Working Healthcare
When Chad Perlyn was four, his parents drove through the night to say goodbye to a baby who was not expected to live. A young pediatric surgeon walked into the waiting room, laid out an impossible choice then walked back out hours later with a smile that meant one thing: the baby survived. That moment set Chad’s life in motion. On this episode of Working Healthcare, host Meredith Hirsh sits down with Dr. Chad Perlyn, a pediatric plastic surgeon, Oxford-trained scientist, MBA and dean of Nova Southeastern University’s allopathic medical school. Chad traces his path from a waiting room in Miami to Oxford labs and, after the earthquake in Haiti, to a children’s hospital where a pilot on the tarmac asked, “Who’s in charge?” Everyone turned to him. From there, the conversation turns to the crisis hiding behind titles and credentials. Fewer physicians run their own practices. More young doctors enter a world of EMRs, system jobs, private equity rollups and patients who no longer automatically trust the white coat. Chad explains why hanging a shingle is getting harder every year, why more physicians now work for someone else and what that means for access, autonomy and the future of independent medicine. He worries less about AI than about what medicine could lose if machines manage too much of the work: the human voice in a crisis and the hand on a parent’s shoulder when there is no cure, only presence. If you wonder where all the independent doctors went or what kind of physician will be waiting on the other side of the exam room door 10 years from now, this episode asks the question medicine cannot afford to ignore. Contact Chad: LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/chad-perlyn-md-phd-mba-facs-1102a019a/] Contact Meredith: Website: meredithhirsh.com [https://www.meredithhirsh.com/] Instagram: @workinghealthcare [https://www.instagram.com/workinghealthcare/] Facebook: WorkingHealthcare [https://www.facebook.com/workinghealthcarepodcast] LinkedIn: @meredithfhirsh [https://www.linkedin.com/in/meredithfhirsh/] YouTube: @WorkingHealthcare [https://www.youtube.com/@WorkingHealthcare]
112 episodes
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