エピソード

  • DMD #70 | Overcoming Burnout: Dr. Amy Fogelman's Journey from Primary Care to Expert Witness and Physician Advocacy
    2026/02/12
    Dr. Amy Fogelman, MD, a former internal medicine physician from Boston, joins Dr. Peter Crane to discuss her career trajectory from a high-volume primary care practice at Mass General to founding High Rock Experts in 2018. With over a decade in clinical medicine, she opens up about burnout exacerbated by long commutes, administrative overload, and loss of joy in patient care. The conversation explores her decision to leave clinical practice after her husband's encouragement, her six-month break for self-reflection, and networking with non-clinical physicians. Dr. Fogelman highlights the value of expert witness work for leveraging medical expertise, the importance of ethical reviews in malpractice cases, and systemic issues in healthcare like prior authorizations and shrinking reimbursements. She offers practical advice on finding fulfillment, reclaiming autonomy, and addressing physician suicide risks. This episode equips physicians at all stages with strategies for navigating burnout, exploring alternative careers, and advocating for systemic change, while emphasizing the enduring empathy in the medical workforce.Episode HighlightsAmy's background: Growing up in Boston, training in internal medicine, and practicing primary care at Mass General for a decade before shifting to a smaller practice.Journey into burnout: Starting part-time with extra projects like opioid policies and teaching, but facing increasing administrative burdens, long commutes, and emotional strain at home.The turning point: A Boston Globe article on physicians quitting medicine, prompted by a former patient, leading Amy to share her hidden struggles publicly and resonate with many.Leaving clinical practice: Husband's intervention, a six-month break, coaching, and networking with non-clinical physicians like Graham Gardner, realizing no additional degrees were needed.Discovering expert witness work: Transitioning from ad-hoc reviews to founding High Rock Experts, connecting attorneys with medical professionals, and creating courses on ethical expert testimony.Challenges in medicine: Administrative overhead, insurance battles, short visit times, and loss of patient trust; the need for physicians to reclaim control from administrators.Systemic fixes: Eliminating prior authorizations (as in Massachusetts), transparent visit lengths for patients, avoiding incentive-based metrics that penalize complex cases, and exploring direct primary care.Advice for physicians: Recognize you're not stuck—seek non-clinical options, prioritize joy, and use broad medical training for entrepreneurship; permission to step back and pivot.Ethical expert work: Explaining medicine objectively to courts, preventing frivolous lawsuits, and ensuring credible experts review cases to protect both patients and providers.Hope for the future: Valuing empathetic physicians, reducing bureaucracy, and voting with feet through career shifts to force systemic improvements.Top 3 TakeawaysBurnout often stems from administrative burdens and loss of control; pivoting to non-clinical roles like expert witness work can restore joy and leverage medical expertise without additional degrees.Physicians aren't stuck—network, reflect on what brings fulfillment, and explore options like direct primary care or entrepreneurship; seek permission from loved ones or coaches to step back.Systemic change requires reclaiming physician autonomy, eliminating prior authorizations, and avoiding metrics that incentivize firing "noncompliant" patients; ethical expert work helps maintain integrity in malpractice cases.About Dr. Amy FogelmanDr. Amy Fogelman is an MD and former primary care physician with over a decade of experience at Mass General and a private practice in Chestnut Hill, Boston. After battling burnout, she founded High Rock Experts in 2018, a company that connects medical professionals with attorneys for expert witness roles and offers courses on ethical testimony. Her work focuses on empowering physicians through non-clinical careers, integrity in legal-medical intersections, and advocacy for better healthcare systems. She has been featured in the Boston Globe for her insights on physician burnout.LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/amyfogelmanmd About the Host:Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.About the Show:Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the ...
