Venturi Project
It is not a consultancy firm or a closed platform.
It is an open collaborative analysis network, driven by professionals with direct experience in healthcare management.
It was born with a clear mission: to better understand the system in order to transform it with practical intelligence. Our goal is not to theorize, but to generate useful knowledge from the rigorous analysis of real data. We translate figures into decisions.
The Venturi Project is not an organization as such: we are not a company, nor a foundation, nor a formally constituted entity.
We act as an umbrella brand that brings together studies, collaborations, and proposals under a single methodological approach and a shared vision.
We study the system, compare realities, propose paths, and open debates to achieve the Venturi effect in healthcare efficiency.
- We prepare information and indicators from public sources
- We develop reproducible, traceable and visual models.
- We bring rigor, but avoid excessive academicism: we seek real impact.
- Identify bottlenecks, critical points and opportunities for improvement.
Healthcare: a shared challenge that requires collective solutions
Healthcare is going through a critical period of inefficiency without profound reforms. The Venturi Project has spent years analyzing this problem using data, assessing the healthcare burden, and proposing realistic proposals to improve the system's efficiency.
This challenge is not exclusive to the public or private sectors, but to society as a whole. Companies, professionals, patients, and institutions are part of the problem… and also part of the solution. It makes no sense to continue talking about dichotomies when a large part of public healthcare is already provided in private centers.
Companies—large and small—contribute knowledge, innovation, and management capacity. From healthcare centers to tech startups, their role is key to ensuring viable healthcare. But we need to focus our proposals on answering the real question: how much does it cost to maintain the healthcare system we want?
Only with a systemic, collaborative, and rigorous approach will it be possible to trigger the Venturi effect that transforms the system and ensures its medium- and long-term sustainability.