Connected By Health – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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Podcast Connected By Health

Connected By Health

Krishna Vedala, MD

Forme & Santé
Société & Culture

Fréquence : 1 épisode/2j. Total Éps: 23

Hosting podcast Libsyn
Connected by Health is a modern healthcare podcast hosted by Krishna Vedala, MD, MPH, MBA, CPE—a board-certified Internal Medicine and Obesity Medicine physician, healthcare executive, and innovation leader based in Oklahoma City. This show explores the intersection of clinical medicine, physician leadership, healthcare operations, AI in healthcare, and data-driven decision-making; all with one goal: creating more connected, effective, and human-centered care. Each episode features conversations with physicians, healthcare executives, innovators, and system leaders on: - Internal Medicine & Obesity Medicine - AI in Healthcare & Health Data Management - Physician Leadership & Practice Management - Healthcare Finance, Business Intelligence & Quality Improvement - Operational Excellence & Lean Six Sigma in healthcare Dr. Vedala brings a rare blend of frontline clinical experience, executive leadership training, and systems-level thinking, helping listeners bridge the gap between medicine, leadership, and innovation. 🎧 Connected by Health is for physicians, healthcare leaders, administrators, and anyone committed to building the future of healthcare together. Connect with Dr. Krishna Vedala 🔗 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drkvedala
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  • 🇨🇦 Canada - medicine

    20/06/2026
    #64
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    20/06/2026
    #52
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    19/06/2026
    #93
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    18/06/2026
    #79
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    13/06/2026
    #66
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    11/06/2026
    #99
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    10/06/2026
    #89
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    09/06/2026
    #46
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    08/06/2026
    #43
  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - medicine

    07/06/2026
    #63

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#07 - Prevention, Policy, and People: Public Health in Practice

lundi 6 avril 2026Durée 22:16

In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Kerry Morgan, public health professor and health behavior researcher at the University of Central Oklahoma, to explore the foundational role of public health in shaping healthier, more resilient communities. From disease prevention and health education to burnout, research, and policy, this conversation highlights how public health operates far beyond hospitals—impacting every aspect of society.

We dive into the importance of investing in prevention systems like vaccination, sanitation, and disease surveillance, and how these efforts not only save lives but reduce long-term healthcare costs. Dr. Morgan also shares practical strategies for addressing burnout, improving health literacy, and making physical activity more accessible—while emphasizing the critical role of research in driving meaningful, evidence-based change.

As we recognize National Public Health Week, this episode serves as a powerful reminder: the health of a society is built long before patients ever walk into a clinic. When we invest in public health, we invest in everything.

🔑 Key Highlights & Takeaways 🌍 Public Health = Prevention First
  • Focuses on stopping problems before they become crises
  • Reduces:
    • Hospitalizations
    • Healthcare costs
    • Lost productivity
  • Example: Vaccination and surveillance systems prevent outbreaks before escalation
💡 Health Is Shaped by More Than Medicine
  • Behavior, environment, relationships, and policy all influence outcomes
  • Public health works at the population level, not just individual care
🧠 Burnout Is Both Personal AND Systemic
  • Individual strategies:
    • Identify "depleters vs energizers"
    • Lean into what restores energy
  • System-level solutions:
    • Flexible work environments
    • Protected time for decompression
    • Strong communication culture
📚 Health Education = Empowerment
  • Health literacy enables better decision-making
  • Small gaps in understanding (e.g., nutrition labels) can lead to major health impacts
  • Critical for:
    • Obesity prevention
    • Chronic disease management
    • Long-term behavior change
🏃 Physical Activity = Underrated Medicine
  • Benefits go far beyond weight:
    • Improves mental health (anxiety, depression)
    • Enhances sleep and mood
    • Reduces chronic disease risk
  • Community design plays a key role in accessibility
🔬 Research Drives Everything Forward
  • Innovations (like GLP-1 medications) take years to decades
  • Requires:
    • Rigorous scientific testing
    • Replication across studies
    • Long-term investment
  • Without research → no safe or scalable solutions
🤝 Community Engagement Is Essential
  • Trust is built through direct engagement
  • Policy must be:
    • Evidence-based
    • Community-informed
  • UCO's MPH program emphasizes real-world partnerships

Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

 

Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

──────────────────────────────────────────

🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

#06 - Resilient Leadership: Building Trust, Equity, and Safety in Health Systems

lundi 30 mars 2026Durée 33:31

In this episode of Connected by Health, host Krishna Vedala sits down with healthcare administrator Adrian Francisco from Advent Aurora Health in Wisconsin to explore what it truly means to lead in today's evolving healthcare system. Drawing from his experience within one of the largest nonprofit health systems in the U.S., Adrian explains how administrative decisions—from staffing models to reimbursement structures—ultimately determine what care is even possible for patients.

Set against the backdrop of a $4.5–$5 trillion U.S. healthcare industry (nearly 18–20% of GDP), this conversation examines the immense scale—and pressure—placed on healthcare leaders. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, the role of administrators has shifted dramatically: from focusing on operational efficiency to leading through workforce burnout, staffing shortages, and ongoing system disruption.

The episode highlights a critical reality:

  • Nearly 1 in 5 healthcare workers have left their jobs since 2020, contributing to persistent workforce gaps
  • Clinician burnout rates remain above 45–50% nationally, directly impacting care delivery and retention
  • Health system consolidation continues to rise, with over 1,500 hospital mergers in the U.S. since 2000, accelerating post-pandemic due to financial pressures

Adrian challenges the common misconception that efficiency and patient-centered care are in conflict, arguing instead that inefficiency is often what harms patients most. He emphasizes that short-term cost-cutting often leads to long-term quality decline, reinforcing the need for sustainable, system-level thinking.

A major theme of the episode is psychological safety in healthcare leadership. Adrian explains that culture is not built through mission statements, but through how leaders respond when frontline staff raise concerns. Higher reporting of safety events, he notes, is often a sign of greater trust—not worse performance.

The conversation also dives into healthcare equity, highlighting that:

  • A patient's ZIP code can be a stronger predictor of health outcomes than genetic factors
  • Inequitable access leads to higher emergency department use, avoidable admissions, and increased system costs
  • Addressing equity is not just ethical—it is a financial and quality strategy essential for long-term sustainability

Finally, the episode explores the future of healthcare through digital transformation, AI, and telehealth, stressing that technology must be designed with clinicians and patients in mind—or risk widening existing disparities.

At its core, this episode is about stewardship. As Adrian puts it, healthcare leaders are not just managers—they are architects of systems that determine who gets care, how quickly, and at what quality. In a time of constraint and uncertainty, leadership rooted in clarity, courage, and consistency is what will ultimately shape the future of healthcare—and the health of our communities.

Key Episode Highlights:
  • Healthcare administration determines what care is possible—not just how it's delivered
  • Post-COVID leadership requires resilience, not just efficiency
  • Burnout and workforce shortages are among the greatest threats to system stability
  • Efficiency ≠ cutting corners—it's about removing barriers to better care
  • Psychological safety is built through actions, not slogans
  • Equity reduces cost and improves outcomes—it's a strategic priority
  • Technology must be implemented as a people-centered change strategy, not just an IT upgrade
  • Strong leadership is measured by trust, consistency, and long-term impact—not short-term metrics

Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

───────────────────────────────────────

🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

 

#05: Education, Health, and the Future of Our Communities

Saison 1 · Épisode 5

lundi 23 mars 2026Durée 36:25

Education, Health, and the Foundation of Human Potential

Guest: Superintendent Jason Perez

  The Big Idea of the Episode

This conversation explores how education and health are deeply connected, and why schools often serve as the front line for community wellbeing.

Jason Perez discusses how meeting students' basic human needs is essential before learning can truly happen — a concept rooted in Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs.

The core message:

Students cannot succeed academically if their basic human needs are not met first.

  Key Themes From the Episode 1. Maslow's Hierarchy Still Applies Today

Perez references Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs (1943) as a guiding principle for leadership and education.

