Mayo Clinic Has A Radical Plan To Expand Its Reach Across The World

The health care industry, and hospitals in particular, are under incredible pressure to cut costs and increase the quality of care. For many, the response has been to consolidate .

Hospitals will continue to merge and buy each other out because larger groups can run more efficiently and provide cheaper care.

Mayo Clinic CEO John Noseworthy says that by taking advantage of an increasingly hyperconnected world, there's an alternative that's better for patients.

In the future — indeed right now if you live in certain areas — your doctor could have access to 100 plus years of experience treating the hardest cases in the world, and you could get a second opinion from a doctor at the Mayo Clinic, which is perhaps the best known and respected brand in medicine ... at no additional cost to you.

Noseworthy's goal is to bring the Mayo Clinic's expertise to 200 million people around the world by 2020.

Sharing the best medical practices and doctors in the world

Mayo isn't immune to cost and economic pressures but its advantage is that it's been at this longer than anyone else. They're the oldest and largest physician led practice out there.

"For well over 100 years everything we do every day is continually retooling how we work to provide safer care, better care, more efficient care, for our patients," Noseworthy said. "The Affordable Care Act and everything else that's happening in the industry is putting a sharper pencil on that, but we're not really reacting to the law."

Others, like Cleveland Clinic CEO Dr. Delos Cosgrove, argue that cost pressures and the increasing complexity of medicine make consolidation inevitable, and smaller practices increasingly unworkable in the long run.

Noseworthy understands the trend towards consolidation, but it wasn't right for Mayo because it could dilute a unique patient experience. Putting the clinic's name on a sign out front isn't enough, Noseworthy argues. "Unless we change the whole culture, which takes decades, it won't feel like the Mayo Clinic.

Instead, Mayo is doing something entirely different. They're giving patients around the country access to best practices from more than 100 years of experience, and consultations with the best doctors in the country.

Members of the Mayo Clinic Care network, a group of carefully vetted medical groups around the country, subscribe to a online database (called Ask Mayo Expert) on the way the hospital does things. If offers a level of information and expertise that doctors have never had access to before. It lets them, in Noseworthy's words, " provide better care to their patients and their community."