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    39 分
  • DMD #69 | Wealth in Wellness: Physician's Real Estate Escape with Dr. Alexander Schloe
    2026/02/05
    Dr. Alexander Schloe, MD, a family medicine physician and Air Force veteran, joins Dr. Peter Crane to discuss his multifaceted career blending clinical practice, military service, family life, and real estate entrepreneurship. With over a decade in medicine, Dr. Schloe recounts his early exposure to assisted living at age 15 and a pivotal residency experience witnessing substandard care in a facility, prompting his shift toward boutique residential assisted living homes that prioritize dignity, consistent staffing, and personalized care. He explains the financial and ethical advantages of investing in these small, home-like facilities (6–16 residents), which yield higher returns (20–30% cash-on-cash) than traditional rentals while addressing senior care gaps amid staffing shortages and Medicaid cuts. Dr. Schloe emphasizes physician financial literacy starting with emergency funds, debt reduction, and house hacking, before scaling to passive income streams like assisted living. He shares how achieving financial independence in four years allowed him to practice part-time (two days/week), travel with family, and host the Physicians and Properties podcast. The conversation highlights avoiding lifestyle inflation, diversifying investments (e.g., Roth IRA, TSP alongside real estate), and using real estate for tax benefits and legacy building. This episode inspires physicians to pursue side ventures that align purpose with profit, fostering better work-life balance and patient care.Episode Highlights Alex's introduction: Christian, husband, father, family physician, Air Force veteran, real estate investor, and podcast host focused on financial freedom without losing one's soulMission: Help physicians achieve freedom at home and hospital through financial independence and dignified senior care via boutique assisted livingEarly exposure: First job at 15 in assisted living, residency horror story of poor care inspiring a better modelAssisted living realities: Staffing shortages, Medicaid cuts, and the need for small homes with 1:6 ratios for better dignity and outcomesFinancial perks: 20–30% cash-on-cash returns, tax advantages (depreciation, 1031 exchanges), and scalability from owning to investing passivelyPhysician pitfalls: Lifestyle inflation post-residency; advice to delay big purchases and build foundational financial habitsDiversification: Blend real estate with stocks, Roth IRA, TSP; start with house hacking for low-risk entryPersonal wins: Financial freedom in 4 years enabling part-time practice, family travel (e.g., month-long Europe camping), and improved doctoringResources: Physicians and Properties podcast, ralroom.com for assisted living guides and webinarsClosing advice: Get financial literacy (e.g., White Coat Investor, Rich Dad Poor Dad), invest wisely, and don't quit medicine—be better at itTop 3 Takeaways Boutique assisted living offers physicians high returns (20–30% cash-on-cash) and purpose by fixing broken senior care—start with education via webinars or guides to own or invest passively.Build financial independence by prioritizing emergency funds, debt payoff, and house hacking before scaling; avoid lifestyle inflation to accelerate freedom in 4–5 years.Diversify investments (real estate + stocks/IRAs) for tax benefits and legacy; financial freedom enhances work-life balance, making you a better doctor, spouse, and parent.About Dr. Alexander SchloeDr. Alexander Schloe is a board-certified family physician, Air Force veteran, real estate investor, and host of the Physicians and Properties podcast. With years in military medicine and clinical practice, he focuses on helping physicians achieve financial freedom through real estate, particularly boutique residential assisted living homes that provide dignified senior care. His mission blends purpose and profit, enabling doctors to work on their terms while building wealth and legacy. He practices part-time, invests in assisted living, and shares strategies for burnout prevention and entrepreneurship.Website: https://physiciansandproperties.comPodcast: Physicians and Properties PodcastAssisted Living: https://theralroom.com (RAL Room)LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/alexander-schloe-mdAbout the Host:Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.About the Show:Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the script. ...
