Ballot Debris

Thoughts on Agile Management, Leadership and Software Engineering

MADdotNET - Succeeding With Agile & TFS 2010

clock March 4, 2010 07:40 by author Chad Albrecht

I presented “Succeeding With Agile & TFS 2010” for the MADdotNET User Group last night to a full house.  I want to thank everyone for the turnout and the great questions and discussions!  I’m going to try to post some articles as follow-ups to some the the questions that were asked last night that didn’t get the attention they deserve.  Some of these topics will be:  Agile Estimation, Technical Debt, Code Churn and including bugs and refactoring on the Product Backlog.  Let me know if I missed anything you want me to cover.

For those that are interested, here is the presentation:



Health Care Dollar

clock October 7, 2009 04:37 by author Chad Albrecht

For those of you who haven’t been to the Perot Charts site, have a look.  It has a great collection of visuals that pertain to our economy.  This one caught my eye:

healthcare10

Picture source:  http://perotcharts.com/2008/05/the-nations-healthcare-dollar-2004/



The Accelerated Learning Handbook

clock August 18, 2009 13:49 by author Chad Albrecht

Another book to add to the list:

 

Pascal Van Cauwenberghe has a review here.



Leadership Reading

clock August 11, 2009 07:30 by author Chad Albrecht

I glanced at my bookshelf this morning and laughed.  “The Unknown Ideal” how fitting given the news these days.  I think it’s time for our leaders and lawmakers to revisit this book.

Capitalism: The Unknown Ideal


ObamaCare

clock August 9, 2009 06:53 by author Chad Albrecht

Here is the bill:

http://edlabor.house.gov/documents/111/pdf/publications/AAHCA-BillText-071409.pdf

And here is a diagram of how it will work:

image

The current healthcare/insurance industry is already a take from the healthy/wealthy and give to the sick/poor.  This bill will take this concept to the next level as well as introduce additional spending and waste.  This is a bad idea.  We should seek to reduce waste and spending on overhead. 

“U.S. health care spending is expected to increase at similar levels for the next decade reaching $4.3 TRILLION in 2017, or 20 percent of GDP.” (taken from NCHC)

With that, let me talk about where I see the issues.

Overhead

Where do we attribute this spending?  In the stat above $4.3T equates to about $14K annually per person in the US.  While some of the growth can be attributed to the increase in the aging population, where does the rest of the growth come from and where does this money go? Let’s look at the revenue of some of the larger insurance companies:

Conventry: $12B annually.

CIGNA: $20B annually.

Humana: $30B annually.

United Health: $80B annually.

At this rate, it should be obvious where we spend $2.4T today or see where how we will get to the $4.3T by 2017.  So do we need healthcare reform or insurance reform?

Where does the spending go?  Much of it is waste in the form of overhead.  Obviously insurance companies take a big chunk, doctors, hospitals, drug companies, long-term health care facilities, etc.  Think about all the paperwork you fill out, the plastic card you carry, the systems used to keep your records, the bills sent to you and your insurance company, etc. It takes a lot of people to support this system. I don’t claim to have the answers here but I keep coming back to Lean Systems and thinking if we could eliminate waste here it could dramatically decrease costs in this area.

Personal Responsibility

Atul Gawande wrote an interesting article for the New Yorker on where some of the money goes.  This article highlights some of the reasons for the increase in spending over the coming years.  Lack of accountability.  Why should people who take care of themselves, eat right and exercise be penalized (pay) for those that do not?  Jordan Shlain, MD suggests, “You either get with the health program or you don't get the benefits.”  A Practicing Doctor's Prescription for Health Care Reform.

Higher Expectations

As our understanding of the human body, disease and aging continues to increase so does the quality and efficacy of modern medicine and treatments.  We find ourselves in a culture that has zero tolerance for discomfort or inconvenience.  Have you ever gone to the doctor because you were tired and dealing with your common cold?  We are spending more, because we demand more.

Lack of a True Health Care Market

Have you ever comparison shopped for your health care?  Do you even know where to get this information?  Try calling your doctor’s office and asking how much it will cost for a test for strep throat test, an arm cast, CBC or CHEM-7.  How do you find the best orthopedic surgeon in your area?  It’s easier for me to find a good plumber that a good doctor. We need a better system to comparison shop and determine those providers that have the highest value (price vs. level of service).

Conclusion

ObamaCare seeks to solve a perceived problem through an increase in spending.  This is NOT the answer!  We should look at addressing the issues above in small test markets and empirically evaluate the outcome. As always your comments are welcome!

Additional reading:

Long Term Outlook for Health Care Spending

Canadian and American health care systems compared

Does Health Cost Too Much? If you think so, stop buying so much

Ann C. Engle’s Summary of Bast, J. L., R. C. Rue and S. A. Wesbury Jr. 1993

Ask the Editors: Why Does Health Care Cost So Much?



Scientific Calculator

clock July 29, 2009 06:27 by author Chad Albrecht

I have an old TI-85 that I use constantly. I’ve been thinking of upgrading to the TI-89.  Anyone have one?  Is it worth the $140?  Thoughts?



Serendipity

clock July 28, 2009 07:55 by author Chad Albrecht

Do you believe it exists? Or do you think there is no such thing as luck?  According to Wikipedia:

Serendipity is the effect by which one accidentally discovers something fortunate, especially while looking for something else entirely unrelated.

I have worked very hard in my life and have achieved many things, but I have to attribute some of it to serendipity.  I have spent some time thinking about this over the last few months as I continue networking for the next opportunity.  The Law of Attraction talks about the concept or belief that you can “will” things into existence.  If you want to to be President, start imagining yourself as such and working towards it and it will happen.  Is this concept similar to or at odds with serendipity?  I would love to hear your thoughts on this!



The Economics of Iterative Software Development

clock July 19, 2009 07:25 by author Chad Albrecht

Another book to add to the list…



New Blog

clock July 11, 2009 15:41 by author Chad Albrecht

I’ve spent the last few weeks evaluating some site upgrades.  My primary focus was getting my blog engine upgraded from an old version of .Text that I have been running for years.  So here it is!  I’m now running on BlogEngine.net version 1.5 and have customized it quite a bit to suite my needs.  Let me know what you think!



Windows Mobile vs. iPhone

clock June 29, 2009 04:03 by author Chad Albrecht

John McCaffrey has a good article on why I use Windows Mobile over an iPhone. The most important thing for me is Tethering.



About me...

bio_headshot

I am a leader, entrepreneur, software engineer, husband, father, pilot and athlete. Over the last 17 years of my career I have built numerous successful companies and software development teams. This amazing journey has taken me all over the world and allowed me to work in a number of diverse industries. I have had the privilege to meet and work with thousands of unique and talented people. As you will see from my blog I am a strong believer in Agile SDLC techniques and the Kaizen corporate culture. I am always looking to grow myself, my teams and the companies I am partnered with.

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