The Doctor Was Replaced by the System: How American Medicine Became a Financial Machine
American medicine was not simply “broken.” It was captured. The old model was imperfect, but it was human. A patient knew a doctor. A doctor knew a family. A local practice had roots in the community. The physician was not free from pressure, but at least there was a person in the room with enough independence to say, “This is what I think you need.” That model has been systematically pushed toward extinction. Not by accident. By financial design. First came insurance capture. The insurance company became the gatekeeper between the patient and the doctor. It decided what was covered, what was denied, what required prior authorization, what codes mattered, what networks counted, and what treatments would be reimbursed. That changed the exam room. The doctor still wore the coat. But the insurer held the leash. Then came hospital consolidation. Small hospitals merged into systems. Systems bought clinics. Clinics became branded access points. Independent doctors became employees inside mas...