Montrose, California
Steven Kamajian, DO, FACOFP, has no problem bringing his unique perspective to any situation because that is what he always does. The board-certified family practice specialist has spent his 30-plus-year career on the front lines of health care, serving the youngest patients to the oldest. He’s treated people in traditional hospital settings, skilled nursing facilities, and hospice centers. Dr. Kamajian also took his skills to where he considered them most in need and founded the Westminster Free Clinic. Not satisfied with setting up another clinical environment, Dr. Kamajian employed the medical home model decades before health care reform and legislated “accountable care” came into play. , he saw the innovative model as an effective means to give the hard-to-reach, low-income patient population access to physicians like himself and dentists, pharmacists, nurses, mental health counselors, allied health professionals, attorneys, and others. As health care enters a new phase, physicians are challenged to adjust to new schools of thought, but Dr. Kamajian has long looked beyond traditional practice philosophies. For example, he’s been enthusiastic about adapting successful strategies from other industries. Suppose the policy of disruptive innovation, in which management steps aside to allow those closest to the process or problem to brainstorm solutions freely, works in the corporate world. Why couldn’t it be equally successful in the medical setting?
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Saturday, April 6, 2024
11:20 AM – 12:20 PM CT