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Futile Care, Dignity at the End of Life, and Physician-Owned Hospitals

Futile Care, Dignity at the End of Life, and Physician-Owned Hospitals

Update: 2025-09-19
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🎯 Why Listen

When an 88-year-old with dementia lands in the hospital, should we implant a device simply “because we can”? The panel examines futile care, ICU economics, malpractice fears, and the cultural bias to always “do something.” With special guest JP Kolcun, a seventh-year neurosurgery resident, they also debate whether physician-owned hospitals could restore dignity, efficiency, and leadership to American medicine.


👥 Co-Hosts

  • Dutch Rojas – Founder, Bliksem Health
  • Anthony DiGiorgio, DO, MHA – Neurosurgeon, UCSF; health policy researcher
  • Anish Koka, MD – Cardiologist, Philadelphia; healthcare policy commentator
  • Dan Choi, MD, FAAOS – Orthopedic spine surgeon, Long Island; healthcare advocate and social media voice
  • Sanat Dixit, MD, FACS – Neurosurgeon, Huntsville, AL; Faculty, Vanderbilt University; healthcare entrepreneur
  • Special Guest: JP Kolcun, MD – Seventh-year neurosurgery resident, Rush University, Chicago

📌 Episode Overview

The panel examines costly end-of-life interventions like Watchman devices, asking whether they truly benefit frail patients and what dignity looks like when medicine defaults to “doing something.” In the second half, they debate physician-owned hospitals, exploring how lifting ACA restrictions could improve efficiency, reduce burnout, and restore physician leadership in patient-centered care.


đź’¬ Notable Quotes

  • “Wherever the art of medicine is loved, there is humanity.” – Hippocrates, quoted during the episode
  • “Government is a poor deployer of capital.”
  • “Who would you rather have running a hospital—someone oath-bound, or someone only bound by greed?”


📚 What You’ll Learn

  • Why left atrial appendage occluders spark debate about futility and cost at the end of life
  • How Medicare’s spending patterns shape hospital incentives
  • The tension between physician judgment, family wishes, and systemic pressures
  • What Section 6001 of the ACA did to physician-owned hospitals
  • Why physician-led care models could improve efficiency and morale in healthcare
  • Broader reflections on dignity, values, and the role of physicians in society


⏱ The Episode (Timestamps)

  • [00:01:30 ] Introductions, JP Colcun rejoins the panel
  • [00:04:00 ] End-of-life spending and Watchman device outcomes
  • [00:08:00 ] The 40% mortality problem in device patients
  • [00:13:00 ] Futility, family wishes, and medical-legal pressures
  • [00:17:00 ] Medicare’s role and distorted spending incentives
  • [00:22:00 ] Dignity, third-party payment, and lost physician “quarterbacks”
  • [00:30:00 ] Transition to physician-owned hospitals
  • [00:33:00 ] Section 6001 of the ACA explained
  • [00:36:00 ] Physician burnout and hospital inefficiencies
  • [00:44:00 ] The nonprofit hospital paradox
  • [00:50:00 ] Closing reflections: restoring physician entrepreneurship and values

đź”— Connect with the Hosts:

• Dutch Rojas on X

• Dr. Anthony DiGiorgio on X

• Dr. Anish Koka on X

• Dr. Dan Choi on X

• Dr. Sanat Dixit on X

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Futile Care, Dignity at the End of Life, and Physician-Owned Hospitals

Futile Care, Dignity at the End of Life, and Physician-Owned Hospitals

Rojas Media