The hierarchy shows that before higher-level goals like learning or achievement can occur, basic needs must be satisfied:

  1. Physiological needs (food, shelter, safety)

  2. Security and stability

  3. Belonging and connection

  4. Self-esteem

  5. Self-actualization

One powerful way Perez explains it:

"Before we can enjoy a good book, be a good friend, or be a functional worker, we have to have our basic physiological needs met."

  2. Schools Are Now Community Support Centers

The conversation highlights how schools increasingly serve roles beyond education.

Many students rely on schools for:

  • Meals

  • Safety

  • Structure

  • Emotional support

  • Stability

Perez shares a striking statistic:

About 69% of students in Oklahoma qualify for free or reduced lunch.

This means schools are often addressing basic survival needs, not just academic development.

  3. Leadership in Education

Perez also reflects on leadership lessons learned through his career as an educator and superintendent.

Key leadership principles discussed:

  • Listening to communities

  • Understanding cultural and socioeconomic challenges

  • Supporting both students and teachers

  • Building systems that help children succeed beyond the classroom

Education leadership today requires balancing policy, community needs, and human development.

  4. The Intersection of Health and Education

The episode ties directly into the Connected by Health mission: recognizing that health extends far beyond medical care.

Education, nutrition, emotional wellbeing, and community stability all influence long-term health outcomes.

In many ways:

Healthy communities begin with supported students.

  The Core Takeaway

Education and healthcare are not separate systems.

They are deeply interconnected and if we want to improve the future of healthcare, we must also invest in supporting students and strengthening schools today.

 

Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

 

Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year; whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated; they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

──────────────────────────────────────────

🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

#04: The Middlemen Behind Drug Prices: What PBMs Don't Want You to Know

Saison 1 · Épisode 4

lundi 23 mars 2026Durée 37:29

Why Your Prescriptions Cost So Much: A Pharmacist Explains PBMs

 

Why does the same medication cost dramatically less in other countries while Americans are stuck choosing between prescriptions and rent?

In this episode of Connected by Health, Dr. Krishna Vedala sits down with Alexander Vedala, a licensed pharmacist and CEO of Sooner Pharmacy and Compassionate Care Pharmacy, to expose what's really driving prescription drug prices in the U.S. and why patients feel trapped inside a system that's supposed to protect them.

As Alexander puts it, PBMs were "supposed to help reduce cost to medications"… but the incentives got "tainted."

 

You'll hear a behind-the-counter breakdown of the biggest cost drivers, including:

  • PBMs (pharmacy benefit managers) as the "middleman" gatekeepers between manufacturers and insurers

  • Rebates that don't reach patients: "They don't pass that through to the patient."

  • Spread pricing: the insurer sees one price, the pharmacy gets another "and they're pocketing that money."

  • Steering patients to mail-order through higher copays at local pharmacies (often owned by the PBM)

  • Why independent pharmacies are being squeezed, especially in rural communities where access is already fragile

 

And yes, they talk real numbers and real human impact.

Alexander shares a personal story that brings the entire issue into sharp focus:

"My youngest son has type one diabetes… and that's just not affordable for a lot of people."

 

This isn't just a rant about what's broken. It's a roadmap for what could change.

You'll hear actionable reform ideas, including:

  • Moving toward transparent "cost-plus" pricing (and what Mark Cuban's Cost Plus Drugs gets right)

  • Eliminating or reducing prior authorizations that delay care

  • Rebuilding incentives so drug pricing isn't driven by profit from inflated costs

  • Expanding pharmacists' role to reduce delays and expand access ("you guys know the dosing if not better than we do")

  • Why "provider status for pharmacists" could help patients get faster, cheaper care

 

Alexander also makes the case for coalition-level advocacy across the healthcare team:

"We'd be much more powerful if we could get together… joining the fight."

 

If you've ever wondered why your prescriptions are expensive, confusing, or delayed; this episode will give you clarity (and probably a few jaw-dropping moments).

