28. How Storytelling Can Change Healthcare Culture with Tracy Granzyk
What happens when healthcare professionals finally have a safe place to tell the truth about what they have seen, carried, and survived?
In this episode of The MedLife Support Podcast, Dr. Lisa sits down with Tracy Granzyk — award-winning filmmaker, writer, editor, communication strategist, and founding editor-in-chief of Please See Me — to explore the power of storytelling in healthcare. Together, they discuss why so many clinicians feel unseen, why silence is so deeply embedded in medical culture, and how personal narrative can create healing, connection, and culture change.
Tracy shares how her work in life sciences, academic medical centers, patient safety, and health system leadership opened her eyes to the emotional cost of working in medicine. She explains how stories of medical harm, moral distress, burnout, and vulnerability often go untold because healthcare professionals do not feel safe speaking openly. That realization eventually led her to create Please See Me, a digital literary magazine designed to give clinicians, patients, caregivers, and families a place to be heard.
This conversation goes far beyond storytelling as self-expression. Tracy and Lisa unpack how stories can become tools for healing, truth-telling, patient safety, and system-level change. They also discuss how burnout, error, and emotional distress do not stay inside hospital walls. These experiences ripple into marriages, families, and the broader healthcare ecosystem, affecting everyone connected to the physician or healthcare professional.
If you have ever felt like medicine teaches people to endure instead of express, or if you have watched the ripple effects of burnout, stress, or patient harm touch an entire family, this episode offers both validation and hope.
In this episode, we cover:
* Why storytelling matters in healthcare culture change
* How Please See Me became a safe space for clinicians, patients, and caregivers
* The connection between storytelling, healing, and being seen
* Why healthcare professionals often feel unsafe telling the truth
* How stories can help process burnout, moral distress, and vicarious trauma
* The ripple effects of medical harm and physician distress on families
* Why patient safety and physician wellbeing are deeply connected
* How narrative can support truth-telling, transparency, and more humane systems
* What happens when clinicians finally have permission to be human
* Why speaking up matters the moment a system makes you feel less than
At its heart, this episode is a conversation about visibility, voice, and what becomes possible when people no longer have to carry their stories alone. Tracy's work is a reminder that stories do more than document pain — they can also create belonging, release, and real change.
Guest Bio
Tracy Granzyk is an award-winning filmmaker, writer, editor, and communication strategist whose work sits at the intersection of storytelling, healthcare, and culture change. She is the founding editor-in-chief of Please See Me, a digital literary magazine that creates space for healthcare professionals, patients, caregivers, and families to tell the stories that often go unseen. With a background spanning life sciences, patient safety, organizational culture, and digital media, Tracy helps clinicians, leaders, and organizations free the stories they have been carrying so those stories can reshape how care is delivered, experienced, and sustained.
Guest Links
Website: www.pleaseseeme.com [http://www.pleaseseeme.com/] LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/tgranz24/]