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    41 分
  • LMC #68 | Solitary Fibrous Tumors: Research Advances, Treatment Strategies, and Hope for Sarcoma Patients
    2026/01/29
    Dr. Javier Martin-Broto, MD, PhD, a medical oncologist at Fundacion Jimenez Diaz University Hospital in Madrid, joins Dr. Peter Crane to discuss his extensive career in sarcoma care and research. With over 30 years of experience, Dr. Martin-Broto shares how he entered oncology, emphasizing its innovative and research-driven nature. The conversation focuses on solitary fibrous tumors (SFT), including diagnostic shifts from "malignant" to risk-based classifications, the efficacy of anti-angiogenic agents like pazopanib over chemotherapy, and promising preclinical research on BET inhibition and alternative splicing inhibitors like tepotinib. He highlights clinical trial results showing tumor shrinkage, the role of microenvironment in immunotherapy challenges, and strategies like trabectedin plus radiation for bulky tumors. Dr. Martin-Broto stresses multidisciplinary teams, patient advocacy, and access to innovative trials for better outcomes. This episode provides physicians and patients with actionable insights on rare sarcomas, fostering hope through ongoing research.Episode HighlightsJavier's journey into medical oncology: From residency in 1994 to leading sarcoma research and founding the Spanish Sarcoma GroupWhy oncology? Balancing broad medical knowledge with innovation, research, and patient careSolitary fibrous tumors (SFT): Shift from malignant/benign to low/high-risk classifications and metastatic behaviorKey trial insights: Pazopanib's superior efficacy (10+ months PFS in low-risk, 5 months in high-risk) over chemotherapyAnti-angiogenics and rotation strategies: Benefits for metastatic SFT and microenvironment targetingImmunotherapy challenges: Limited PD-1 efficacy but potential in immune modulation via cytokinesPromising research: BET inhibition and alternative splicing inhibitors (e.g., tepotinib) showing tumor shrinkage in trialsCombined therapies: Trabectedin + radiation for bulky or brain SFT, achieving up to 80% reductionPreclinical models: Testing new compounds and organoids for personalized treatmentAdvice for patients: Seek expert multidisciplinary teams, join advocacy groups, and access innovative trialsTop 3 TakeawaysSFT prognosis depends on initial risk level; anti-angiogenics like pazopanib offer better control than chemo, with potential for drug rotation.Emerging therapies like tepotinib (alternative splicing inhibition) show promising tumor shrinkage in ongoing phase II trials.Patients should engage sarcoma experts, multidisciplinary teams, and advocacy groups for access to innovative research and hope.About Dr. Javier Martin-Broto Dr. Javier Martin-Broto is an MD, PhD, and medical oncologist at Fundacion Jimenez Diaz University Hospital in Madrid, specializing in sarcoma care and research for over 30 years. He founded the Spanish Sarcoma Group in 1994 and leads a preclinical team with 40+ projects. His work includes designing 30+ clinical trials, pioneering anti-angiogenic treatments for SFT, and advancing therapies like BET and splicing inhibitors. Dedicated to translational research, he focuses on improving outcomes for rare sarcomas through innovation and patient-centered care.LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/javiermartinbrotoAbout the Host:Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.About the Show:Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the script. From burnout recovery to bold career pivots, health challenges to quiet leadership, this show honors the truth that healing begins with connection—and doctors, too, deserve to be whole.Visit: doctorsmakingadifference.comLMC Series Note:Living with Metastatic Cancer (LMC) explores the science, decisions, and day-to-day realities of life with advanced disease—through candid physician–patient conversations. The Doctors Making a Difference Podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for medical, legal, or professional advice. Always consult appropriate experts regarding your unique circumstances. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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    37 分
  • DMD #67 | International Service: Connecting Physicians Through Global Volunteerism
    2026/01/22

