They Did What?

The Investor Who Offers to Save You Is the Threat

35 min · 9. Juni 2026
Episode The Investor Who Offers to Save You Is the Threat Cover

Beschreibung

You trained fifteen years to become a doctor. Nobody trained you to spot the person who spends the next decade quietly draining everything you built. This week Dr. A talks about hard lessons from his own years fighting a former partner he can only name by a pseudonym while the case sits in court. His warning is for physician entrepreneurs: smart, fresh out of training, sitting on a real idea, and nearly defenseless against the kind of "investor" who shows up offering to be a savior. He lays out the exact playbook — the manufactured rescue, the grab for control of the money, the conflicted vendor referrals — then sets it beside a celebrity entrepreneur's recent suit alleging her own managers looted her fortune. The pattern is identical.The money, he says, you can earn back. The years you burn fighting for it, you can't. We Also Cover: * For physician entrepreneurs: Run a "progressive dating period" before anyone gets equity or control. * For clinicians eyeing a deal: When a prospective partner pushes a specific vendor, ask straight out whether they own a piece of it or take a profit share — a referral that pays them twice is a conflict, not a favor. * System-level: These setups run on blurring family and fiduciary — once a "partner" has cast himself as your mentor, big brother, or savior, questioning the books starts to feel like betraying a relative. That's the design.

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Episode The Investor Who Offers to Save You Is the Threat Cover

The Investor Who Offers to Save You Is the Threat

You trained fifteen years to become a doctor. Nobody trained you to spot the person who spends the next decade quietly draining everything you built. This week Dr. A talks about hard lessons from his own years fighting a former partner he can only name by a pseudonym while the case sits in court. His warning is for physician entrepreneurs: smart, fresh out of training, sitting on a real idea, and nearly defenseless against the kind of "investor" who shows up offering to be a savior. He lays out the exact playbook — the manufactured rescue, the grab for control of the money, the conflicted vendor referrals — then sets it beside a celebrity entrepreneur's recent suit alleging her own managers looted her fortune. The pattern is identical.The money, he says, you can earn back. The years you burn fighting for it, you can't. We Also Cover: * For physician entrepreneurs: Run a "progressive dating period" before anyone gets equity or control. * For clinicians eyeing a deal: When a prospective partner pushes a specific vendor, ask straight out whether they own a piece of it or take a profit share — a referral that pays them twice is a conflict, not a favor. * System-level: These setups run on blurring family and fiduciary — once a "partner" has cast himself as your mentor, big brother, or savior, questioning the books starts to feel like betraying a relative. That's the design.

9. Juni 202635 min
Episode They Don't Care About Your Doctor Cover

They Don't Care About Your Doctor

Hospitals are quietly firing their best doctors — not for malpractice, not for complaints, but for costing 8 to 12 percent more than a cheaper alternative. When a 20-year oncologist with 100% patient satisfaction and zero blemishes gets cut to protect a margin, something has broken beyond repair. In this episode, Dr. A pulls back the curtain on a pattern accelerating across specialties — radiology, oncology, anesthesia — where exceptional clinicians are being replaced not by better ones, but by cheaper ones. The engine behind it is private equity and insurance-owned hospital systems operating on a simple mandate: generate margin, cut cost, and move on. If the numbers work out — 70% margin, 4% more deaths — hospital leadership has already told you which one they will choose.  We also cover: * For clinicians: Doctors who resist should focus their attention on the CFO, because is the only person in the building who speaks the language that can save your contract. * For patients: Radiology is the canary in the coal mine. AI-driven replacement is not a future threat. * System-level: Insurance companies now own hospitals, clinics, and imaging centers, and they are running physician staffing decisions like an Excel algorithm.

6. Mai 202622 min
Episode 75 Percent of Physicians No Longer Own Their Practice Cover

75 Percent of Physicians No Longer Own Their Practice

Three out of four physicians in America no longer own their own practice. The entity that now controls their decisions, their staffing, their billing — is not a doctor. It is a private equity firm with a five-year exit strategy and no obligation to the patient sitting in the exam room. In this solo episode, Dr. A breaks down what he calls the darkest deal in modern medicine: the private equity acquisition of physician practices. Between 2013 and 2020, nearly a thousand practices were absorbed by PE-backed consolidators — each time triggering the same playbook: cut staff, replace doctors with mid-levels, crank patient volume, code aggressively, and sell before the whole thing collapses. Dr. A traces how a model built for returns on IT companies and fast food chains has been force-fitted onto cardiology offices and ophthalmology suites — and why scaling a body is not the same as scaling a balance sheet. We also cover: * For patients: Knowing the ownership structure of your practice is the first step to protecting yourself. * For clinicians: Before burning out and selling to a PE-backed consolidator, physicians should know that AI-powered practice management tools can now handle a significant portion of administrative workload. * System-level: The doctrine of corporate practice of medicine exists in many states but is almost never enforced

14. Apr. 202625 min
Episode The First Business Mistake Doctors Never See Coming Cover

The First Business Mistake Doctors Never See Coming

Fourteen years of training doesn’t prepare you for this. One bad business decision can nearly end a medical career. In this season-one finale, Dr. A tells a true story from early in his career—what happened when a newly trained physician stepped into entrepreneurship without business training, formal safeguards, or verification. Fresh out of fellowship, at the dawn of digital medicine, he partnered with close friends to build a new kind of radiology practice. The idea was right. The timing was right. The execution was not. This isn’t about blame. It’s about pattern recognition—and stopping history from repeating itself. If you’re trained to save lives, who teaches you to protect your own? We Also Cover * For patients: Why physician burnout and system pressure often start long before you ever meet your doctor * For clinicians: The hidden risk of entering business without verification, incentives, or guardrails * System-level: How medical training structurally omits business literacy—and why that gap keeps costing careers

13. Jan. 202622 min
Episode When Physicians Stopped Acting Together Cover

When Physicians Stopped Acting Together

Physicians no longer control many of the decisions that shape patient care—and that loss didn’t happen overnight. According to Dr. A, it took decades of fragmented choices, missed chances to act together, and quiet acceptance of outside control. In this episode of They Did What, Dr. A delivers a blunt reckoning with the medical profession itself. He traces how professional culture, competition, and failure to unify created openings for insurers, corporate owners, and legal frameworks to move into clinical decision-making. The result: defensive medicine, productivity quotas, and care shaped as much by billing codes as by patient need. This is not about blaming individual clinicians. It’s about how shared behaviors—embracing commercialization, tolerating fragmentation, and avoiding collective advocacy—slowly weakened professional authority.  We Also Cover * For patients: Why your doctor may be constrained even when they agree with your care plan * For clinicians: How professional fragmentation reduced leverage with payers and institutions System-level: How cultural norms inside medicine enabled long-term corporatization

30. Dez. 202517 min