Hi there, I'm Drew Weilage and I'm working to make healthcare better for patients.
This is a blog with links to healthcare goings on, trends, and uncategorized interestingness as well as attempts to filter my own healthcare thinking through essay.
I am greatly aware of my idealistic, naive even, views on a number of topics. But frankly, I think healthcare is in dire need of more of the "what's possible/what could be" type of thinking. I'm greatly protective of my unabashed idealism but always open to reason and discourse about any of it.
This is round two of my blogging life, the first being archived here.
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Via Dan Pink via the new book “See New Now:”
A study of the top fifty game-changing innovations over a hundred-year period showed that nearly 80 percent of those innovations were sparked by someone whose primary expertise was outside the field in which the innovation breakthrough took place.
Could it be termed “industry blindness?” Years of experience learning “how we do things” takes a toll upon in-industry creativity. It’s the ability to take a process concept and apply it to a problem in another field that is the crucial skill. The study mentioned above reveals that only 20 percent of the game-changing innovations came from within the industry.
It’s really difficult to critically investigate opportunity within one’s purview when all of your experience comes from one field. The outlook is limited by tight focus. Health care is especially prone to this problem because the vast majority of workers in the industry are lifetime members.
So consider hiring from outside health care when you can. Encourage reading of all things not health care. Reciprocate visits from professionals in other industries. We often turn to each for help in solving our problems. Here’s to asking someone the publishing industry.
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