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What if our healthcare system kept us healthy?

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    So my freshman year of college
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    I signed up for an internship in the housing unit
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    at Greater Boston Legal Services.
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    Showed up the first day
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    ready to make coffee and photocopies,
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    but was paired with this righteous, deeply inspired attorney
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    named Jeff Purcell,
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    who thrust me onto the front lines
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    from the very first day.
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    And over the course of nine months
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    I had the chance
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    to have dozens of conversations
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    with low-income families in Boston
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    who would come in presenting with housing issues,
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    but always had an underlying health issue.
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    So I had a client who came in,
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    about to be evicted because he hasn't paid his rent.
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    But he hasn't paid his rent, of course,
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    because he's paying for his HIV medication
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    and just can't afford both.
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    We had moms who would come in,
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    daughter has asthma,
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    wakes up covered in cockroaches every morning.
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    And one of our litigation strategies
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    was actually to send me into the home of these clients
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    with these large glass bottles.
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    And I would collect the cockroaches,
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    hot glue-gun them to this poster board
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    that we'd bring to court for our cases.
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    And we always won
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    because the judges were just so grossed out.
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    Far more effective, I have to say,
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    than anything I later learned in law school.
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    But over the course of these nine months,
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    I grew frustrated with feeling
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    like we were intervening too far downstream
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    in the lives of our clients --
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    that by the time they came to us,
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    they were already in crisis.
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    And at the end of my freshman year of college,
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    I read an article about the work
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    that Dr. Barry Zuckerman was doing
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    as Chair of Pediatrics
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    at Boston Medical Center.
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    And his first hire was a legal services attorney
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    to represent the patients.
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    So I called Barry,
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    and with his blessing, in October 1995
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    walked into the waiting room
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    of the pediatrics clinic at Boston Medical Center.
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    I'll never forget,
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    the TVs played this endless reel of cartoons.
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    And the exhaustion of mothers
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    who had taken two, three, sometimes four buses
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    to bring their child to the doctor
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    was just palpable.
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    The doctors, it seemed,
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    never really had enough time for all the patients,
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    try as they might.
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    And over the course of six months,
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    I would corner them in the hallway
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    and ask them a sort of naive but fundamental question:
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    "If you had unlimited resources,
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    what's the one thing you would give your patients?"
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    And I heard the same story again and again,
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    a story we've heard hundreds of times since then.
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    They said, "Every day we have patients that come into the clinic --
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    child has an ear infection,
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    I prescribe antibiotics.
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    But the real issue is there's no food at home.
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    The real issue
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    is that child is living with 12 other people
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    in a two-bedroom apartment.
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    And I don't even ask about those issues
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    because there's nothing I can do.
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    I have 13 minutes with each patient.
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    Patients are piling up in the clinic waiting room.
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    I have no idea where the nearest food pantry is.
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    And I don't even have any help."
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    In that clinic, even today,
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    there are two social workers
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    for 24,000 pediatric patients,
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    which is better than a lot of the clinics out there.
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    So Health Leads was born of these conversations --
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    a simple model
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    where doctors and nurses
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    can prescribe nutritious food,
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    heat in the winter
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    and other basic resources for their patients
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    the same way they prescribe medication.
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    Patients then take their prescriptions
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    to our desk in the clinic waiting room
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    where we have a core of well-trained college student advocates
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    who work side by side with these families
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    to connect them out
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    to the existing landscape of community resources.
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    So we began with a card table in the clinic waiting room --
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    totally lemonade stand style.
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    But today we have a thousand college student advocates
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    who are working to connect nearly 9,000 patients and their families
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    with the resources that they need to be healthy.
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    So 18 months ago
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    I got this email that changed my life.
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    And the email was from Dr. Jack Geiger,
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    who had written to congratulate me on Health Leads
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    and to share, as he said,
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    a bit of historical context.
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    In 1965 Dr. Geiger founded
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    one of the first two community health centers in this country,
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    in a brutally poor area in the Mississippi Delta.
