What healthcare execs are saying on staffing, AI, weight loss drugs

In This Article:

The rising popularity of digital services, artificial intelligence, and weight loss drugs are paving the way for various concerns in the healthcare space. Yahoo Finance Senior Health Reporter Anjalee Khemlani spoke with some of the top health executives at the 2023 HLTH Conference in Las Vegas to gain insights into where these new frontiers for healthcare will lead and what that means for the patient experience.

Top interviews include:

0:35 — 1:48 Dr. Vineeta Agarwal, Andreessen Horowitz General Partner

2:09 — 3:17 Dr. Amy Abernathy, Verily Chief Medical Officer

3:41 — 5:40 Neil Lindsay, Amazon (AMZN) Health Services SVP

6:03 — 7:07 Dr. Patrick Carrol, Hims & Hers (HIMS) Chief Medical Officer

7:29 — 8:08 Dr. Jon Wigneswaran, Walmart (WMT) Chief Medical Officer

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.

Video Transcript

[AUDIO LOGO]

ANJALEE KHEMLANI: Welcome back to Yahoo Finance Live. I'm senior health reporter Angela Khemlani. And I just came back from the health conference in Las Vegas, which has grown every year, signaling the importance that digital health and AI are going to be playing in our future health care. I spoke to a number of experts who told me that investors and founders are really struggling with trying to figure out where the next big bet is.

To that end, Vineeta Agarwal, Andreessen Horowitz's general partner talked to me about the role that medical experts are going to play in that role. Listen to what she had to say.

VINEETA AGARWAL: We're looking at an overstretched health care workforce. I'm a primary care physician myself. The inbox volume that most providers today are receiving from patients who appropriately have an expectation that they will be heard and heard quickly is almost unmanageable. And yet when we look at our national statistics of number of providers per capita or health outcomes on that basis, we fall short. And we don't actually have numerically a provider shortage in this country.

And so we are left with this strange sort of situation and tale of two cities, so to speak, which is that we've got lots of providers and yet we're not achieving the health care outcomes and patient experiences that we want nor the cost reduction that we want. And so bridging those exact two worlds, we think of a host of provider enablement technologies like AI that can be a co-pilot to our providers, that can take administrative burden off of our providers plates, that can interface directly with patients in meaningful ways when providers otherwise wouldn't be able to. And all of those use cases we think are going to be powered by new and next generation AI models in a really impactful way.