What Happens When Insurance Companies Become More Powerful Than Medicine?

What Happens When Insurance Companies Become More Powerful Than Medicine?

The Health Care Blog – Read More

By MATTHEW ZACHARY

The American healthcare system behaves exactly as its incentives tell it to behave. That sentence sounds almost boring until you follow it to its logical conclusion.

Insurance companies now influence clinical decisions more aggressively than many physicians. They shape hospital consolidation. They determine startup viability. They influence venture capital allocation. They dictate which drugs succeed commercially. They pressure physician behavior through reimbursement design. They decide who accesses diagnostics, rehabilitation, home care, specialty drugs, imaging, mental health services, and sometimes whether a patient gets enough time left on Earth to watch their kid graduate college.

And somehow we still spend an astonishing amount of time talking about apps.

I have spent almost 30 years inside this machine as a brain cancer survivor, nonprofit founder, media mogul, healthcare conference producer, policy advocate, and accidental anthropologist of American institutional failure. I have watched every corner of healthcare promise transformation. Precision medicine. Digital therapeutics. Patient engagement. AI. Consumerism. Value based care. Coordinated care. Interoperability. Navigation. Ambient listening. Population health. Personalized medicine. Blah blah blah,.

Meanwhile millions of Americans spend their afternoons arguing with an insurance company employee named Chad who has never met them but somehow possesses the authority to overrule their oncologist.

At some point we need to admit the obvious. Innovation stopped driving healthcare years ago. Insurance drives healthcare now.

That realization sits underneath every chapter of my new book, We the Patients: Understanding, Navigating, and Surviving America’s Healthcare Nightmare. I wrote it because after decades inside the system I finally understood something uncomfortable. Americans think they are angry about healthcare costs, wait times, medical debt, or inaccessible care. They are. But underneath all of that sits a deeper fury most people struggle to articulate.

People understand, instinctively, that somebody they never elected now controls enormous portions of their lives during moments of maximum vulnerability.

That changes a country.

Healthcare executives still talk about “patient experience” like it is 2004 and somebody just discovered FourSquare recommendations. Venture backed startups still pitch friction reduction while prior authorization delays chemotherapy. Health systems launch innovation centers with reclaimed wood conference tables and espresso bars while patients crowdsource GoFundMe campaigns to afford deductibles larger than a used Volkswagen Scirocco.

Everybody inside healthcare knows this tension exists. Few people say it plainly because too many livelihoods depend on pretending the current arrangement remains sustainable.

The business incentives tell a clearer story than the public relations campaigns ever will.

UnitedHealthcare generated more than $400 billion in revenue last year. CVS Health topped $350 billion. Cigna approaches the GDP of mid sized nations.

Meanwhile independent physician practices collapse, rural hospitals disappear, oncology practices consolidate under private equity pressure, and patients navigate a reimbursement structure designed by people who appear to view Kafka novels as operational blueprints.

The market consolidated exactly as incentives encouraged it to consolidate.

Insurance companies figured out something the rest of healthcare still struggles to admit. Whoever controls reimbursement controls the system itself.

That means every healthcare innovation eventually slams into the same wall. Reimbursement policy determines survival.

Founders know it. Hospital executives know it. Pharma knows it. Investors definitely know it.

You can build the greatest diagnostic AI platform in human history. If insurers refuse coverage or bury reimbursement under administrative complexity, congratulations on your beautiful science project.

You can build extraordinary survivorship programs. If insurance declines long term rehabilitation, fertility preservation, cognitive support, nutrition counseling, or mental health services, patients still absorb the damage alone.

You can launch patient navigation companies until every healthcare conference ballroom from San Diego to Orlando glows with backlit logos and optimism. If the underlying insurance architecture rewards denial, delay, and opacity, navigation simply becomes another coping mechanism layered on top of institutional dysfunction.

The healthcare industry increasingly resembles a city building flood mitigation kiosks while refusing to discuss the hurricane.

That hurricane carries a giant insurance company logo.

The irony here deserves attention. American healthcare still publicly frames itself around medicine. The system actually operates around financial risk management.

Insurance companies do not fundamentally exist to maximize health outcomes. They exist to manage financial exposure. Sometimes those goals align. Sometimes they violently diverge.

Every physician reading this knows exactly what I mean.

Every hospital CFO knows it too.

