Remove 2010 Remove Development Remove Health Care Remove Industry
article thumbnail

Marshall, Not McChrystal, Should Be Role Model for Military Leaders

Michael Lee Stallard

When FDR put the Civilian Conservation Corps during the Depression under Marshall’s command, he developed an “absorbing interest” in helping the young men by educating them and taking care of their health-care needs. on July 5th, 2010 [.] He increased human value in several ways. I know he is going.

Ryan 220
article thumbnail

Rethinking Digital Transformation: An Interview With Kathleen Wilson-Thompson

HR Digest

The HR Digest: How has Walgreens Boots Alliance responded to the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure employee safety, managing relationships with clients, collaboration with industry leaders and internal workforce management? Prior to this, she was Senior Vice President and Chief Human Resources Officer for Walgreens since 2010.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Fixing the Gender Imbalance in Health Care Leadership

Harvard Business Review

Yet bright spots have emerged, both in healthcare and in other industries asking themselves a similar question. The Future of Health Care. Creating opportunities for development and sponsorship. These numbers point to a clear need for better representation of female physicians in leadership. Quantification.

article thumbnail

Searching for Health Care's Entrepreneurial Spirit

Harvard Business Review

Editor's note: This post is part of a three-week series examining innovation in health care, published in partnership with the Advanced Leadership Initiative at Harvard University. At first blush, it would appear that entrepreneurship is alive and well in health care. Think instead about other industries.

article thumbnail

What the CVS-Aetna Deal Means for the Delivery of U.S. Health Care

Harvard Business Review

The landscape for the delivery of health care in the United States is changing, but the traditional care-delivery players are not the change agents. In fact, this environment is the most disruptive I’ve witnessed in my 35 years in the health care industry. Carol Yepes/Getty Images.

article thumbnail

The Innovation Health Care Really Needs: Help People Manage Their Own Health

Harvard Business Review

Finally, health care, which has been largely immune to the forces of disruptive innovation , is beginning to change. health care keeps getting costlier. These astronomical costs are largely due to the way competition works in American health care. In most industries, disruption comes from startups.

article thumbnail

3 Entrepreneurs Who Made It Their Mission to Lower Health Care Costs

Harvard Business Review

trillion, or almost 18% of its GDP , on health care — that’s $10,000 per person, twice as much as any other country in the industrialized world. Reverse Innovation in Health Care: How to Make Value-Based Delivery Work. There is a healthcare crisis in the U.S. In 2016, the U.S. spent a staggering $3.2