 

───────────────────────────────────────

Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

 

Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

────────────────────────────────────────

🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

#03: Inside the ICU During COVID: Sacrifice, Truth, and the Collapse of Trust

Saison 1 · Épisode 3

lundi 23 mars 2026Durée 43:34

A Tale of Sacrifice and Truth: The Untold Reality of Practicing Medicine During COVID When Medicine Had No Playbook

 

What was it really like inside hospitals during the COVID-19 pandemic?

Behind the headlines, political arguments, and endless media coverage were physicians and nurses navigating a crisis that modern medicine had never faced before.

Protocols were evolving in real time. Data changed daily. And every decision carried life-or-death consequences.

As we explain in this episode:

"We were doing research on the go while taking care of patients."

Doctors were simultaneously learning about a new disease while trying to save lives; often without clear guidance and under immense pressure.

  The Human Cost Inside Hospitals

While the public saw case counts and statistics, healthcare workers experienced something very different.

Hospitals were pushed beyond capacity. Ventilators were scarce. Physicians were forced to make rapid triage decisions about which patients were most likely to survive.

And at the same time, they carried a deeply personal fear home with them every day.

"Every day going home and every day coming to work, those decisions were things I hated."

Many healthcare workers isolated themselves from their own families to avoid spreading the virus. Some stripped off their clothes in the garage before entering their homes. Others lived in constant anxiety about infecting loved ones.

The emotional toll of those years is still unfolding today.

  Moral Injury in Medicine

One of the most powerful themes in this conversation is moral injury — the psychological burden that comes from making impossible decisions under extreme circumstances.

Physicians weren't just treating a disease. They were confronting ethical dilemmas that most medical training never prepares you for:

• Patients dying without family present
• Delivering devastating news over the phone
• Limited resources forcing impossible choices

These experiences left many healthcare workers emotionally exhausted and questioning the system they had dedicated their lives to serving.

  Misinformation, Disinformation, and the Collapse of Trust

Another difficult challenge during the pandemic was the rapid spread of misinformation.

The episode explores the important distinction between:

Misinformation — incorrect information shared unknowingly
Disinformation — false information intentionally spread for influence or gain

Both had a profound impact on public perception of medicine.

As trust eroded, many physicians found themselves facing skepticism from the very communities they were trying to help.

  The Reality of Medical Expertise

One of the most striking reflections from this episode is a simple but powerful reminder about expertise.

"We should not be put on a podium… but when it comes to our area of expertise, we should be listened to."

Healthcare workers were never asking to be idolized. They were simply asking for the space to practice medicine in good faith during an unprecedented crisis.

  Why This Conversation Matters

This episode offers a rare and honest look at what healthcare professionals experienced behind the scenes during the pandemic.

It's not just a story about medicine.

It's a story about leadership under pressure, ethical responsibility, sacrifice, and the fragile relationship between science and public trust.

If we want to move forward as a healthcare system and as a society conversations like this are essential.

 

🎙️ Listen now to Connected by Health and explore the truth behind one of the most challenging chapters in modern medicine.

 

 

──────────────────────────────────────────

Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

 

Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

──────────────────────────────────────────

🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

#02: The White Coat Burden: The System Is Breaking Its Healers

Saison 1 · Épisode 2

lundi 23 mars 2026Durée 23:26

300–400 Physicians a Year: The Crisis We Refuse to Fix

 

In the United States, 300 to 400 physicians die by suicide every year.
That's roughly one doctor per day.

Among male physicians, suicide rates are 40% higher than the general population.
Among female physicians, the rate is 130% higher.

This isn't burnout.
This isn't weakness.
This is a system-level crisis hiding in plain sight.

 

As Krishna states in this episode:

"Physician mental health is not optional. It is infrastructure."

 

In this powerful and difficult conversation, we examine what's really driving physician mental health decline and why the language of "burnout" may actually be minimizing the problem.

Because this isn't just emotional exhaustion.

It's moral injury; being forced to act against your professional values.
It's documentation overload; up to two hours of charting for every one hour of patient care.
It's fear of seeking therapy because of licensing repercussions.
It's a culture that "rewards performance over health."

