In this raw and vulnerable episode, I take you on a journey from broken emergency rooms where administrators and clinicians speak different languages, through my frustration with MBA programs that teach theory while students will face chaos, to the creation of an integrated learning ecosystem that bridges clinical reality, business constraints, technology limitations, and the African healthcare context. I confront the brutal math of impact: one doctor saves patients one at a time, but one eco...
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In this raw and vulnerable episode, I take you on a journey from broken emergency rooms where administrators and clinicians speak different languages, through my frustration with MBA programs that teach theory while students will face chaos, to the creation of an integrated learning ecosystem that bridges clinical reality, business constraints, technology limitations, and the African healthcare context. I confront the brutal math of impact: one doctor saves patients one at a time, but one eco...
Podcast 4: Imposter Syndrome Has Two Flavors (And I've Tasted Both)
4 a.m. confessions of an MBA grad
19 minutes
2 weeks ago
Podcast 4: Imposter Syndrome Has Two Flavors (And I've Tasted Both)
There's a special kind of hell that comes with career transition. You're too clinical for the boardroom, too business-minded for the bedside, and you don't fully belong anywhere. I've sat in MBA classes feeling like a fraud who doesn't understand finance. I've stood in hospital corridors being told I've 'lost touch' with real medicine. This is about the identity crisis nobody warns you about, how to build credibility when you're stuck between two worlds, and why your hybrid expertise is actua...
4 a.m. confessions of an MBA grad
In this raw and vulnerable episode, I take you on a journey from broken emergency rooms where administrators and clinicians speak different languages, through my frustration with MBA programs that teach theory while students will face chaos, to the creation of an integrated learning ecosystem that bridges clinical reality, business constraints, technology limitations, and the African healthcare context. I confront the brutal math of impact: one doctor saves patients one at a time, but one eco...