From Babylon to Baylor: How Insurance Went Off the Rails

From Babylon to Baylor: How Insurance Went Off the Rails

Author: The Doctor's Lounge May 2, 2026 Duration: 34:01

Anish and Dr. DiGiorgio trace the history of insurance from ancient Babylonian bottomery contracts through Egyptian workers' guilds, Greek risk-pooling societies, Lloyd's of London, and the birth of actuarial science — then walk forward into the Great Fire of London, the 1929 Baylor hospital plan, Henry Kaiser's vertically integrated care, the World War II wage-freeze tax subsidy that chained health coverage to employment, Medicare in 1965, and the ACA in 2010. Along the way they unpack why the insurance model breaks down when applied to events with a 100% chance of happening (like primary care visits), why government-imposed price controls force low-risk payers to subsidize high-risk ones, the role of reinsurance and moral hazard in disaster-prone regions, and how the cultural argument against socializing risk has been quietly losing ground in the West since the Great Depression.

Chapter markers

00:00 Cold open — blizzard vs. backyard burgers

01:45 Why physicians need to understand insurance

02:11 Babylon, bottomery contracts, and the Code of Hammurabi

05:29 The birth of actuarial science

07:16 When insurance stops making sense (the 100% problem)

07:42 Egyptian guilds and Greek risk-pooling societies

09:40 Lloyd's of London and the coffee-house origins of underwriting

10:44 Actuarial tables meet societal mores — pricing risk by sex

13:16 What happens when the government caps what insurers can charge

16:18 The Great Fire of London and the rise of fire brigades

17:42 Reinsurance, FEMA, and Thomas Sowell on flood-zone moral hazard

21:36 The 1929 Baylor plan and the seed of Blue Cross

24:24 Henry Kaiser's vertically integrated healthcare

25:34 World War II wage freezes and the tax subsidy that chained insurance to employment

30:51 How Medicare and the ACA redefined "insurance" to mean prepaid care

33:04 Bismarck's 1880s gambit — socializing to prevent socialism

34:04 Why the argument against socialized risk keeps losing

36:23 Hayek, Friedman, and why socialism keeps coming back

36:49 Britain, the NHS, and Bevan "stuffing their mouths with gold"

Co-Host handles

@anish_koka and @drdigiorgio


Show handle

@drsloungepod


Subscribe links

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Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-doctors-lounge/id1489323962

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheDoctorsLounge


In The Doctor's Lounge, the white coat comes off for a conversation that moves freely from the exam room to the boardroom. This isn't a lecture hall; it's the back table where practicing physicians gather to unpack the complex systems that define modern medicine. Hosted by Dutch Rojas and Anthony DiGiorgio, DO, with regular voices like Anish Koka, MD, Dan Choi, MD, and Sanat Dixit, MD, the discussions are built on frontline experience. You'll hear unfiltered perspectives on the policy debates that shape care, the realities of navigating business and entrepreneurship within a medical practice, and the constant push for meaningful reform. The dialogue is grounded in a shared commitment to physician autonomy and, ultimately, better patient outcomes. Each episode in this podcast connects the dots between clinical fitness and the health of the medical profession itself, offering a rare look at the challenges and opportunities that exist where patient care meets the mechanics of the healthcare industry. It's a space for the nuanced, often contentious, and always real conversations happening behind the scenes.
Author: Language: English Episodes: 53

The Doctor's Lounge
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