This podcast is brought to you by the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. Was the healthcare sector continues to develop with things like telehealth and more? The retail side of medicine is also in focus with how companies like Walmart and others will impact that industry. In fact, the expectation of some experts is that Walmart may able to do very well in segments of healthcare due to what the consumer or the patient is actually looking for.
Mark Pauli, Professor Emeritus of Healthcare Management at the Wharton School joins us with more on that. Mark, great to talk to you again. How have you been? I've been fine Dan. Thanks. Thank you.
All right. So Walmart and Amazon are obviously making- I visited Walmart last week to do some research for this. So I'm all set. Well, exactly. So give us what you found out because I think a lot of people are truly trying to figure out the role that a company like Walmart is going to have in healthcare moving forward and why they may have an advantage.
Yeah. Well, so it's tempting, right? Because healthcare is 18% of GDP. Healthcare spending is actually not growing as rapidly as a lot of other things in these inflationary times, but as I personally know, the population is aging. So it looks like a growth industry and to a lot of big companies, Amazon as well as Walmart. This looks like a low hanging fruit that they could take part in. So that's I think what's going on.
And also Walmart has had success in moving away from its original focus on low priced clothing and things like that to becoming the number one retailer of groceries in the US. So, you know, if you can do it for potato chips, why can't you do it for knee replacements? Seems to be the question. As usual, of course, there are some issues about the value creation here, but that seems to be the philosophy that this is a big chunk of the economy. It has not been reformed or reorganized in any serious way for the last 50 years, at least. So, you know, why not give it a shot? And that's what Walmart is doing.
From an operational perspective, what are the challenges that Walmart is going to be dealing with on a daily basis? Because certainly from a regulatory standpoint, you would think there's probably more potential headaches in healthcare than there might be in some of the other operations that Walmart's involved with.
Yeah. Well, certainly there's regulation that's going to make it life more complicated than selling potato chips. And there's also insurance coverage. Imagine if you had the file and insurance claim for your six pack of Coke that would make life more complicated for the seller too. So, it's definitely more complicated. They seem to imagine, and here I'll probably be a little bit snarky, that, you know, you go out on a Saturday to buy some socks and you decide to stop by maybe for a shingles vaccine or probably not for a colonoscopy, but that seems to be the idea that this would be a convenience sort of thing. And that seems to be what they're setting up. They're setting up something which is very similar to the urgent care centers or retail clinics that are already pretty well blank at the U.S. and, of course, make use of those abandoned gas stations where they set up these clinics. Walmart apparently intends to move into that market for sort of episodic primary care.
It seems so, I guess, the skepticism comes from thinking of two things. One is the big money in healthcare is not in primary care. The big money is in things like knee replacements, but Walmart's not going to do that or, you know, care for heart disease or for that matter, diabetes care. Maybe there's something they could do there, but that seems to be a little bit trickier because they're not, you know, they're not really set up for continuity of care. It seems they appear to be more interested in displacing the place where, you know, in your neighborhood where you will go if you've got a splinter that you can't get out or you've got a rash that doesn't seem to be going away, things like that.
So, yeah, so that's a pleasure. If you kind of alluded to kind of the low-hanging fruit of the medical profession, correct?
嗯,是的,那真是一种乐趣。如果你有点暗指医学行业中那些容易达到的目标,对吗?
Yeah, well, there's a lot of money hanging out there, so that's, I think, the temptation, but it's not so easy to grab a hold of because, as you mentioned, the regulation, the insurance-induced complexity and the fact that people with who spend have a lot of money spent on them, are not going for episodic care. They're going for chronic care, and that's a lot harder to put in place in a setting that's adjacent to the local Walmart. Amazon tried it. You mentioned that and basically failed, so, but maybe Walmart can make a success of it, I don't know.
You mentioned before about kind of the changes that Walmart has made as a brand. They've kind of upped the level of perception of what a Walmart is. And so, I guess, to a degree that believe that that's a benefit for them as they make this foray further into healthcare is that they already had a strong relationship with a lot of consumers when they were kind of considered to be a lower-end retail option. They've kind of built on that, and now they've kind of continued to establish that relationship with so many millions of Americans. Yeah, yeah.
So they certainly went into eyeglasses, and for all I know, they could make a big presence in Botox, but the real money in healthcare is not in things like that, although it's probably enough to cover a fair amount of profit. The real money is in things like care of chronically ill or surgical procedures, even some diagnostic procedures like a colonoscopy, which you're unlikely to have at your local Walmart just on the spur of the moment. So there may be a model that can, I guess, sort of my advice, my two cents worth would be they need to somehow integrate this more convenient setting with what everybody thinks is needed in healthcare, but nobody's been able to pull off, which is real coordinated care that identifies individuals as individuals and links them to particular providers, physicians, and so forth. So it's a little bit hard to see how it will work in a mass production setting like Walmart, but maybe they could do it.
There's a lot of discussion around these days about staffing issues in the healthcare sector. Doesn't Walmart have to be very concerned about that as a problem in trying to build that up as well? Well, sure. The ability to cut costs, which appears to be what led to their success for groceries, is probably much more limited in healthcare just because it's, for one thing, labor-intensive and for another thing, the kind of labor it uses, for the most part, is specialized professional labor, which, as you mentioned, is in short supply and it doesn't come cheap. So yeah, cost-cutting strategy by hiring lower paid workers doesn't seem to plausible.
So as Walmart moves forward here, what kind of a role do you think that they will play and will they potentially drive out some of those urgent care facilities that have kind of dotted the landscape over the last decade? Yeah, that's kind of what I see as most likely, that that seems to be what their product would be. Their other service would be this is going to be a service for the most part. And those in pre-standing, not always independent, they're chains of them, of course, but they may be relatively easy pickings for Walmart just because of the greater convenience and perhaps some economies of scale associated with it, which is going to be a good thing for the episodic need for medical care, it's a lot more convenient just to drop by than it is to try to make an appointment over the phone and I'm going to learn Spanish so I can make those appointments more efficiently, but it's very complicated to make appointments with your regular health care system, which is not set up very well to deal with episodic care. So that may be the niche that they target and that could be a useful edge on to auto repair and other kinds of things that Walmart is good for.
All right, Mark, great to talk to you as always. Thank you very much. You get your oil changed and your fluids changed at the same time. Exactly right. Oh, man. All right, Mark, thanks for joining us all the best. You got to Mark Paul, yeah, Professor Emeritus of Health Care Management here at the Wharton School.