
American Healthcare Doesn’t Lack Money. It Lacks Alignment.
Friday, March 6, 2026

American Healthcare Doesn’t Lack Money. It Lacks Alignment.
Colleagues:
We now spend roughly $14,500 per person per year — about $5 trillion nationally — yet the average American pays only about $1,500 out of pocket in a given year. That disconnect matters. When someone else is paying most of the bill, prices rise without resistance. Corporate health systems expand administrative layers. Insurers grow utilization management departments. Profit and bureaucracy accumulate far faster than value. As Margaret Thatcher eloquently stated, “The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money.”
Spending is also highly concentrated. In 2022, the top 1% of out-of-pocket spenders paid about $23,700 annually. The top 10% paid $6,126. Meanwhile, the bottom 50% spent just $24. That tells us something critical: routine care is modest for most people in most years, while catastrophic events drive the extreme tail of spending.
So, what would costs look like in a competitive marketplace stripped of hospital bloat, opaque pricing, and insurer overhead?
Look at sectors already exposed to competition — LASIK, cosmetic surgery, direct primary care, imaging centers that post cash prices. When consumers shop and providers compete, prices often fall 30–60% relative to hospital-based negotiated rates. Administrative overhead in traditional insurance routinely runs 15–20% or more; corporate health system administrative costs can exceed 25% of total spending. Remove layers of billing complexity, prior authorization bureaucracy, cross-subsidized markups, and opaque contracting — and the underlying clinical cost of many common services drops dramatically.
If even a conservative 25–30% of the $14,500 reflects administrative friction, inflated facility fees, and market consolidation pricing power, that implies several thousand dollars per person annually are not tied to actual care delivery. In a disciplined competitive environment, routine annual healthcare consumption for most Americans could plausibly cost far less than current system-wide spending suggests — because much of today’s spending is transactional overhead, not medicine.
This is where a public-private structure makes sense:
- Healthcare savings accounts, funded by individuals, employers, and public support for lower-income families, would cover predictable care. When patients control the dollars, price transparency becomes meaningful and competition works.
- Catastrophic and life-event insurance would protect against rare, devastating events — cancer, trauma, neonatal ICU stays. That’s what insurance is designed to do: absorb low-frequency, high-severity risk.
- Real price transparency would allow patients to compare bundled prices before elective procedures — when they choose to undergo services. The decision to move forward should rest with the patient and physician, not a third party whose financial incentives reward delay or denial.
Care denials should be limited to clinical safety standards and clear contractual boundaries — not opaque utilization management designed to preserve margins. If a patient elects to proceed with a transparent, competitively priced service using their HSA funds, the friction should be minimal. Catastrophic coverage would activate only when true high-cost risk emerges.
The current system spreads $14,500 per person across layers of cross-subsidies, hidden pricing, and administrative gatekeeping. A system that separates routine spending from catastrophic protection — and reintroduces transparent competition — would force cost discipline where markets function and reserve insurance for what only insurance can responsibly manage.
If we want sustainable healthcare, we must stop treating every dollar as if it requires third-party control. Routine care should operate in a competitive marketplace. Catastrophic care should be insured. And administrative profit should not be mistaken for medical value.
Until we reach a proper balance in private and public funding, then we need to continue to fight for physicians to have a fair ability to appeal insurer underpayments to state and federal Independent Dispute Resolution (IDR) systems and for the preservation of private practice.
To this end, please come make your voice heard at MSSNY’s Physician Advocacy Day on March 10. Register for Physician Advocacy Day
All the best,
David Jakubowicz, MD, FACS
MSSNY President

Register for March 10 Physician Advocacy Day in Albany
Last chance to register for MSSNY’s Physician Advocacy Day, taking place this Tuesday, March 10th. Join us from 7:45 to 11:00 AM in Meeting Room 6 of the Empire State Plaza in Albany. Register now!
Prior Authorization Hurting Care
Prior authorization delays care, drains staff time, and disrupts treatment, especially for chronic patients. MSSNY is pushing reform, but we need real data from your practice to act. Add your voice. Take the Survey Now
Capital Update: March 6, 2026
- Physicians Across the State Coming to Albany for MSSNY’s Physician Advocacy Day on March 10 – Will You Join Us?
- Please Urge Legislature to Reject Budget Proposals that Will Harm Patient Access to Needed Care!!
- New York Senate Passes Legislation to Protect Access to Vaccinations & Uphold Vaccine Efficacy Standards
Advocacy in Action

MSSNY President Dr. David Jakubowicz and other MSSNY members meet with U.S. Senator Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), Chair of the Senate Health, Education, Labor, & Pensions Committee to discuss various issues affecting physicians and their patients, including the Federal IDR process and health system consolidations.

