#13 - Primary Care Is Cracking: Why the Front Door of Healthcare Is Failing cover art

#13 - Primary Care Is Cracking: Why the Front Door of Healthcare Is Failing

#13 - Primary Care Is Cracking: Why the Front Door of Healthcare Is Failing

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Four Percent of Spending. One Hundred Percent of the Foundation Primary care is called the front door of the healthcare system. It's where prevention happens. It's where chronic disease is managed. It's where trust between patients and clinicians is built. And yet in the United States, that front door is cracking. Primary care accounts for just 4–5% of total healthcare spending in a system that spends nearly $4.5 trillion per year. Meanwhile, countries that invest double or triple that percentage achieve better outcomes, lower mortality, and lower costs. If primary care is the foundation of healthcare, why do we treat it like an afterthought? In this episode of Connected by Health, Dr. Krishna Vedala takes a deep dive into the primary care crisis; not just why it matters, but why it's structurally failing. You'll hear: Why more than 30% of U.S. adults lack a usual source of care Why over 7,900 federally designated primary care shortage areas exist Why primary care physicians earn significantly less than specialists — despite managing the most complex, longitudinal care Why burnout among primary care clinicians now exceeds 50% This isn't just about physician dissatisfaction. It's about access, equity, cost, and sustainability. When primary care weakens, patients wait weeks or months for appointments. They turn to emergency rooms as default care. Chronic conditions worsen. Costs rise downstream. As Krishna Vedala explains: "When primary care works, everything downstream works better." And when it doesn't? Everything downstream becomes more expensive and less humane. This episode doesn't stop at diagnosis, it outlines what real reform would actually require. You'll learn: Why the traditional fee-for-service model rewards volume, not prevention How value-based care models aim to stabilize revenue and prioritize outcomes Why administrative burden and fragmented payers create chaos for practices What real policy reform would look like — including primary care spending targets of 10–12%, Medicare payment stabilization, workforce investment, and long-term policy stability Krishna makes it clear: Primary care reform isn't a mystery. The evidence exists. The models exist. What's missing is alignment between policy and values. "If prevention really matters, we should fund it." Primary care isn't optional. It's infrastructure. And systems don't stand long when their foundations are ignored. If you are a policymaker, health system leader, clinician, or patient who believes healthcare should be more accessible, sustainable, and humane; this episode is for you. Share it with someone shaping policy. Send it to a healthcare leader. Start the conversation in your organization. Because without primary care reform: Costs will continue to rise Burnout will worsen Access will shrink Disparities will widen But if we rebuild the foundation? Communities become healthier. Care becomes more human. The system becomes sustainable. If this episode resonated with you, leave a review on Apple and share your biggest takeaway. Conversations like this are how reform begins. ──────────────────────────────────────── Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ──────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.
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