David Goldhill is an American business executive and writer on healthcare policy. He is the CEO and co-founder of Sesame, an online marketplace for discounted health services; and chair of the board of directors at the Leapfrog Group, an independent organisation for hospital and medical safety.
Health care writings
In September 2009, Goldhill was the author of the cover story in The Atlantic titled How American Health Care Killed My Father. In the article and other stories in Bloomberg, , The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal, Goldhill has noted that the problem in American health care are the intermediaries that serve as the primary customers – employers, insurance companies, and government insurers. As per his writing, health care providers are more responsive to the needs of those intermediaries than to the needs of patients. Though his writings focus on increasing the role of consumers and markets in driving health care innovation, Goldhill also argued that America's highly politicized policy-making had led to extensive industry capture of Medicare, Medicaid, and other government health programs, warping their mission. Goldhill has published three books on health care:
Catastrophic Care: Why Everything We Think We Know about Health Care Is Wrong
New York’s Next Health Care Revolution, co-edited with Paul Howard
The Real Costs of American Health Care
Reception and criticism
For Goldhill's article in The Atlantic, David Brooks from The New York Times, wrote “If I were magically given an hour to help Barack Obama prepare for his health care speech next week, the first thing I’d do is ask him to read David Goldhill’s essay.” Fareed Zakaria on CNN called it “The best article I have read on American health care” and John Schwenker at the American Conservative referred to it as “maybe the best writing on health care”. According to Juliet Eilperin of Washington Post feels that David's book, Catastrophic Care “provided a persuasive case for applying free-market principles and greater transparency to the health-care industry”. Goldhill's book Catastrophic Care was criticized by Arnold Relman arguing that the system Goldhill advocates for is “unfair to patients with limited means, because it forces them to choose between spending on medical care they might need and saving their funds for other needed or desired purposes.”
Business career
From 2007 to 2017 Goldhill was the CEO of GSN, the operator of the cable Game Show Network. As chairman and CEO of INTH, he founded the TV3 Russia national broadcast network which was acquired by Interros Group in 2007 for $550 million. He was also the president and CEO of television for Universal Studios, up to its acquisition by GE in 2004. He was the chief financial officer of Act III Communications, a private production company. Goldhill has served as director for CommerceHub, Expedia, and eLong. As of 2019, Goldhill is the co-founder and CEO of Sesame, an online marketplace for discounted health services serving uninsured patients and other direct-pay customers; and chair of the board of directors of the Leapfrog Group, an independent national employer-sponsored organization focused on hospital and medical safety.