    Kimberly Haley-Coleman is the Executive Director of Globe Aware, a nonprofit offering short-term (6-7 day) volunteer service trips in 26 countries, focusing on community partnerships for projects like medical clinics, wheelchair distribution, and infrastructure builds. With a family full of physicians, Kimberly shares her journey founding Globe Aware to bridge the gap between willingness to serve and limited time, emphasizing human connections over heroism. The discussion explores the transformative power of cultural immersion, misconceptions about efficiency and structure in global service, benefits for volunteers, including burnout recovery, and practical details like costs, $1,500/week average, tax-deductible, and inclusivity for non-medical participants.

    Dr. Crane reflects on his own life-changing trips, highlighting trust-building and global unity.

    Episode Highlights

    • Globe Aware's origins: Bridging time gaps for volunteers inspired by Peace Corps and Doctors Without Borders
    • Short-term projects: 30 hours/week of service with cultural learning in 26 countries
    • Medical and non-medical roles: From clinics to building stoves and distributing wheelchairs
    • Cultural exchange: Challenging assumptions and fostering soft power through human connections
    • Misconceptions: Efficiency abroad vs. home; embracing flexibility in community settings
    • Inclusivity: Opportunities for families, EMTs, and non-clinicians
    • Practical considerations: Safety, meals, and adapting to local structures
    • Costs and accessibility: $1,500/week average, tax-deductible, with employer matching
    • Personal impact: Reigniting joy, combating burnout, and building lifelong friendships
    • Getting involved: Contact Globe Aware for tailored trips

    Top 3 Takeaways

    • Service abroad is a mutual exchange. Volunteers gain as much in perspective and joy as communities receive in aid.
    • Short-term trips fit busy schedules; focus on partnerships and flexibility over rigid efficiency.
    • Non-medical skills are valuable; everyone contributes, from families to paramedics, in holistic community projects. About Kimberly Haley-Coleman

    About Kimberly Haley-Coleman

    Kimberly Haley-Coleman is the Executive Director of Globe Aware, a U.S./Canadian nonprofit with 25 years of experience running short-term volunteer service trips in 26 countries. Founded to address the time constraints of professionals eager to serve, Globe Aware emphasizes cultural partnerships and transformative experiences. Kimberly's background in international volunteering led her to create accessible programs blending service, learning, and connection. Surrounded by a family of physicians, she has collaborated extensively with medical professionals on global projects.

    LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/kimberlyglobeaware

    Website: https://www.globeaware.org

    About the Host:

    Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.

    Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.

    About the Show:

    Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.

    In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the script. From burnout recovery to bold career pivots, health challenges to quiet leadership, this show honors the truth that healing begins with connection—and doctors, too, deserve to be whole.

    Visit: doctorsmakingadifference.com

    LMC Series Note:

    Living with Metastatic Cancer (LMC) explores the science, decisions, and day-to-day realities of life with advanced disease—through candid physician–patient conversations.

    The Doctors Making a Difference Podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for medical, legal, or professional advice. Always consult appropriate experts regarding your unique circumstances.


