The Democracy-First
Healthcare Playbook
A revolutionary greenfield model for American healthcare built on a radical premise: governance should flow from communities upward, rights should flow from the constitution downward, and every dollar should buy care — not administration. For Americans, by Americans.
Design Principles
Every structural decision in this model traces back to four non-negotiable principles.
Power Flows Upward
Democratic legitimacy starts at the community level. Local assemblies govern local care. Higher tiers coordinate, fund, and set floors — they don't dictate.
Rights Flow Downward
A constitutionally-protected baseline of care that no local majority can override. Democracy above the floor; rights below it.
Pluralism by Design
Not a monolithic state system. Community health centers, independent practices, hospitals, and specialists — governed by democratic standards, not corporate boards.
Every Dollar Buys Care
Structural elimination of insurance intermediaries. Administrative overhead drops from ~30% to under 10%. What we save funds what we need.
Stakeholder Map
Every actor in the current system has a role in the new one — but their power dynamics fundamentally change.
Patients & Communities
From Consumers → CitizensDirect democratic governance through Community Health Assemblies. Vote on priorities, elect boards, serve on sortition panels. The system answers to them.
Healthcare Workers
From Employees → Co-GovernorsWorkplace councils with formal authority over conditions. One-third of national governance seats. Expanded scope, eliminated debt, restored purpose.
Federal Government
From Regulator → Funder & Standard-SetterSets the national rights floor, distributes needs-based funding, negotiates drug prices. One-third of national council — not the whole voice.
Employers
From Insurer → ContributorReleased from the burden of providing insurance. Pay a health assessment instead. Employees gain full portability and freedom.
Insurance Industry
From Gatekeeper → Transition PartnerStructural elimination from basic care. Transition support for workforce redeployment into care coordination, data, and supplemental roles.
Pharma & Device Companies
From Price-Setter → Negotiated PartnerNational negotiation with real leverage. Fair pricing in exchange for guaranteed volume. R&D shifts toward public-investment priority areas.
Governance Architecture
Three tiers. Each with distinct authority. Power moves upward from communities; standards move downward from the constitution.
National Health Council
Sets the rights floor, distributes funding, negotiates drug prices, funds research
Community Reps — 33%
Elected by Regional Cooperatives
Govt Appointees — 33%
Executive + Senate confirmed
Health Workers — 33%
Elected by professional bodies
Regional Health Cooperatives
~60 nationwide. Negotiate rates, coordinate specialist networks, run regional public health, distribute funds
Community Health Assemblies
Every city/county. Elect local boards, vote on priorities, govern community health centers, handle grievances
Regional cooperatives don't follow state lines. They form around actual health communities — shared referral patterns, epidemiological profiles, and workforce catchments. West Texas and Austin get different cooperatives. Appalachia gets one that spans state borders.
The National Health Guarantee
The constitutionally-protected floor. No community, no local vote, no political cycle can take this away.
The National Health Council defines the floor based on evidence. A National Health Ombudsman — independent, Senate-confirmed, 10-year term — has binding authority to investigate and correct any entity that fails to deliver the guarantee.
Democratic Choice Layer
Above the guarantee, communities make real choices about what their health system looks like. This is where democracy lives.
Financing Model
Consolidated funding replaces the fragmented mess of employer insurance, Medicare, Medicaid, VA, marketplace plans, and out-of-pocket spending.
Revenue Sources
Progressive Health Tax
Payroll tax (employer + employee) plus income surcharge on high earners. Replaces all premiums.
Corporate Assessment
Revenue-based health surcharge on large corporations. Decouples coverage from employment.
Federal Revenue
Portion of existing federal revenue for budget stability during downturns.
Regional Supplemental
Optional. RHCs can levy modest assessments if populations vote for enhanced services.
Distribution
Projected Impact
$4.5T
Current annual spend
$3.6T
Projected annual spend
~$900B
Annual savings redirected to care
National drug negotiation with formulary exclusion as leverage. Global hospital budgets tied to community needs, not fee-for-service volume. Administrative simplification — one billing system, one claims process. Technology assessment — new treatments evaluated for cost-effectiveness before inclusion in the guarantee.
Workforce Strategy
The system is only as good as the people who deliver care. This model invests heavily in the workforce — not just numbers, but voice, scope, and dignity.
Double Primary Care
Federally funded training slot expansion. Target: double the PCP workforce and triple the mental health workforce in 15 years.
Community Health Workers
Formalized as a licensed profession with training programs, career ladders, and competitive pay. The connective tissue between system and community.
Debt Elimination
Full tuition forgiveness for 7+ years of service in community health centers or underserved areas. Removes the financial barrier to mission-driven work.
Task-Shifting
Expanded scope for NPs, PAs, pharmacists, and midwives. Practice at the top of training. Resolves bottlenecks without compromising quality.
Workplace Democracy
Healthcare workers form workplace councils with formal input into staffing, scheduling, conditions, and clinical protocols. Not optional — structural.
