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Fostering Empathy and Equity in Value-Driven Health Care


The transformation of care delivery is driven by value-based health care (VBHC). In addition to its cost-effectiveness and clinical efficiency, the success of VBHC depends upon its ability to exemplify empathy and equity. Usually disregarded in pursuing metrics, data, and integrated payments, these two pillars are indispensable for implementing a system that provides dignity and equity to all patients. Embedding empathy and equity into health care delivery is no longer an option as we transition from volume to value; it is a moral and operational necessity.

Empathy is not merely a humanistic ideal; it is a clinical instrument that has the potential to enhance trust, improve outcomes, and reduce fatigue. Patient satisfaction, adherence to care plans, and holistic outcomes are equally important in a value-based model as clinical metrics. Empathetic providers are more likely to engage patients in shared decision-making, comprehend the social context of illness, and personalize care in a manner that fee-for-service models rarely permit. The result? These soft skills can improve patient satisfaction scores and reduce malpractice claims. Empathy enhances communication, reducing readmissions, and is a key benchmark in VBHC models.

Equity guarantees that value is not a privilege for a select few but a guarantee for all. When implemented without an equity lens, value-based health care can exacerbate disparities by rewarding high-performing systems that may omit complex, underserved populations. Health systems must acknowledge the distinctive requirements of marginalized communities, such as ethnic minorities, low-income communities, Indigenous populations, and immigrants. This is the point at which empathy and justice intersect. The results? These equity-focused investments can reduce emergency room visits and improve substance misuse therapy in vulnerable populations, demonstrating that equity-driven care is ethical and economically sound.

Empathy-informed equity framework bridges these two pillars in the VBHC setting. Empathy and equity are not independent concepts but are intricately linked. Equity compels health care systems to eradicate those barriers, while empathy enables providers to acknowledge the structural barriers that patients encounter. Some patients who are experiencing housing insecurity, substance misuse, or chronic illness require more than just medication; they need a health care team that is willing to inquire about the reasons for their inability to manage their condition and how the system can be modified to provide them with the necessary sociomedical support.

Empathy and equity must be ingrained into VBHC. Health policies must emphasize that systems that reduce disparities should be rewarded with incentives, rather than those that only reduce costs. Medical and nursing school training must prioritize empathy, communication, and cultural competence as fundamental competencies. Equity officers and patient advocates must be incorporated into strategic planning in the C-suites and boards of directors.

True value in health care is not solely determined by the number of outcomes achieved per dollar spent but by the system’s capacity to provide compassionate, equitable care to everyone. Empathy allows clinicians to view patients as individuals, while equity guarantees that the system accommodates them at their current level. Collectively, they elevate VBHC from a financial model to a transformative movement. As health systems transform, empathy and equity mustn’t be mere footnotes but rather integral components of the narrative of VBHC.

Olumuyiwa Bamgbade is an accomplished health care leader with a strong focus on value-based health care delivery. A specialist physician with extensive training across Nigeria, the United Kingdom, the United States, and South Korea, Dr. Bamgbade brings a global perspective to clinical practice and health systems innovation.

He serves as an adjunct professor at academic institutions across Africa, Europe, and North America and has published 45 peer-reviewed scientific papers in PubMed-indexed journals. His global research collaborations span more than 20 countries, including Nigeria, Australia, Iran, Mozambique, Rwanda, Kenya, Armenia, South Africa, the U.K., China, Ethiopia, and the U.S.

Dr. Bamgbade is the director of Salem Pain Clinic in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada—a specialist and research-focused clinic. His work at the clinic centers on pain management, health equity, injury rehabilitation, neuropathy, insomnia, societal safety, substance misuse, medical sociology, public health, medicolegal science, and perioperative care.


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