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    And so many of his patients came in
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    presenting with malnutrition
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    that be began prescribing food for them.
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    And they would take these prescriptions to the local supermarket,
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    which would fill them
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    and then charge the pharmacy budget of the clinic.
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    And when the Office of Economic Opportunity in Washington, D.C. --
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    which was funding Geiger's clinic --
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    found out about this,
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    they were furious.
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    And they sent this bureaucrat down
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    to tell Geiger that he was expected to use their dollars
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    for medical care --
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    to which Geiger famously and logically responded,
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    "The last time I checked my textbooks,
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    the specific therapy for malnutrition was food."
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    (Laughter)
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    So when I got this email from Dr. Geiger,
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    I knew I was supposed to be proud
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    to be part of this history.
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    But the truth is
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    I was devastated.
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    Here we are,
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    45 years after Geiger has prescribed food for his patients,
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    and I have doctors telling me,
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    "On those issues, we practice a 'don't ask, don't tell' policy."
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    Forty-five years after Geiger,
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    Health Leads has to reinvent
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    the prescription for basic resources.
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    So I have spent hours upon hours
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    trying to make sense of this weird Groundhog Day.
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    How is it that if for decades
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    we had a pretty straightforward tool for keeping patients,
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    and especially low-income patients, healthy,
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    that we didn't use it?
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    If we know what it takes to have a healthcare system
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    rather than a sick-care system,
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    why don't we just do it?
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    These questions, in my mind,
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    are not hard because the answers are complicated,
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    they are hard because they require that we be honest with ourselves.
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    My belief is that it's almost too painful
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    to articulate our aspirations for our healthcare system,
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    or even admit that we have any at all.
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    Because if we did,
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    they would be so removed
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    from our current reality.
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    But that doesn't change my belief
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    that all of us, deep inside,
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    here in this room and across this country,
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    share a similar set of desires.
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    That if we are honest with ourselves
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    and listen quietly,
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    that we all harbor
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    one fiercely held aspiration for our healthcare:
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    that it keep us healthy.
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    This aspiration that our healthcare keep us healthy
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    is an enormously powerful one.
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    And the way I think about this
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    is that healthcare is like any other system.
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    It's just a set of choices that people make.
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    What if we decided
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    to make a different set of choices?
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    What if we decided to take all the parts of healthcare
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    that have drifted away from us
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    and stand firm and say, "No.
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    These things are ours.
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    They will be used for our purposes.
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    They will be used to realize
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    our aspiration"?
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    What if everything we needed
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    to realize our aspiration for healthcare
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    was right there in front of us
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    just waiting to be claimed?
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    So that's where Health Leads began.
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    We started with the prescription pad --
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    a very ordinary piece of paper --
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    and we asked, not what do patients need to get healthy --
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    antibiotics, an inhaler, medication --
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    but what do patients need to be healthy,
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    to not get sick in the first place?
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    And we chose to use the prescription
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    for that purpose.
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    So just a few miles from here
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    at Children's National Medical Center,
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    when patients come into the doctor's office,
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    they're asked a few questions.
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    They're asked, "Are you running out of food at the end of the month?
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    Do you have safe housing?"
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    And when the doctor begins the visit,
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    she knows height, weight, is there food at home,
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    is the family living in a shelter.
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    And that not only leads to a better set of clinical choices,
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    but the doctor can also prescribe those resources for the patient,
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    using Health Leads like any other sub-specialty referral.
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    The problem is,
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    once you get a taste of what it's like
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    to realize your aspiration for healthcare,
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    you want more.
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    So we thought,
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    if we can get individual doctors
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    to prescribe these basic resources for their patients,
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    could we get an entire healthcare system
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    to shift its presumption?
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    And we gave it a shot.
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    So now at Harlem Hospital Center
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    when patients come in with an elevated body mass index,
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    the electronic medical record
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    automatically generates a prescription for Health Leads.
