07 May Meet Amir Dan Rubin, CEO of One Medical on June 6th at PMWC 2018 Michigan
Amir Dan Rubin has sought to make significant positive impacts on health care throughout his career. He serves as President and CEO of One Medical, the leading membership-based, technology-enabled, national primary care organization focused on transforming health care. Amir previously served as an EVP at UnitedHealth Group’s Optum division, where he served as a divisional CEO focused on helping to make the health system work better for everyone. Amir also previously served as President and CEO at Stanford Health Care—the academic health system affiliated with Stanford University—where he helped raise patient experience and quality scores to the highest levels in the nation, grow a regional network of care settings, and advance digital health and corporate partnerships in the heart of Silicon Valley. Amir also previously served as COO for UCLA Health System, COO for Stony Brook University Hospital, AVP at Memorial Hermann Health System, and management consultant with APM. Amir holds MBA and MHSA degrees from the University of Michigan, and a BA from the University of California, Berkeley. He has also been awarded the EY Entrepreneur of the Year Award in Northern California for large companies. Read his full bio.
PMWC 2018 Michigan taking place June 6-7, 2018.
Q&A with Amir Dan Rubin The CEO of One Medical
Q: What are some of the biggest contributors to these challenges and how can we overcome them?
A: One of the underlying challenges driving the rising the cost of health care is that most of the health system’s stakeholders have few incentives, if not outright disincentives, to manage expenditures. Much of the economics in the system is driven by fee-for-service payments, which reward utilization of expensive interventions, and discount approaches which are time-intensive, cognitive-oriented, behavior-directed, or technologically outside the reimbursement norms.
Q: How will health care need to be changed to create a balanced equilibrium between all the stakeholders, including payers and patients?
A: Greater focus and economic investment in innovative primary care models is needed. Such models–with proper alignment of economic incentives, technology, and operating models–can advance consumer engagement, health improvement, cost avoidance, and provider resilience.
Q: What should be done to reshape medicine and provide equal health care for all?
A: Greater focus and economic investment in innovative primary care models is needed. Such models–with proper alignment of economic incentives, technology, and operating models–can advance consumer engagement, health improvement, cost avoidance, and provider resilience.
Q: How can we deliver care that is highly patient-centered with the current challenges in place? What needs to be done?
A: At One Medical we have developed a consumer-oriented model that delivers premier levels of satisfaction with Net Promotor Scores above 90%, improved health and quality outcomes, and reductions in the total cost of care. Our member-based, technology-powered, salaried primary care model allows for frictionless in-office and digital access, while giving providers and members the technological tools, operating systems, and aligned incentives to advance outcomes.