HLTH: Future of Healthcare: Insights from Chris Moniz, HSBC, and Kristin Apple, Linus Group
Young physicians are primarily motivated by a desire to help and heal, not by prestige or financial gain.
In this episode, Kristin Apple, President of the Linus Group, and Chris Moniz, Managing Director of Healthtech at HSBC Innovation Banking, discuss the findings of the "Health 2035" report, highlighting insights from a survey of 1,000 young physicians and over 40 health care visionaries. Kristin delves into their aspirations for preventative care, their increasing concern about patient trust, and their eagerness to integrate AI into their practices, although not at the expense of the human connection. Chris adds his perspective on the investment trends backing these preferences, focusing on increased funding for provider operations.
Join us and learn how the healthcare landscape is poised to shift towards a more preventative, tech-enabled, and community-centered approach!
About Chris Moniz: Chris Moniz is a Managing Director at HSBC Holdings. Previously, he was a Managing Director and Market Manager at SVB Financial Group, leading Northwest & Northeast HealthTech & Medical Devices. A contributing author to HSBC Innovation Banking's 1H 2023 Venture Healthcare Report, Chris offers expertise and actionable insights to healthcare companies and investors.
About Kristin Apple: Kristin Apple is President of LINUS, guiding leaders in health, wellness, and life sciences through transformative decisions. With 20+ years of experience advising major healthcare, pharmaceutical, and CPG companies, she's passionate about healthcare innovation. Previously, she led the healthcare vertical at Egg Strategy. Her background includes nearly six years at Eli Lilly, launching blockbuster drugs. Kristin holds an MBA from the University of Colorado and a degree from Indiana University.
Things You’ll Learn:
There is a growing concern among young physicians that patient trust is eroding, coupled with a mirroring lack of trust in patients.
Young physicians are eager to incorporate AI into their practices for diagnosis and therapeutic decision-making while maintaining the human connection as an essential aspect of the patient-physician relationship.
Technology should be used to enhance patient connection and streamline administrative tasks, not to replace human interaction.
The future of healthcare involves a community-centric approach, with care delivered where people are, integrating their support systems.
The healthcare industry must embrace and shape inevitable changes rather than be overtaken by them.
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