As shared in the episode:

"You can't just meditate your way out of a broken system."

This conversation moves beyond individual resilience and into the uncomfortable truth:
The system designed to heal patients is quietly harming its healers.

 

Why does this matter?

Because physician mental health is directly tied to:

  • Patient safety

  • Medical error rates

  • Workforce retention

  • Healthcare costs

 

Replacing just one physician can cost between $500,000 to $1 million.

Hospitals with high burnout see higher error rates and lower patient satisfaction.

As Krishna powerfully reminds us:

"Physician mental health is patient safety."

This episode doesn't just highlight the crisis; it outlines what leaders, policymakers, and institutions must do to fix it:

 

  • Reform intrusive licensing questions

  • Provide truly confidential mental health care

  • Reduce clerical burden

  • Shift from volume-based metrics to time-based care

  • Normalize help-seeking from the top down

 

Because:

"Physician suicide is not inevitable. It is shaped by culture, policy, and leadership."

And what is shaped can be changed.

 

If you are a physician, trainee, nurse, administrator, or policymaker, this episode is for you.

Share this conversation with a colleague.
Start the discussion in your department.
Challenge leadership to address structural drivers.

And if you or someone you know is struggling, support is available:

📞 Call or text 988 (Suicide & Crisis Lifeline – U.S.)
📞 Physician Support Line: 1-888-409-0141

Talking about this saves lives.
Changing systems saves more.

If this episode impacted you, leave a review on Apple and share your biggest takeaway. Conversations like this are how culture shifts.

 

───────────────────────────────────────

Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

 

Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

───────────────────────────────────────

🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

 

#01: The Human Side of Healthcare: Marriage, Ambition & Big Dreams

Saison 1 · Épisode 1

lundi 23 mars 2026Durée 09:33

The Human Side of Healthcare: Marriage, Ambition & Big Dreams

 

When we talk about healthcare, we often focus on systems, policies, and diagnoses. But behind every title and credential is a human being with vision, ambition, and deeply personal motivations.

In this episode of Connected by Health, I step outside the clinical setting and into a candid conversation at home. This is not a discussion about treatment plans or medical protocols. It is a conversation about leadership, legacy, family, and the kind of future we want to build in healthcare.

If you believe health is about more than a diagnosis, this episode will resonate with you.

In this personal and reflective dialogue with my wife, we explore the dreams and ambitions that drive us beyond our daily responsibilities. I share my long-term vision of serving at the highest levels of public health, including the aspiration to one day become Surgeon General of the United States. We discuss what retirement could look like—not as an escape from work, but as a season of intentional living, writing, building, and continuing to contribute.

We also examine innovation beyond medicine, including ideas around sustainable business models, leadership opportunities in emerging industries, and how entrepreneurial thinking intersects with healthcare reform.

At its core, this episode introduces something foundational to this podcast: healthcare leadership begins with clarity of purpose. It begins with values. And it begins at home.

The future of healthcare will not be shaped solely by clinical expertise. It will be shaped by leaders who are willing to think long-term, dream boldly, and build intentionally.

 

In this episode, you will hear reflections on:

  • Balancing professional ambition with family life

  • Raising children with strong values while pursuing meaningful work

  • The importance of setting long-term goals in public service

  • Why innovation requires both vision and humility

  • And how leadership in healthcare starts with personal integrity

 

My hope is that this conversation encourages other healthcare professionals to think beyond their current role and consider the broader impact they are capable of making.

Because medicine is not just a career. It is a calling. And leadership is not defined by position, but by responsibility.

If this episode added value to you, I encourage you to share it with a colleague, friend, or fellow healthcare professional who is thinking about their own next chapter.

And if you are listening on Apple Podcasts, I would greatly appreciate it if you left a review and shared your biggest takeaway.

Thank you for being part of Connected by Health. Together, we can help shape a more innovative, humane, and connected future for healthcare.

 

 

────────────────────────────────────────

Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

 

Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

────────────────────────────────────────

🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.


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