Rural & Underserved Access
Mandatory minimum infrastructure per CHA area. Dedicated 5% budget carve-out. Regional specialist rotation schedules.
Data & Accountability
Transparency is structural, not optional. Every level of the system is accountable to the people it serves.
Universal Health Record
One interoperable EHR per person. Patient-owned with controlled access. Any provider, anywhere in the country.
Public Data Commons
De-identified population health data as a public good. Accessible to researchers, journalists, CHAs, and citizens.
Algorithmic Transparency
Any clinical AI, decision support tool, or allocation algorithm must be auditable with publicly disclosed logic.
National Health Ombudsman
Independent office with binding corrective authority. Senate-confirmed, 10-year term. Investigates systemic failures.
Every CHA publishes a plain-language annual report: health outcomes, spending, patient satisfaction, equity metrics. Presented at quarterly assemblies. Regional scorecards benchmark cooperatives on quality, equity, cost, and experience — with technical assistance for low performers, then intervention.
Implementation Roadmap
A 15-year transformation. Not a light switch — a phased build with democratic checkpoints at every stage.
Foundation
Build the institutional scaffolding. Pass enabling legislation. Pilot in willing communities.
- Establish the National Health Council (tripartite structure)
- Enact the National Health Guarantee into law
- Launch 20 pilot CHAs in diverse communities
- Begin universal EHR infrastructure procurement
- Consolidate federal health funding streams
- Start medical school debt forgiveness program
Build-Out
Scale governance and delivery. Expand coverage service by service. Build regional infrastructure.
- Expand to 100+ CHAs across 15+ states
- Form first 20 Regional Health Cooperatives
- Implement national drug price negotiation
- Phase in primary care and mental health on the guarantee
- Launch CHW licensing and training programs
- Begin insurance industry transition support
Scale
Nationwide coverage. Full governance activation. Cost control mechanisms fully operational.
- Near-universal CHA coverage nationwide
- 55–60 Regional Cooperatives operational
- Full guarantee package available to all residents
- Global hospital budgets implemented
- Universal EHR fully deployed and interoperable
- Insurance industry transition substantially complete
Maturity
System optimization. Continuous improvement. Democratic culture embedded.
- Full administrative overhead reduction achieved (<10%)
- Primary care workforce doubled
- Mental health workforce tripled
- Measurable reduction in health disparities
- Democratic governance normalized — high civic participation
- Continuous quality improvement cycle operational
Success Metrics
What gets measured gets governed. These are the system's scorecard — reported annually at every level.
Current System vs. Democracy-First Model
| Dimension | Current System | Democracy-First Model |
|---|---|---|
| Coverage | Employer-tied, 30M+ uninsured | Universal, residence-based, fully portable |
| Governance | Corporate boards, distant bureaucrats | Community assemblies, worker councils, tripartite national |
| Cost Control | Market-based (fails systematically) | Global budgets, national negotiation, admin simplification |
| Primary Care | Undervalued, severe shortage | Prioritized compensation, doubled workforce |
| Mental Health | Separate, underfunded, stigmatized | Integrated, parity-enforced, tripled workforce |
| Admin Overhead | ~30% of all spending | <10% target — single billing system |
| Innovation | Profit-driven, me-too drugs | Public investment in priority areas, cost-effectiveness gate |
| Equity | Deep disparities by race, income, geography | Rights floor + needs-based funding + community governance |
Risk Register
Every model has failure modes. Identifying them honestly is how you prevent them.
| Risk | Likelihood | Impact | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Industry lobbying blocks legislation | High | Critical | Phase-in strategy; pilot-first proof of concept; coalition building with employers freed from insurance burden |
| Workforce shortages during transition | High | High | Immediate debt forgiveness; expanded scope of practice; CHW fast-track; phased geographic rollout |
| Funding disruption in economic downturn | Medium | Critical | Multi-source revenue (not payroll-dependent); general revenue stabilization; automatic counter-cyclical triggers |
| Regional inequity in democratic capacity | Medium | High | Technical assistance programs; governance capacity grants; rights floor ensures baseline regardless of local capacity |
| Provider resistance to global budgets | Medium | High | Pilot demonstration; provider governance participation; competitive compensation; debt elimination as incentive |
| Data privacy and security breaches | Medium | Critical | Privacy-by-design architecture; patient data ownership; independent security audits; breach response protocols |
| Public confusion during transition | High | Medium | Dedicated transition communication office; community health navigators; no-net-loss guarantee during transition |
| Political cycle reversal after implementation | Low | Critical | Constitutional-level protection for the rights floor; democratic constituency that defends its own governance power |
The current American healthcare system treats patients as consumers and communities as markets. This model treats patients as citizens and communities as self-governing bodies with collective agency over their own health. That's not just a policy change. It's a philosophical one — and it requires building democratic infrastructure that doesn't currently exist. The healthcare system becomes, in part, a vehicle for rebuilding civic capacity. People who learn to govern their local health system can govern other things too.
© IMEUS Democracy-First Healthcare Playbook · v1.0 · A Greenfield Model for Systemic Transformation