Oath taped to his dresser, a daily reminder of his calling.  A first-generation immigrant whose parents fled Ukraine during the anti-Jewish Pogrom of 1921, he served in World War II as a surgical tech in the 80th infantry of Patton’s Third Army.  He attended the wounded and dying during the Battle of the Bulge and was part of the unit that liberated Buchenwald.  After the war, He finished pharmacy training and attended Jefferson Medical College.  Following internship, he began his career as a rural generalist in a small borough 30 miles west of Philadelphia.

I asked him in retirement if he had ever turned away anyone who came to him for help.  Without hesitation, he quietly replied, “No.”  His commitment to his patients and their families was total, and intensified during the last phase of terminal illnesses. When a long-time patient passed away, he closed the office and joined his staff at the family’s memorial gathering.  The letter from the daughter of his patient read in part:  “Doctor, your act of compassion crosses the boundary of professionalism into humanity, and into my heart.  I value your gesture of respect for my family – and for our father.”[10]

Nearing retirement, he sold his house and adjacent office building to a group of multi-specialty internists expanding into local communities.  The understanding was that he would continue to see his patients in his own way until retirement, that his practice would be an enclave within the group.  Several months after the arrangement began, an office manager knocked on his door and confronted him with a printout attesting to his low productivity.  He retired the next day.

If VillageMD wants its website tagline, A Lifetime of Care, to be more than advertising drivel, it should have its providers read The Last Family Doctor.  Medicine has changed enormously since my father put out his shingle in Trappe, PA in 1952, but the physician’s commitment to a life of care is, or should be, a constant.  Contemporary physicians laboring under the weight of corporate oversight should be reminded from time to time of what Hippocratic caregiving looks like.  No, they needn’t tape the Hippocratic Oath to their dressers.  But it wouldn’t hurt if they familiarized themselves with a physician whose care of people, not customers, embodied cura in its true Latin sense – a care suffused with compassion, generosity of spirit, and love.  Such cura reduces the care glibly scripted by corporate advertisers to rubble.

_____________________

[1] Richard K. Thomas, Marketing Health Services, 2nd ed.  Chicago:  Health Administration Press, 2009,  11-14.

[2] Dylan Scott, “The Untold Story of TV’s First Prescription Drug Ad,” Stat, 11 December 2015 (https://www.statnews.com/2015/12/11/untold-story-tvs-first-prescription-drug-ad).

[3] All material on early Amazon culture, includes quotations, from “Amazon Empire:  The Rise and Reign of Jeff Bezos,”  Frontline, 18 February 2020 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RVVfJVj5z8s&t=2800s).

[4] “Summit Health Launches First Brand Advertising Campaign”  (https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/summit-health-launches-first-brand-advertising-campaign-301364781.html); “Summit Healthcare Solutions – Business Philosophy”; (https://www.summithcs.health/about-us/#:~:text=Summit%20Healthcare%20Solutions’%20business%20philosophy,compliance%2C%20dedication%2C%20and%20timeliness).

[5] Kathy Hovis, “VillageMD CEO Named Cornell Entrepreneur of the Year 2024,” Cornell Chronicle, 23 January 2024 (https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2024/01/villagemd-ceo-named-cornell-entrepreneur-year-2024).

[6]  Rebecca Pifer, “VillageMD CEO Tim Barry Steps Down,”  Healthcare Dive, 2 December 2024 (https://www.healthcaredive.com/news/villagemd-ceo-tim-barry-out-walgreens/734247).

[7] Bruce Japsen, “Tim Barry Is Out As CEO Of Walgreens Clinic Partner VillageMD,” Forbes, 27 November 2024 (https://www.forbes.com/sites/brucejapsen/2024/11/27/tim-barry-is-out-as-ceo-of–walgreens-clinic-partner-villagemd).  For Walgreens, the imbroglio over VillageMD capped a decade of mounting losses and, as such,  was prelude to financial collapse.  On 6 March 2025, it announced its sale to Sycamore Partners, a private equity firm, for roughly $10 billion.  This was one-tenth Walgreens’s market value a decade ago.

[8] On the training exercises during  residencies intended to cultivate caring doctors, i.e., doctors with empathic receptiveness to patients and the stories they bring to them, see Paul E. Stepansky, In the Hands of Doctors:  Touch and Trust in Medical Care (Santa Barbara: Praeger,  2017),  ch. 5 (“Can We Teach Doctors to Care?”).

[9] Elisabeth Rosenthal, An American Sickness:  How Healthcare Became Big Business and How You can Take it Back.  NY:  Penguin, 2017, 14-20.

[10] Paul E. Stepansky,  The Last Family Doctor:  Remembering My Father’s Medicine.  Montclair, NJ: Keynote, 2011,  103.

Copyright © 2025 by Paul E. Stepansky.   All rights reserved.  The author kindly requests that educators using his blog essays in their courses and seminars let him know via info[at]keynote-books.com.