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    And our volunteers can then work with them
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    to connect patients to healthy food and excercise programs
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    in their communities.
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    We've created a presumption
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    that if you're a patient at that hospital
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    with an elevated BMI,
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    the four walls of the doctor's office
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    probably aren't going to give you everything
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    you need to be healthy.
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    You need more.
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    So on the one hand,
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    this is just a basic recoding
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    of the electronic medical record.
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    And on the other hand,
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    it's a radical transformation
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    of the electronic medical record
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    from a static repository of diagnostic information
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    to a health promotion tool.
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    In the private sector,
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    when you squeeze that kind of additional value
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    out of a fixed-cost investment,
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    it's called a billion-dollar company.
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    But in my world,
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    it's called reduced obesity and diabetes.
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    It's called healthcare --
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    a system where doctors can prescribe solutions
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    to improve health,
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    not just manage disease.
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    Same thing in the clinic waiting room.
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    So every day in this country
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    three million patients
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    pass through about 150,000 clinic waiting rooms in this country.
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    And what do they do when they're there?
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    They sit, they watch the goldfish in the fish tank,
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    they read extremely old copies
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    of Good Housekeeping magazine.
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    But mostly we all just sit there forever, waiting.
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    How did we get here
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    where we devote hundreds of acres and thousands of hours
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    to waiting?
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    What if we had a waiting room
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    where you don't just sit when you're sick,
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    but where you go to get healthy.
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    If airports can become shopping malls
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    and McDonald's can become playgrounds,
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    surely we can reinvent the clinic waiting room.
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    And that's what Health Leads has tried to do,
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    to reclaim that real estate and that time
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    and to use it as a gateway
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    to connect patients
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    to the resources they need to be healthy.
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    So it's a brutal winter in the Northeast,
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    your kid has asthma, your heat just got turned off,
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    and of course you're in the waiting room of the ER,
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    because the cold air triggered your child's asthma.
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    But what if instead of waiting for hours anxiously,
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    the waiting room became the place
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    where Health Leads turned your heat back on?
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    And of course all of this requires
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    a broader workforce.
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    But if we're creative, we already have that too.
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    We know that our doctors and nurses
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    and even social workers
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    aren't enough,
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    that the ticking minutes of health care
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    are too constraining.
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    Health just takes more time.
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    It requires a non-clinical army
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    of community health workers and case managers
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    and many others.
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    What if a small part of that next healthcare workforce
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    were the 11 million college students in this country?
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    Unencumbered by clinical responsibilities,
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    unwilling to take no for an answer
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    from those bureaucracies
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    that tend to crush patients,
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    and with an unparalleled ability
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    for information retrieval
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    honed through years of using Google.
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    Now lest you think it improbable
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    that a college volunteer
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    can make this kind of commitment,
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    I have two words for you:
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    March Madness.
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    The average NCAA Division I men's basketball player
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    dedicates 39 hours a week to his sport.
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    Now we may think that's good or bad,
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    but in either case it's real.
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    And Health Leads is based on the presumption
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    that for too long
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    we have asked too little of our college students
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    when it comes to real impact in vulnerable communities.
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    College sports teams say,
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    "We're going to take dozens of hours
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    at some field across campus at some ungodly hour of the morning
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    and we're going to measure your performance, and your team's performance,
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    and if you don't measure up or you don't show up,
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    we're going to cut you off the team.
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    But we'll make huge investments
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    in your training and development,
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    and we'll give you an extraordinary community of peers."
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    And people line up out the door
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    just for the chance to be part of it.
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    So our feeling is,
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    if it's good enough for the rugby team,
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    it's good enough for health and poverty.
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    Health Leads too recruits competitively,
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    trains intensively,
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    coaches professionally,
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    demands significant time,
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    builds a cohesive team
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    and measures results --
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    a kind of Teach for America for healthcare.
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    Now in the top 10 cities in the U.S.
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    with the largest number of Medicaid patients,
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    each of those has at least 20,000 college students.
