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Shilpi's avatar

This is such an intriguing concept. The article definitely resonates with me professionally, especially as we struggle to recruit for our tele service line and struggle to grow due to lack of manpower. Gigs improve access to care and reduce burnout but affects patient care continuum. As a patient, I value seeing same physician in an outpatient and inpatient setting (more impractical inpatient). As a physician, I value building patient doctor relationships that last long term. At this time, I feel that the gig economy for physicians may be more of a personal choice for various different pros and cons that you have mentioned.

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Gordon Tang's avatar

Imagine you have a brain tumor. Or need heart surgery. A once in a lifetime, high stakes event. What is your measure of quality? In healthcare, quality can be so opaque that even over doctors have a hard time telling. In which case a long standing reputation for quality built upon a track record serves an adequate surrogate. Gig takes that away. Higher quality doctors have essentially a limitless supply of patients and so operational efficiency dictates that they don’t travel at all as the supply comes to them, on their own crafted terms to limit any variability in the system, demand and get any changes to enhance their effectiveness, no wasted time and control of the environment to the benefit of the doctor and patient. Anyone who walks away from such efficiencies could be a signal of low supply due to poor reputation and signal lower quality or experience. Is that what you would want as a patient?

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