Dr. John Kenagy knows healthcare as a physician, executive, scholar, advisor and patient. After receiving his MD with distinction, he trained in General and Vascular Surgery and is a Fellow of the American College of Surgeons with board certification in General and Vascular Surgery.

In addition to 20 years experience as a vascular surgeon, he has been Chief of Surgery, Chief of Staff and held management positions including Regional Vice President for Business Development for a multi-state, not-for-profit healthcare delivery system.

His frustration with current methods was fueled by an injury – he suffered a broken neck in a fall from a tree. He discovered that his recovery depended on the effort of individuals working in a broken system. Searching for organizational answers beyond “try harder,” he earned a management degree from Harvard University’s Kennedy School and was then appointed a Visiting Scholar at Harvard Business School from 1998-2002.

His Harvard research and teaching focused on disruptive innovation healthcare strategy and the unique management methods of highly resilient companies like Toyota, Intel and Southwest Airlines who excelled when others failed to adapt and change. He founded Kenagy & Associates, LLC to bring these capabilities to healthcare with the concept of Adaptive Design®.

Dr. Kenagy’s contributions have been widely recognized:

• Academic appointments have included: Clinical Associate Professor of Surgery, University of Washington; Adjunct Professor of Pharmacy and Therapeutics, University of Pittsburgh and Visiting Scholar, Harvard Business School.
• Speaking and consulting engagements throughout the US and in Canada.
• Testimony before the US Senate Commerce Committee.
• Published in journals as diverse as Journal of the American Medical Association and Harvard Business Review. His article “Service Quality in Health Care” was named the Best Health Care Management Article of the Year.
• Inspired and helped lead the introduction of Toyota’s true “DNA” to healthcare.
• Coauthored Harvard Business School Teaching Cases on managing and improving complex, collaborative healthcare work that have been taught at Harvard, many other universities, in healthcare and at many non-healthcare companies, including Toyota.
• His new book is Designed to Adapt—Leading Healthcare in Challenging Times (September 2009).
Forbes Magazine featured Dr. Kenagy as “the man who would save healthcare.”

Blog Entries by John Kenagy

Turning Health Care Reform Losers Into Winners

Posted November 12, 2009 | 09:33 AM (EST)


Recently, The New York Times identified a surprising group that may lose, and lose big, under health care reform - large urban medical centers. The Boston Globe ran a similar story two weeks ago on Boston Hospitals.

What's unusual is that the big losers are not just gritty, inner...

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Beyond Politics: Making a Difference in Healthcare Now

6 Comments | Posted October 1, 2009 | 11:05 AM (EST)


"Markup" time is politics in action as Chairman Max Baucus' healthcare reform bill faces a barrage of amendments in the Senate Finance Committee. Politics in action equals deal making in action, and as I watch, it makes me nervous.

Here's politics in action:

Bloomberg News...

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The Path to One Trillion Dollars

13 Comments | Posted September 14, 2009 | 08:34 PM (EST)


President Obama said last week his health care reform plan requires about $1 trillion in health care savings over the next 10 years. In all the acrimonious debate around health care, we can all agree that saving that $1 trillion is vital. Without it, the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO)...

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An Obama Health Care Reform Scorecard

Posted September 8, 2009 | 02:17 PM (EST)


I am going to be watching as President Obama addresses Congress tomorrow evening on his health care reform initiative. If his speech moves us closer to more care at lower cost, I'm on board. But how will I know? Perhaps I need a scorecard.

The inspiration for a health...

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Co-ops, the Unconventional and Healthcare Innovation

10 Comments | Posted August 20, 2009 | 02:47 PM (EST)


The health care reform debate moved into a new phase over the weekend when Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius said a public insurance option was "not the essential element" of any overhaul, and non-profit cooperatives could also fulfill the White House goal of creating more competition on insurance....

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Solving the Health Care Reform Puzzle

7 Comments | Posted August 17, 2009 | 12:42 PM (EST)


Health care reform in America is possible. In fact, four eminent physician leaders wrote an intriguing editorial in the New York Times on Aug. 12 offering the opinion that, in places, it has already been done.

Authors Atul Gawande, Donald Berwick, Elliot Fisher and Mark McClellan -- who...

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My Healthcare Reform Fear - It's Not Who Pays, It's What We Get

30 Comments | Posted July 24, 2009 | 12:13 PM (EST)


I share President Obama's commitment to healthcare reform and greatly value his leadership. I have been a physician, healthcare executive, academic scholar, advisor, author and, most importantly, a patient once deeply immersed in our healthcare system with a critical injury. In all those roles, I have consistently seen the need...

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The Health Care Pundits Get It Right ... And Wrong

Posted July 13, 2009 | 12:59 PM (EST)


Last week, Alex MacGillis of The Washington Post and David Brooks of The New York Times both identified the crucial flaw in the current efforts at government-driven health care reform -- the failure to control health care inflation.

MacGillis admitted President Obama acknowledges there are limits to what we...

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Ensuring Investment in Healthcare Information Technology Does Not Flatline

43 Comments | Posted June 25, 2009 | 06:26 PM (EST)


Given the $47 billion awarded in stimulus funding, it's clear the government's assumption is that healthcare information technology (IT) will deliver better care at lower cost. The IT industry and all the healthcare IT mavens are waving the flags and beating the drums.

But can current IT deliver?

I...

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Health Care Rationing is Inevitable - Unless We Build the Alternative

8 Comments | Posted June 15, 2009 | 06:26 AM (EST)


As President Obama makes it increasingly clear we are going to reform health care this summer, the parties are drawing lines in the sand and everyone is choosing sides for the long-haul. For the Democrats, the public health insurance option is a key part of the agenda. Meanwhile, the Republicans...

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When Healthcare Solutions Become Problems

7 Comments | Posted June 8, 2009 | 10:02 AM (EST)


When it comes to healthcare, bigger isn't necessarily better -- not even in Texas. In a recent New Yorker article, Dr. Atul Gawande examines the healthcare system of McAllen, TX, also known as one of the most expensive places in American healthcare. Despite the latest and greatest technologies and...

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To Fix Healthcare, Let's Not Just Rearrange the Deck Chairs on the Titanic

44 Comments | Posted May 19, 2009 | 05:38 PM (EST)


As physician, healthcare executive, academic scholar, author, advisor and, most importantly, a patient, I propose the answer to our current healthcare dilemma starts with a laser-like focus on getting patients exactly what they need at continually lower cost. But current healthcare proposals are offering more of the same.

Over...

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