Physicians Needed for NY Workers’ Compensation Advisory Committee
- Key Point:The New York State Workers’ Compensation Board is reconvening its Medical Advisory Committee (MAC) to update 16 Medical Treatment Guidelines and the Drug Formulary.
- Why It Matters for MSSNY Physicians:These guidelines directly affect treatment decisions, reimbursement, and administrative requirements for Workers’ Compensation
- Impact on Practice:Physician participation helps ensure guidelines remain clinically appropriate and patient-centered.
- MSSNY Role:MSSNY will nominate physician representatives to ensure the physician perspective is included in the update process. Interested physicians should contact MSSNY to submit their CV and be considered for nomination
The New York State Workers’ Compensation Board (WCB) is preparing to reconvene its Medical Advisory Committee (MAC) to begin a multi-year process of updating the state’s Medical Treatment Guidelines (MTGs) and Drug Formulary, an effort that will directly affect the practice of medicine across the Workers’ Compensation system.
MSSNY has been invited to nominate physicians to participate in this important advisory body. The MAC plays a critical role in reviewing and updating 16 Medical Treatment Guidelines that guide care across multiple specialties, including musculoskeletal conditions, pain management, psychiatry, pulmonary care, ophthalmology, and other areas relevant to injured workers.
These guidelines influence treatment authorization, documentation expectations, and clinical decision-making for physicians caring for patients under Workers’ Compensation. Ensuring that practicing physicians help shape these policies is essential to maintaining guidelines that are both clinically sound and practical for real-world medical practice.
The committee will meet virtually, approximately once per month to once per quarter, lasting about 2 hours. Participants should also expect periodic review of proposed guideline updates between meetings. The full guideline review process is expected to take approximately two to three years. These positions are volunteer roles but provide an important opportunity for physicians to help shape statewide healthcare policy affecting injured workers and the physicians who care for them.
Physicians interested in serving should be licensed, and in good standing in New York State, Workers’ Compensation Board authorized, board-certified in their specialty, and familiar with the structure and content of Workers’ Compensation Medical Treatment Guidelines. A broad clinical knowledge base is particularly valuable given the range of conditions covered by the guidelines. Academic appointments are preferred but not required.
For New York physicians, participation offers a meaningful opportunity to bring real clinical experience into the policy-making process and ensure that treatment standards reflect the realities of patient care.
If you are interested in being considered as a MSSNY nominee, please contact [email protected] and submit your CV for review. Your voice can help shape the future of Workers’ Compensation care in New York.

MSSNY Welcomes New Senior Staff Members
MSSNY is strengthening its leadership team with the appointment of Jennifer Lepurage as Vice President of Membership and Michael Reynolds as Vice President of the Committee for Physician Health.
Jennifer Lepurage has been named Vice President of Membership, bringing more than three decades of association management experience to the organization. Most recently serving as Vice President of Membership for the Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association, Jennifer led membership recruitment and retention efforts, developed affinity partner programs, and generated non-dues revenue through sponsorship and advertising initiatives.
Her expertise in member engagement, marketing strategy, and association operations will support MSSNY’s efforts to grow and strengthen the New York physician community. By expanding member participation and strengthening partnerships, MSSNY continues to build a stronger statewide voice for physicians.
MSSNY also welcomes Michael Reynolds, who has been named Vice President of the Committee for Physician Health, where he will oversee the New York State Physician Health Program and the Committee for Physician Health (CPH). In this role, he leads clinical services, case management operations, monitoring processes, program modernization, outreach to referral sources, and strategic initiatives designed to expand the program’s impact.
Michael brings significant experience as a healthcare operations executive with a strong track record of modernizing healthcare systems, improving and diversifying revenue streams, and implementing innovative technologies to improve efficiency and outcomes. Prior to joining MSSNY, Reynolds led numerous transformative projects, including a $7.1 million New York State Healthcare Facility Transformation Grant that expanded access to care through a new medical village offering primary care, pediatrics, behavioral health services, and brand-new retail and specialty pharmacy services.
Together, these leadership additions reflect MSSNY’s ongoing commitment to supporting physicians through strong programs, meaningful engagement, and effective advocacy.

MSSNY President Offers Allergy Season Advice
While the ongoing frigid temperatures have delayed the start of the spring allergy season, Medical Society of the State of New York President and otolaryngologist Dr. David Jakubowicz offers New Yorkers some tips on how to prepare for what promises to be a shorter, but more intense spring allergy period this year. He urges people to start steroid nasal sprays now in anticipation of the pollen and to have antihistamines at the ready for when the warm temperatures finally do arrive.
Full Story: WPIX-TV (New York City) (3/1)

MSSNY CME Webinar Calendar
We invite you to register for our remarkable upcoming CME webinars! Join us for an engaging experience filled with invaluable insights that you won’t want to miss!
- Sunday, March 7, 9:45 AM-1:15 PM
The Importance of Networking
- Wednesday, March 11, 7:30-8:30 a.m.*
Patients with Opioid Use Disorders: Identification, Treatment, and Management of Co-occurring Pain
*Free of charge to members, $50 for Non-members.

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