Billede af showet Summit Lens

Summit Lens

Podcast af Eva

engelsk

Videnskab & teknologi

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Healthcare is shaped by three forces: patients, policy, and products. Summit Lens explores how these forces interact to define modern medicine.

Alle episoder

5 episoder

episode Why Making the Drug Is Only Half the Battle cover

Why Making the Drug Is Only Half the Battle

What does it actually take to turn a scientific breakthrough into a drug patients can access? In this episode, I look at the manufacturer side of the healthcare system, the part that absorbs scientific failure, funds long-shot bets, and then enters a second battle after the science succeeds. Because FDA approval is not the finish line. It is the point where a therapy enters the real commercial system: one shaped by patent clocks, launch pricing, payer resistance, formulary access, rebates, and budget pressure. This is a story about the economics of failure, the logic of blockbuster drugs, and the central tension at the heart of modern pharma: scientifically essential, politically unpopular, financially powerful, and commercially constrained at the same time. Between the lab bench and the patient sits a market that does not simply reward innovation. It prices it, filters it, delays it, and redistributes its value. Timestamps * 00:00 Intro: The Drug Exists. Access Still Breaks Down * 05:44 FDA Approval Is Not the Finish Line * 09:41 Inside the R&D Risk Machine * 13:24 Why Most Drug Trials Fail * 15:32 The Patent Clock Starts Early * 24:39 Why U.S. Drug Prices Run Higher * 29:19 The Gross-to-Net Bubble * 40:16 The Pharma Paradox * 44:05 The IRA Changes the Game * 50:59 Invention Is Not Enough

11. maj 2026 - 55 min
episode Who Really Controls Your Prescription? cover

Who Really Controls Your Prescription?

If your doctor writes a prescription, who actually decides whether you get it, where you fill it, and what you pay? In this episode, I unpack the hidden role of pharmacy benefit managers, or PBMs, the intermediaries that sit between drugmakers, insurers, employers, pharmacies, and patients. PBMs do not invent drugs or prescribe them, but they often control formularies, prior authorization, specialty pharmacy channels, and the financial terms that shape access. I trace how PBMs evolved from claims processors into powerful gatekeepers, explain how rebates, spread pricing, specialty pharmacy, and step therapy work, and examine the central debate: are PBMs lowering costs, or making the system more opaque while controlling who gets what medicine? From insulin and biosimilars to specialty drug markups and the latest reform pressure, this is a story about the financial architecture between the prescription pad and the patient. Timestamps * 00:00 — Cold open * 03:23 — The pharmacy counter mystery * 12:28 — Meet the PBM * 16:35 — The evolution of PBMs * 22:25 — How the machine works * 38:01 — Why PBMs grew so powerful * 49:33 — Critics vs. Defense * 57:01 — What this means

27. apr. 2026 - 1 h 8 min
episode How Private Insurers Took Over American Healthcare cover

How Private Insurers Took Over American Healthcare

What happens when an insurance company stops acting like a payer and starts acting like infrastructure? In this episode, I explore how private insurers became some of the most powerful actors in American healthcare. Using UnitedHealth Group as a central case study, I trace the shift from passive bill payer to managed care gatekeeper to vertically integrated healthcare empire. From Medicare Advantage and self-funded employer plans to Optum, PBMs, and the Change Healthcare crisis, this is a story about how private insurers scaled, consolidated, and embedded themselves into the plumbing of the U.S. health system. Timestamps * 00:10 The role of health insurance in healthcare * 07:02 The shift to managed care * 11:00 Understanding UnitedHealth Group’s strategy * 22:55 The impact of Medicare Advantage * 33:25 Self-funded plans and pharmacy benefit managers * 44:28 The vulnerability of consolidation * 50:45 The corporate takeover of healthcare

15. apr. 2026 - 53 min
episode Why U.S. Healthcare Is So Complicated cover

Why U.S. Healthcare Is So Complicated

Why does getting care in America so often feel like navigating a maze? In this episode, I unpack the hidden architecture behind that confusion. U.S. healthcare is not one coherent system. It is a patchwork of rulebooks built over time through employer-sponsored insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, the ACA Marketplace, ERISA, and decades of political compromise. The result is a system where your job, age, income, disability status, or state can shape not just who pays, but which rules you live under.  This episode explores why public programs increasingly flow through private managed care, why reform so often adds new layers instead of replacing old ones, and why complexity itself has become part of the business model of American healthcare.  Timestamps * 00:00 Why healthcare feels like a maze * 07:48 How the patchwork was built * 18:20 Five rulebooks, one system * 33:10 Why reform adds more layers * 46:37 The human cost of complexity * 49:34 Three takeaways

6. apr. 2026 - 52 min
episode How America Built the World’s Most Expensive Healthcare System cover

How America Built the World’s Most Expensive Healthcare System

Why does the United States spend more on healthcare than any other country in the world, and still underperform on many basic health outcomes? In this episode, I unpack the machinery behind the high cost of American healthcare. From employer-sponsored insurance and tax policy to hospital consolidation, administrative complexity, and market power, this is a story about how the U.S. built a system that is extraordinarily expensive, highly fragmented, and remarkably hard to fix. This episode is not just about prices. It is about the architecture underneath them, the incentives, institutions, and historical decisions that made the system what it is today. Timestamps * 00:00 The Start of a Healthcare Journey * 01:45 Intro: Understanding the Cost of Healthcare * 04:13 The Economics of Healthcare Spending * 12:09 The Historical Context of Employer-Based Insurance * 16:47 The Fragmentation of the Healthcare System] * 23:27 Administrative Costs and Market Power * 30:24 The Role of Pharmaceuticals in Healthcare Costs * 35:36 Return on Investment in Healthcare * 40:36 Conclusion

25. mar. 2026 - 43 min
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