teleo-codex/domains/health/healthcare is a complex adaptive system requiring simple enabling rules not complicated management because standardized processes erode the clinical autonomy needed for value creation.md
m3taversal a756745c18 vida: fix broken wiki links and add Vida to Active Agents table
- What: Converted 132 broken wiki links to plain text across 41 health domain files.
  Added Vida to the Active Agents table in CLAUDE.md.
- Why: Leo's PR #15 review required these two changes before merge.
- Details: Broken links were references to claims that don't yet exist (demand signals).
  Brackets removed so they read as plain text rather than broken links.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-03-06 11:35:25 +00:00

5.7 KiB

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Larsson and the WEF framework identifies healthcare as a complex adaptive system where four simple rules -- shared purpose around patient value outcomes measurement aligned incentives and enabling governance -- outperform the compliance-driven management that currently dominates claim health 2026-02-17 Larsson, Clawson, Howard, NEJM Catalyst 2022 (DOI 10.1056/CAT.22.0332); Morieux and Tollman, Six Simple Rules, HBR Press 2014; Plsek in IOM Crossing the Quality Chasm 2001 likely

healthcare is a complex adaptive system requiring simple enabling rules not complicated management because standardized processes erode the clinical autonomy needed for value creation

Larsson, Clawson, and Howard argue that healthcare has become "a classic example of what system scientists term a complex adaptive system" -- and that the standard organizational response (standardized processes, KPIs, guidelines, compliance requirements) is precisely wrong. The compliance approach erodes clinician autonomy while adding layers of organizational complication on top of necessarily complex tasks. The result: unnecessary complicatedness layered on genuine complexity.

The complex adaptive systems literature suggests four types of "simple rules" that enable value-creating emergence: (1) a clearly articulated shared purpose around which stakeholders align, (2) access to relevant data and information, (3) resources and incentives aligned with that purpose, and (4) governance mechanisms that encourage autonomy and innovation while protecting against abuse. In value-based healthcare, the shared purpose is patient value -- the best possible health outcomes for the money spent. Patient value becomes what evolutionary biologists call the "selection principle" against which all institutions and reform efforts are assessed.

This framework directly echoes the designed emergence pattern. Since designing coordination rules is categorically different from designing coordination outcomes as nine intellectual traditions independently confirm, the VBC transformation is not about prescribing how care should be delivered but about creating conditions where value-creating care emerges. The four enablers (delivery organization, payments, informatics, benchmarking) provide the enabling constraints; the outcomes emerge from clinician behavior within those constraints.

The NEJM Catalyst paper proposes a government-led "moonshot" with three pillars: institutionalizing outcomes measurement as national health data infrastructure (comparable to financial disclosures for public companies), aligning payment with outcomes improvement, and investing in 21st-century digital health infrastructure including interoperability standards comparable to TCP/IP for the internet. This is explicitly a coordination infrastructure argument -- the same pattern as LivingIP's thesis applied to healthcare.


Relevant Notes:

Topics:

  • health and wellness
  • emergence and complexity
  • coordination mechanisms