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a16z Podcast
a16z Podcast•January 27, 2026

Healthcare 2026: AI Doctors, GLP-1s, and Insurance Defection

A conversation exploring how healthcare is being rebuilt outside the traditional insurance system, with a focus on consumer-driven care, AI applications, emerging drug technologies like GLP-1s, and the potential for more personalized, proactive health approaches.
Mental Health Awareness
Functional Medicine
Biohacking
Health Tech
Brian Johnson
Nikhil Krishnan
Jay Rougani
Peter Atia

Summary Sections

  • Podcast Summary
  • Speakers
  • Key Takeaways
  • Statistics & Facts
  • Compelling StoriesPremium
  • Thought-Provoking QuotesPremium
  • Strategies & FrameworksPremium
  • Similar StrategiesPlus
  • Additional ContextPremium
  • Key Takeaways TablePlus
  • Critical AnalysisPlus
  • Books & Articles MentionedPlus
  • Products, Tools & Software MentionedPlus
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Podcast Summary

This episode explores how Americans are rebuilding healthcare outside the traditional insurance system due to rising costs, limited access, and poor experiences. (00:33) Host Jay Rughani from a16z Health and Bio discusses with Nikhil Krishnan, founder of Out of Pocket, how consumer behavior and technology are converging to reconfigure U.S. healthcare. The conversation examines why insurance is losing its role as the default way people access care, with rising costs pushing more consumers toward cash-pay diagnostics, preventive care, and navigation services. (00:43) They analyze what this shift means for startups, AI-powered tools, regulation, and healthcare access as the industry continues moving beyond traditional insurance models.

  • Main themes: Healthcare system fragmentation, consumer defection from traditional insurance, rise of cash-pay models, AI integration in healthcare, and the emergence of proactive health management outside conventional clinical settings.

Speakers

Jay Rughani

Jay Rughani is a partner at Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) Health and Bio, where he focuses on investments in healthcare technology and biotechnology companies. He brings expertise in healthcare innovation and venture capital, helping to identify and support companies that are transforming how healthcare is delivered and accessed.

Nikhil Krishnan

Nikhil Krishnan is the founder of Out of Pocket, a healthcare education company that helps people understand how healthcare works and navigate the system in practice. He has built a reputation as a thoughtful analyst of healthcare trends and policy, providing insights through his newsletter and content that make complex healthcare topics accessible to broader audiences.

Key Takeaways

Healthcare Insurance Defection is Accelerating

The uninsured rate is projected to spike from the current 9.5% to 15%, reversing decades of progress from the Affordable Care Act. (04:57) This defection is driven by multiple factors: premium subsidies debates, rising costs in individual exchange markets, and small group insurance fragmentation as healthier employers exit the system. Krishnan notes that on health insurance subreddits, the question "should I just not get health insurance at all?" has become extremely common. For many people paying $600+ monthly premiums plus $5-6K deductibles, the rational choice may be to go uninsured and pay cash, especially for relatively healthy individuals who view insurance primarily as catastrophic coverage.

Cash-Pay Healthcare Creates New Market Opportunities

The shift toward cash-pay models is creating significant opportunities for startups focused on care navigation, transparent pricing, and direct-pay services. (24:28) Companies are emerging to help uninsured patients figure out where to go for care and whether issues are serious enough to warrant higher-cost medical practitioners. This includes novel contracting approaches with existing providers, similar to medical tourism but domestically focused. The Utah pilot allowing AI to prescribe medications for $4 instead of $150 office visits exemplifies how technology can deliver care at dramatically lower costs when insurance friction is removed.

Screening and Diagnostics Represent the Next Healthcare Frontier

Consumer appetite for monitoring and screening diagnostics is driving a new category of healthcare services outside traditional clinical guidelines. (27:58) People want agency in their healthcare and refuse to be told to "wait and see." This demand is particularly strong in cash-pay markets where consumers can escape the 10+ year lag between research evidence and clinical care guidelines. Examples include coronary calcium CT scans and other preventive screenings that patients are willing to pay for out-of-pocket, even when doctors say they don't need them. This represents a shift from reactive to proactive care models.

AI Will Face Populist Backlash Despite Addressing Supply Constraints

Healthcare employs 23 million Americans yet suffers from massive supply constraints, with 100+ million people lacking access to primary care and 40+ day wait times. (33:33) While AI can bridge this gap, Krishnan predicts significant populist resistance will emerge around job displacement fears, implementation challenges, and inevitable high-profile AI mistakes. The backlash will manifest through administrative workers fearing automation, physicians resisting AI mandates, and public reaction to AI errors. However, the fundamental question remains: how many people will AI help versus harm, and the median level of care improvement may justify the trade-offs.

Regulatory Fragmentation Will Create State-by-State Healthcare Experiments

State governments will increasingly clash with federal regulations on AI, insurance law, and public health guidelines, creating a patchwork of different rules across states. (40:54) This mirrors the Waymo rollout where different states have varying opinions on autonomous vehicles. While this creates compliance complexity favoring incumbents, it also enables valuable experimentation. States with large rural populations struggling with care access will likely embrace AI solutions more readily than those with competitive provider networks. The challenge lies in having proper data infrastructure to learn from these diverse experiments and scale successful models nationally.

Statistics & Facts

  1. The current uninsured rate in the US is approximately 9.5%, ranging from as low as 3% in Massachusetts to 18% in Texas. (05:12) Krishnan predicts this will spike to 15% in 2026, effectively reversing 15 years of progress from the Affordable Care Act.
  2. Healthcare employs 23 million Americans, making it the largest employer in the US, yet the system faces massive supply constraints with over 100 million people lacking access to a primary care doctor and 40+ day wait times to see physicians. (33:33)
  3. OpenAI reported that 230 million people around the world use ChatGPT for health-related questions each week, with 40 million using it daily, effectively replacing "Doctor Google" as the go-to source for health information. (34:17)

Compelling Stories

Available with a Premium subscription

Thought-Provoking Quotes

Available with a Premium subscription

Strategies & Frameworks

Available with a Premium subscription

Similar Strategies

Available with a Plus subscription

Additional Context

Available with a Premium subscription

Key Takeaways Table

Available with a Plus subscription

Critical Analysis

Available with a Plus subscription

Books & Articles Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

Products, Tools & Software Mentioned

Available with a Plus subscription

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