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Neel Shah
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Shah founded Costs of Care as a medical student, after realizing that physicians rarely consider how their clinical decisions translate into bills for their patients. He proposed a new ethical framework for medicine, arguing that caring about the individual patient requires them to think about cost. With grant support from the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation, Shah also helped create a novel curriculum for doctors-in-training to learn how their decisions impact what patients pay for care.
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Shah founded Costs of Care as a medical student, after realizing that physicians rarely consider how their clinical decisions translate into bills for their patients. He proposed a new ethical framework for medicine, arguing that caring about the individual patient requires them to think about cost. To motivate physicians to adopt this framework, Shah created Costs of Care's annual essay contest, which crowdsources hundreds of anecdotes from patients and caregivers around the country that illustrate opportunities to improve the value of healthcare. These anecdotes have attracted major media attention, and several have been read by their authors on air on American Public Media's Marketplace. With grant support from the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation, Shah also helped create a novel curriculum for doctors-in-training to learn how their decisions impact what patients pay for care.