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    39 分
  • DMD #66 | Real Estate Investing for Physicians & Financial Strategies
    2026/01/15
    This episode is sponsored by Lightstone DIRECT. Lightstone DIRECT invites you to partner with a $12B AUM real estate institution as you grow your portfolio. Access the same single-asset multifamily and industrial deals Lightstone pursues with its own capital – Lightstone co-invests a minimum of 20% in each deal alongside individual investors like you. You’re an institution. Time to invest like one.—-----Jonathan Spitz, Head of Capital Formation at Lightstone Direct, joins Dr. Peter Crane to discuss real estate investing tailored for busy physicians. With over a decade in the industry, Jonathan shares his path from commercial brokerage to capital raising, emphasizing passive strategies over active management. The conversation covers REITs vs. private investments, liquidity considerations, target returns (14-16% IRR), tax efficiency, and risk management. Jonathan highlights Lightstone's conservative approach, including 20% co-investment and wealth preservation focus, while advising on common pitfalls like excessive leverage. Practical tips include due diligence on managers, diversification, and when to start (around $2-3M net worth). This episode equips physicians at all career stages with tools for long-term financial independence.Episode HighlightsJonathan's career journey from public equities to real estate brokerage and capital formationActive vs. passive real estate: Managing properties yourself or investing with professionalsREITs explained: Public vs. private, dividends, and volatility differencesPrivate real estate strategies: Value-add deals with 3-5 year horizonsLiquidity trade-offs: Illiquid investments for higher potential returns (14-16% IRR)Tax efficiency and cash flow benefits for high-income physiciansRisk management: Conservative leverage (e.g., 54% LTV) and scenario stress-testingLightstone's differentiators: 40-year history, 20% co-investment, and multi-sector agilityCommon mistakes: Over-focusing on high IRRs without checking debt or manager track recordsAdvice for physicians: Join investor groups, seek references, and diversify portfoliosTop 3 TakeawaysPrioritize manager due diligence—check track records, co-investment, and strategy execution over flashy returns.Balance liquidity and upside: Allocate 5-20% to illiquid private real estate for tax-efficient growth.Start diversifying at $2-3M net worth, focusing on wealth preservation and conservative leverage. About Jonathan SpitzAbout Jonathan Spitz Jonathan Spitz is Head of Capital Formation at Lightstone Direct, overseeing business development and investor education for a $12B AUM real estate institution. With over a decade in real estate, he has experience in commercial brokerage, single-family REITs, community banking, and private equity. Jonathan focuses on educating investors—from residents to retirees—on passive real estate strategies, emphasizing risk management and alignment through Lightstone's 20% co-investment policy. Based in Tampa, he enjoys guiding physicians through diversified portfolios.LinkedIn: Jonathan Spitz About the Host:Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.About the Show:Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the script. From burnout recovery to bold career pivots, health challenges to quiet leadership, this show honors the truth that healing begins with connection—and doctors, too, deserve to be whole.Visit: doctorsmakingadifference.comLMC Series Note:Living with Metastatic Cancer (LMC) explores the science, decisions, and day-to-day realities of life with advanced disease—through candid physician–patient conversations. The Doctors Making a Difference Podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for medical, legal, or professional advice. Always consult appropriate experts regarding your unique circumstances. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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    37 分
  • DMD #65 | Medical Education, Student Loans & Work-Life Integration
    2026/01/08
    This episode is sponsored by Lightstone DIRECT. Lightstone DIRECT invites you to partner with a $12B AUM real estate institution as you grow your portfolio. Access the same single-asset multifamily and industrial deals Lightstone pursues with its own capital – Lightstone co-invests a minimum of 20% in each deal alongside individual investors like you. You’re an institution. Time to invest like one.—--Dr. Suzanne Allen is a family physician and Vice Dean for Academic, Rural and Regional Affairs at the University of Washington School of Medicine, overseeing education across the five-state WWAMI region (Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana, Idaho).With a background in military service, public health, and residency training, Dr. Allen shares her unexpected path into medical education, the joys of teaching, and strategies for work-life integration through supportive teams. The conversation delves into the history and future of student loans, including the impacts of HR1 (passed in July 2025), which eliminates Grad PLUS loans, adjusts federal loan limits, and introduces new repayment options like the Repayment Assistance Program (RAP). Dr. Allen offers practical advice for aspiring physicians navigating these changes and emphasizes advocacy to ensure diverse access to medical careers.Episode HighlightsFrom military service to academic leadership: Dr. Allen's career journeyDiscovering a passion for teaching during residencyOpportunities in medical education amid expanding programsThe importance of precepting and mentoring future physiciansWork-life integration over balance: Insights from UW's Chief Wellness OfficerBuilding supportive teams to handle life's challengesHistory of federal student loans from the GI Bill to modern reformsKey changes in HR1: Elimination of Grad PLUS loans and new limitsRepayment options: Standard plans and the Repayment Assistance ProgramPublic Service Loan Forgiveness and other forgiveness programsPrivate loans as a gap-filler and the need for advocacyEncouraging diverse backgrounds in medicineTop 3 TakeawaysPassion for teaching is key to a fulfilling academic career.Work-life integration thrives on supportive colleagues and flexibility.Advocate for policy changes to keep medical education accessible.About Dr. Suzanne AllenDr. Suzanne Allen was appointed to the position of Vice Dean for Academic, Rural and Regional Affairs for the University of Washington School of Medicine in February 2015. Prior to that, Dr. Allen was the Vice Dean for Regional Affairs for the University of Washington School of Medicine for five year and Idaho WWAMI Assistant Clinical Dean for four years. As the Vice Dean for Academic, Rural and Regional Affairs, Dr. Allen is responsible for the WWAMI program across the five states of Washington, Wyoming, Alaska, Montana and Idaho. Dr. Allen is originally from Bremerton, Washington and attended the University of Washington receiving her B.S. in Biology. She then attended George Washington University where she received her M.D. and M.P.H. degrees. Following her family medicine residency training at Malcolm Grow Medical Center, Andrews Air Force Base and four years of active duty practicing as a family physician at Ellsworth Air Force Base and Andrews Air Force Base, Dr. Allen joined the physician faculty at the Family Medicine Residency of Idaho in Boise, Idaho in 1999. Before joining the Idaho WWAMI office, she was the Assistant Director and Medical Student Clerkship Coordinator at the Family Medicine Residency of Idaho. Dr. Allen holds a Clinical Professor faculty position within the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine and continues to see her patients at Full Circle Health, Family Medicine Residency, Boise. Dr. Allen is committed to medical education and rural and underserved healthcare in the Northwest and enjoys working across the WWAMI region to help train the next generation of physicians. LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/suzanne-allen-4253013About the Host:Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.About the Show:Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the script. From burnout recovery to bold career pivots, health challenges to quiet leadership, this show honors the truth that healing begins with connection—and doctors, too, deserve to be whole.Visit: ...
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    44 分
  • DMD #64 | New Year Reflection: Why Being a Healer Still Matters
    2026/01/01

