Viral Healthcare
Every year, healthcare is introduced to new technologies, treatments, and ideas that promise to revolutionize medicine. Some truly change the way we deliver care. Others create enormous excitement but ultimately have only a modest—or even negligible—impact. In this episode of Viral Healthcare, Bruce Spurlock compares some of healthcare's most transformational innovations with others that generated significant hype but failed to deliver the sweeping change many expected. From minimally invasive surgery and HIV antiretroviral therapy to blockchain, consumer wearables, and Haven Healthcare, we explore what separates enduring transformation from innovation theater. If you're a healthcare executive, physician leader, quality professional, or anyone responsible for evaluating new ideas, this episode offers practical lessons on identifying innovations that create lasting value. In this episode: * Why minimally invasive surgery fundamentally changed healthcare * The remarkable impact of HIV antiretroviral therapy * Point-of-care ultrasound and bedside decision-making * Why blockchain never transformed healthcare * The reality behind precision oncology tumor boards * Lessons from Haven Healthcare and other highly anticipated initiatives * How leaders can distinguish transformational innovations from incremental improvements ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.
34 episodes
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