Every founder who quietly pivoted their startup because reimbursement codes changed knows it.

Every exhausted caregiver sitting on hold for 97 minutes while hearing a pan flute version of “Don’t Stop Believin’” knows it too.

The healthcare industry often defends itself by pointing to complexity. Healthcare involves regulation, compliance, clinical nuance, labor shortages, fragmented infrastructure, aging populations, and rising chronic disease burdens. All true.

But complexity became profitable.

That distinction changes everything.

Administrative complexity now functions as both operational reality and economic moat. Entire sectors profit from helping employers, providers, and patients navigate complexity created by other sectors profiting from complexity. We built trillion dollar ecosystems whose business models depend on translation services between fragmented bureaucracies.

At some point that stops looking accidental.

None of this means markets fail automatically or private sector participation inherently creates harm. The opposite argument deserves attention. Properly aligned incentives could produce extraordinary outcomes. Efficient reimbursement models, transparent pricing, aligned preventive care incentives, and rational risk pooling could dramatically improve patient protection while lowering long term system costs.

But current incentives reward scale, opacity, leverage, and administrative endurance.

Patients experience those incentives as exhaustion.

The healthcare industry still underestimates the political consequences of that exhaustion.

For years Americans compartmentalized healthcare suffering as individual misfortune. Cancer happened to somebody else. Bankruptcy happened somewhere else. Insurance denials belonged to another family. Then the system expanded its dysfunction into nearly every household in America.

Now everybody has a story.

  • The delayed scan.
  • The denied medication.
  • The impossible bill.
  • The out of network anesthesiologist.
  • The prior authorization nightmare.
  • The “we regret to inform you” letter.
  • The 3 hour phone call transferred 6 times before disconnection.
  • The family forced into amateur actuarial science while somebody they love sits in an ICU bed.
  • Healthcare stopped feeling like civic infrastructure. It started feeling adversarial.

That erosion of trust carries enormous consequences for every institution attached to healthcare. Pharma wonders why public trust collapsed. Hospitals wonder why patient hostility increased. Insurers wonder why public rage escalates. Policymakers wonder why healthcare suddenly carries populist volatility across the political spectrum.

People eventually recognize when a system treats them like revenue extraction units wrapped in diagnostic codes.

The most dangerous mistake healthcare insiders still make involves assuming patients lack systemic awareness. Patients understand incentives far better than the industry gives them credit for. They may not speak in reimbursement terminology or regulatory language, but they understand outcomes.

They understand when nobody takes responsibility.

They understand when every institution redirects blame toward another institution.

They understand when “care coordination” means their exhausted spouse now functions as unpaid case manager, billing specialist, transportation coordinator, pharmacist, medical records clerk, and amateur attorney.

That awareness creates political energy.

Healthcare leaders should pay closer attention to what happens when millions of Americans across ideological lines begin reaching the same conclusion at the same time. The insurance architecture underpinning modern American healthcare increasingly shapes labor markets, household economics, disability, entrepreneurship, retirement timing, caregiving burdens, and social trust itself.

That reaches far beyond medicine.

The healthcare industry still behaves like patients remain fragmented consumers navigating isolated problems. Reality changed. Americans increasingly recognize shared structural exposure.

That realization explains why I wrote We the Patients.

I wanted to document the mechanics underneath the madness. I wanted readers to understand how incentives compound harm over time. I wanted healthcare insiders to confront the gap between what the system claims to deliver and what ordinary people actually experience after the MRI, after the diagnosis, after discharge papers land in their hands.

Most importantly, I wanted people to recognize their anger has a rational source.

Nothing destabilizes public trust faster than realizing your survival may depend less on medical science than on whether an insurance company decides your care fits an approved financial framework.

Once people see that clearly, they cannot unsee it.

That realization changes how people vote, organize, spend, work, retire, build companies, evaluate institutions, and understand power itself.

And frankly, after 30 years watching this system from every possible angle, I think healthcare insiders should spend a lot less time celebrating innovation theater and a lot more time asking a brutally simple question.

Who actually controls reality when a patient hears the word no?

Matthew Zachary is a 30-year brain cancer survivor & the co-founder of We The Patients, and the author of We the Patients: Understanding, Navigating, and Surviving America’s Healthcare Nightmare (Wiley, May 2026).

 

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