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    New York alone has half a million college students.
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    And this isn't just a sort of short-term workforce
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    to connect patients to basic resources,
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    it's a next generation healthcare leadership pipeline
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    who've spent two, three, four years
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    in the clinic waiting room
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    talking to patients about their most basic health needs.
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    And they leave with the conviction,
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    the ability and the efficacy
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    to realize our most basic aspirations for health care.
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    And the thing is, there's thousands of these folks already out there.
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    So Mia Lozada is Chief Resident of Internal Medicine
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    at UCSF Medical Center,
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    but for three years as an undergraduate
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    she was a Health Leads volunteer
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    in the clinic waiting room at Boston Medical Center.
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    Mia says, "When my classmates write a prescription,
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    they think their work is done.
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    When I write a prescription,
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    I think, can the family read the prescription?
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    Do they have transportation to the pharmacy?
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    Do they have food to take with the prescription?
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    Do they have insurance to fill the prescription?
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    Those are the questions I learned at Health Leads,
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    not in medical school."
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    Now none of these solutions --
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    the prescription pad, the electronic medical record,
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    the waiting room,
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    the army of college students --
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    are perfect.
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    But they are ours for the taking --
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    simple examples
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    of the vast under-utilized healthcare resources
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    that, if we reclaimed and redeployed,
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    could realize our most basic aspiration
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    of healthcare.
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    So I had been at Legal Services for about nine months
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    when this idea of Health Leads started percolating in my mind.
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    And I knew I had to tell Jeff Purcell, my attorney,
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    that I needed to leave.
  • 14:29 - 14:30
    And I was so nervous,
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    because I thought he was going to be disappointed in me
  • 14:33 - 14:36
    for abandoning our clients for some crazy idea.
  • 14:36 - 14:38
    And I sat down with him and I said,
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    "Jeff, I have this idea
  • 14:40 - 14:42
    that we could mobilize college students
  • 14:42 - 14:45
    to address patients' most basic health needs."
  • 14:45 - 14:47
    And I'll be honest,
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    all I wanted was for him to not be angry at me.
  • 14:50 - 14:52
    But he said this,
  • 14:52 - 14:55
    "Rebecca, when you have a vision,
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    you have an obligation to realize that vision.
  • 14:59 - 15:02
    You must pursue that vision."
  • 15:02 - 15:05
    And I have to say, I was like "Whoa.
  • 15:05 - 15:07
    That's a lot of pressure."
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    I just wanted a blessing,
  • 15:09 - 15:10
    I didn't want some kind of mandate.
  • 15:10 - 15:12
    But the truth is
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    I've spent every waking minute nearly since then
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    chasing that vision.
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    I believe that we all have a vision
  • 15:19 - 15:21
    for healthcare in this country.
  • 15:21 - 15:23
    I believe that at the end of the day
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    when we measure our healthcare,
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    it will not be by the diseases cured,
  • 15:28 - 15:31
    but by the diseases prevented.
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    It will not be by the excellence of our technologies
  • 15:34 - 15:36
    or the sophistication of our specialists,
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    but by how rarely we needed them.
  • 15:39 - 15:40
    And most of all,
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    I believe that when we measure healthcare,
  • 15:43 - 15:46
    it will be, not by what the system was,
  • 15:46 - 15:48
    but by what we chose it to be.
  • 15:48 - 15:49
    Thank you.
  • 15:49 - 16:00
    (Applause)
  • 16:00 - 16:01
    Thank you.
  • 16:01 - 16:10
    (Applause)
Title:
What if our healthcare system kept us healthy?
Speaker:
Rebecca Onie
Description:

Rebecca Onie asks audacious questions: What if waiting rooms were a place to improve daily health care? What if doctors could prescribe food, housing and heat in the winter? At TEDMED she describes Health Leads, an organization that does just that -- and does it by building a volunteer base as elite and dedicated as a college sports team.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
16:34

English subtitles

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