Indian-American Surgeon's Short article That Caught Amazon's Eye

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Atul Gawande has been writing about the quality and costs of medical care for years.
The Harvard surgeon and author picked to head a new health venture for Amazon, Berkshire Hathaway
and JPMorgan Chase Co
has been writing about the quality and costs of medical care for years.Atul Gawande is particularly famous for a 2009 New Yorker story, "The
Cost Conundrum," that examined why some parts of the country spend far more on health care than others - without better results, sicker
populations, or higher labor costs.The article, which won a National Magazine Award, examined why the federal Medicare program spent $15,000
in 2006 for patients in McAllen, Texas - almost twice the national average."McAllen, Texas, the most expensive town in the most expensive
country for health care in the world, seemed a good place to look for some answers," Gawande wrote.After talking to doctors and visiting
hospitals around McAllen, he came to this conclusion: "The primary cause of McAllen's extreme costs was, very simply, the across-the-board
overuse of medicine." That included too many tests, too many surgeries and too many visits with providers.The piece attracted the attention
of Warren Buffett and his business partner Charlie Munger
Gawande "had an article last summer that was absolutely magnificent," Buffett told CNBC on March 1, 2010, according to a transcript of the
appearance."You have these enormous variances around the country
And, you know, if you had some really smart people running it that knew a lot about medicine, they're going to - they could do a lot about
it," Buffett said on the appearance.Munger thought the article was so socially useful that he blindly mailed Gawande a $20,000 check,
Buffett told CNBC at the time
Gawande donated the money to an international project to improve surgical equipment in developing countries, according to the Huffington
Post.Gawande was announced Wednesday to head the new venture after being picked by Berkshire's Warren Buffett, Amazon's Jeff Bezos and
JPMorgan's Jamie Dimon.(This story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)