
We Have Enough Money To Fix Our Broken Healthcare System. So Why Don't We?
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Sameer Sood is a medical doctor who is sick of the many financial limitations he’s had to confront. For example, if a patient is covered by Medicare or Medicaid, why can’t that pot of money also cover housing, which might be the best, most cost-effective prescription he could write for someone without shelter? And why can’t you use some of the finance tools of for-profit startups to fund not-for-profit, community-based work? That’s what Sameer is asking–and answering–with the company he cofounded, FwdSlash.
Sameer grew up with relatively little money and even after earning a doctor’s salary never seemed to become too attached to any of it. Of all the things he’s done so far, that may be what's most impressive.
Episode Guide
1:53 Sameer’s money origin story
6:20 A physician’s view of what’s wrong with healthcare in America
8:45 He’s a doctor and an entrepreneur and doesn’t see a difference between the two.
10:55 Feeling “bullet-proof” on $60,000 per year
13:12 Helping non-profit organizations use finance tools typically reserved for for-profits
23:59 What he really wants to buy is his time
28:27 Nine-year-old Sameer wages a schoolwide campaign to buy his family a TV
33:13 Lionel confesses his money envy