Digital Exclusives
Philadelphia is home to a growing innovation district in health care for five key reasons. Perhaps a sixth—an energy and thirst for knowledge and interaction.
The uptake in clinical usage for his digital health solution was a welcome surprise for Wharton entrepreneur John Smithwick. Read the story behind his startup.
Superutilizers make up 1 percent of the population but use upward of 30 percent of health care resources. Here’s one social model to tackle the problem.
Some Wharton entrepreneurs are doing well and doing good by trying to cure what ails American health care.
Is health insurance consolidation good for the consumer? Mounting evidence suggests that pricing and quality of care are negatively, and increasingly, impacted.
A dose of business principles, in large part from venture philanthropy, is changing the way medical research is done in the U.S. health care industry.
Are recent health care mergers a good thing? Who are the winners and losers in these deals? Jeff Voigt finds answers in research on past consolidations.
David Fajgenbaum is battling a little-known, extremely deadly disease as a researcher, a physician, an advocate, an entrepreneur and a patient.
Health Care Management alumni reflect on how and why raising funds for the Kinney Alumni Scholarship was so successful.
As part of the Affordable Care Act, primary care providers got paid more to take Medicaid patients. Did it work to provide better care to more people?
A Wharton health care expert shares a recent scare with his father, when he learned firsthand how fragmented health care delivery is despite the ACA.
Hospital system CEO Dr. Stephen Klasko argues for keeping people out of hospitals and rethinking health care distribution—before someone else disrupts it first.
Academic medical centers face a long list of tasks to survive in the 21st century U.S. health care system, writes Wharton’s alumni health care club president.
The U.S. federal government has rolled out new implementation goals for value-based health care payments. Are regulators moving too far, too fast?
Health information technology is hot, but its growth comes at the expense of medical devices, writes the health care-focused Wharton alumni club president .
With upward of 39 million more Americans receiving health care coverage through health care reform, will the system be able to meet the demand?