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An Open Letter to Capitol Hill: From Fractured to Fractal Health Care Design

  • January 19, 2026
  • Doctor Lawrence

Why Health Policy Needs a Safe Harbor for Continuity

To the Members of Congress,

I am writing in response to recent reporting on President Donald Trump’s new health care proposal, including coverage by the Associated Press that outlines its goals, tradeoffs, and likely points of contention.

I am not writing as a partisan.

I am writing as a physician–scientist who has spent decades inside clinical care, biomedical research, and public health systems—and as someone who has lived with the consequences of how those systems are designed.


When Health Care Systems Fracture, People Fall Through

Over time, one lesson has repeated itself with painful consistency:

When health care systems are fractured, people fall through the cracks.

Fracture is not an abstraction. It is operational and human:

  • Repeated handoffs with no continuity of responsibility
  • Funding cycles that end before biological processes do
  • Policies optimized for short-term metrics while human lives unfold across decades

In fractured systems, continuity becomes an exception—something clinicians try to patch together despite the design, not because of it.


What Fractal Design Makes Possible

A fractal health care system is fundamentally different.

In a fractal design, the same organizing principles hold at every scale:

  • the individual clinical encounter
  • the care team
  • the institution
  • the agency
  • the national policy framework

When values align across these levels, continuity is no longer a special project. It becomes a design feature.

Fractal systems are:

  • More humane, because responsibility does not disappear at boundaries
  • More resilient, because continuity is preserved through transitions
  • More trustworthy, because patients can rely on the system over time

A Safe Harbor for Continuity

This is my appeal to Capitol Hill:

Whatever policy path you choose, govern for fractal coherence.

That means:

  • Protecting continuity across life stages, not just enrollment periods
  • Aligning incentives so what works for a clinician in the room also works for the institution and the nation
  • Creating a safe harbor for care that must persist through uncertainty, political change, and biological time

Health care does not fail because clinicians lack commitment.
It fails when systems are not designed to carry people through complexity.

With respect,

Lawrence M. Nelson, MD, MBA
Women’s Health Surgeon, Physician, Scientist
Former Principal Investigator, NIH Intramural Research Program
CAPT, United States Public Health Service (Retired)

Read the full AP story:

My28Days.org is an educational and advocacy platform supported by the Mary Elizabeth Conover Foundation.  For more information or to lend support, contact Office@ConoverFoundation.org

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