Just to give one data point to the audience before I answer that question. The US economy is roughly 25 trillion dollars, somewhere around that. And healthcare spend is roughly, 3 to 4 trillion dollars of that, so approximately one fourth of the total. You will see that healthcare spend is growing at 6 to 7% on an annual basis. We all know that the US economy is not growing at 6 to 7%. So, if you do the math, healthcare is very quickly going to become a big burden, especially Medicare, Medicaid, et cetera. And it’s going to be unaffordable within the US economy. So that’s my comment on healthcare being broken.
What can I do in order to change some of the regulations? In my view, it again comes from the consumer – what’s best for the consumer, for the patient. As a consumer, I think I would like to have less surgical procedures. I would like to have minimally invasive surgeries and probably less hospital visits for myself. I would like to have more quality or higher quality of care at the least amount of copay or the least amount of payment for myself. When you boil down those things, what it translates to is what we now call as value-based care. In the past, hospitals or physicians were paid based on a number of procedures or scans. Now, the environment is shifting toward “is the patient healthy?” Are you keeping the patient out of hospital? Are you keeping the cost of care lower? And if all of those are yes, yes, and yes, that means you are delivering a good quality value to your patients. The hospitals get paid a fixed amount for doing that, which is what we call value-based care. So, as a regulation, I would recommend we mandate that most of the providers need to participate in a value-based care arrangement with their peers, and march toward the value-based care objective.