The Doctor's Lounge
Episode Summary This week, Drs. DiGiorgio and Koka are joined by returning guest Dr. Sanat Dixit and special guest Dr. Sanjay Dhall, chief of neurosurgery at Harbor-UCLA and a leading spinal cord injury researcher. Dr. Dhall traces his path from a "commando shift" in a Houston trauma bay as a pre-med student to running solo trauma call at Grady Hospital as a young attending, then discusses the strange reality of his current institution: a major county hospital that doesn't bill professional fees or for implants, leaving millions on the table. The conversation moves through hospital alignment under for-profit versus non-profit models, the Christopher Duntsch case and what it reveals about resident training and the GME system, Dr. Dhall's controversial Wall Street Journal letter on NIH indirect costs, and a guideline fight over early surgery for spinal cord injury that got him removed from a neurosurgery executive committee. The episode closes with a wide-ranging discussion on AI and robotics in surgery — what they might realistically take off physicians' plates, and what they almost certainly can't replace. Chapter Markers 00:00 Welcome and introducing Dr. Sanjay Dhall 01:49 From a Houston "commando shift" to a trauma bug 05:10 Running Grady's trauma service solo as the only neurosurgeon 09:25 The unsupervised resident era and its billing aftershocks 14:03 Harbor-UCLA doesn't bill for neurosurgery profies — or implants 19:44 How county hospitals account for six-figure implant write-offs 24:30 Fiduciary duty, taxpayers, and the case for billing aggressively 28:00 Drug rep economics at county hospitals 31:10 Comparing Cleveland Clinic, Mayo, and the county model 34:29 The "color-coded sticker" idea and the bureaucratic mindset 37:59 For-profit alignment vs. "non-profits functioning as for-profits" 43:24 The Devi Shetty suture story and physician-driven cost control 44:13 Physician ownership, conflicts of interest, and carve-out hospitals 46:00 Jefferson's neuro hospital and the private anesthesia advantage 48:45 The Christopher Duntsch case and a failure of training oversight 52:10 How does an incompetent surgeon make it through residency? 56:04 Troubled personalities in neurosurgery training 1:00:04 Work-hour restrictions and the self-selection of old-school neurosurgery 1:02:29 Is dissent tolerated in academic medicine anymore? 1:06:31 Inside NIH indirect costs — where 40-60% of grant money goes 1:10:19 The spinal cord injury guideline fight and getting removed from committee 1:13:44 Burnout, call coverage, and the safety net argument 1:20:27 Will robots ever do neurosurgery? 1:23:11 AI for administrative burden vs. AI in the OR 1:28:34 The pilot analogy, a ruptured aneurysm story, and the limits of automation Co-Host Handles @anish_koka and @drdigiorgio Show Handle @drsloungepod Subscribe Links Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/44vw8eirsKKnjgNIrdDvrR [https://open.spotify.com/show/44vw8eirsKKnjgNIrdDvrR] Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-doctors-lounge/id1832097658 [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-doctors-lounge/id1832097658] YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheDoctorsLoungePod [https://www.youtube.com/@TheDoctorsLoungePod]
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