The Shah's Spleen, Quality Metrics, Health Insurance & the FDA

The Shah's Spleen, Quality Metrics, Health Insurance & the FDA

Author: The Doctor's Lounge March 9, 2026 Duration: 55:27

Dr. Anish Koka and Dr. Anthony DiGiorgio open with the little-known medical story behind the death of the Shah of Iran — how Mohammed Reza Pahlavi came to be operated on in Cairo in 1980 by legendary cardiovascular surgeon Michael DeBakey, and how the "comforting explanation" bias may have contributed to his death from a post-operative abscess rather than his underlying cancer. The case, drawn from a piece by Dr. Li Zhao (NYU Langone), launches a broader conversation about anchoring bias in medicine and the cognitive traps all clinicians face. From there, the hosts turn to the quality metric industrial complex — MIPS, the new low back pain ambulatory model threatening a 12% Medicare penalty for spine surgeons, the hospital readmission program's documented mortality spike, and how 2,266 CMS metrics are costing billions while failing patients. They close with a NEJM perspectives piece from Harvard Business School's Leemore Daphne on health insurance consolidation and her surprisingly free-market prescriptions for reform.

Chapters

00:00 Introduction

02:00 The Shah of Iran — Political Background

03:45 The Shah's Leukemia and Michael DeBakey's 1980 Surgery

06:30 A Spleen the Size of a Football

08:00 The Decision Not to Drain — And Its Consequences

10:00 The Comforting Explanation Bias

12:30 Subspecialization Matters — The Most Famous Surgeon Isn't Always the Right One

14:45 Anchoring Bias in Clinical Medicine

17:00 Modern Imaging and Residents as Checks on Bias

18:30 Surgeons, Complications, and the M&M Conference

21:00 Segue: Judging Doctors by Stats

22:30 The Origins of Quality Metrics — Donabedian 1966

24:00 MIPS and How It Actually Works

26:00 The New Back Pain Ambulatory Specialty Model — A 12% Penalty

28:00 Evidence That Metrics Harm Patients: Hospital Readmission Reduction Program

30:30 Obstetrics and the C-Section Penalty

31:30 Press Ganey and the Cafeteria Problem

33:00 Risk Adjustment Gaming — 40% Margin Increase from Coder Rounding

38:00 2,266 Metrics and 108,000 Person-Hours at Johns Hopkins

40:00 Why Doctors Leave Medicare

42:00 What Good Metrics Could Look Like — Dr. DiGiorgio's JAMA Proposal

44:00 Health Insurance Consolidation — NEJM Perspectives

50:30 FDA, Vinay Prasad, and the WSJ Retraction

55:00 Next Week: Kevin Bass

Subscribe to The Doctor's Lounge: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube Follow the Show: X: @DrsLoungePod Co-hosts: @anish_koka | @drdigiorgio


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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