    This episode is sponsored by Lightstone DIRECT. Lightstone DIRECT invites you to partner with a $12B AUM real estate institution as you grow your portfolio. Access the same single-asset multifamily and industrial deals Lightstone pursues with its own capital – Lightstone co-invests a minimum of 20% in each deal alongside individual investors like you. You’re an institution. Time to invest like one.

    This special New Year’s solo episode is both a thank-you and a reckoning.

    After thousands of downloads and countless conversations with physicians making a difference, Dr. Peter Crane pauses to reflect on the heart of the work — and the responsibility that comes with wearing the white coat.

    As both a physician and a patient, Dr. Crane shares how a massive retroperitoneal tumor diagnosis at age 43 reshaped his understanding of medicine, trust, and healing. What mattered most wasn’t statistics or algorithms — it was presence, compassion, and the collective expertise of a medical team showing up when everything was on the line.

    This episode explores:

    • Why trust in physicians feels fragile — but deeply personal
    • How being a healer goes beyond protocols and prescriptions
    • The growing shift of medical information away from physicians
    • Why advocacy, financial independence, and alignment protect both doctors and patients
    • And how medicine can — and must — be left better than we found it

    This is a reflective, grounded conversation for physicians navigating burnout, identity, purpose, and the future of medicine.

    Episode Highlights

    ✨ The moment medicine became deeply personal
    ✨ Why patients don’t just need answers — they need reassurance
    ✨ What cancer taught Dr. Crane about trust and teamwork
    ✨ The difference between being a provider and being a healer
    ✨ Why burnout isn’t about weakness — it’s about misalignment
    ✨ How financial independence gives physicians ethical freedom
    ✨ Why disability insurance matters more than we want to admit
    ✨ The power of local advocacy and state medical involvement
    ✨ How physicians can rebuild trust — one patient at a time

    Top 3 Takeaways
    1. Healing is relational, not algorithmic
    2. Physicians who are aligned and financially secure are better advocates.
    3. Medicine is still a calling — but it must be protected to survive.

    About the Host:

    Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.

    Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.

    About the Show:

    Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.

    In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the script. From burnout recovery to bold career pivots, health challenges to quiet leadership, this show honors the truth that healing begins with connection—and doctors, too, deserve to be whole.

    Visit: doctorsmakingadifference.com

    LMC Series Note:

    Living with Metastatic Cancer (LMC) explores the science, decisions, and day-to-day realities of life with advanced disease—through candid physician–patient conversations.

    The Doctors Making a Difference Podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for medical, legal, or professional advice. Always consult appropriate experts regarding your unique circumstances.


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    29 分
  • DMD #63 | Infertility, Identity & Finding Alignment in Medicine
    2025/12/26
    This episode is sponsored by Lightstone DIRECT. Lightstone DIRECT invites you to partner with a $12B AUM real estate institution as you grow your portfolio. Access the same single-asset multifamily and industrial deals Lightstone pursues with its own capital – Lightstone co-invests a minimum of 20% in each deal alongside individual investors like you. You’re an institution. Time to invest like one.–Dr. Erica Bove is double board-certified in OB-GYN and Reproductive Endocrinology — but her most powerful insights come from lived experience.After being told early in life she may never conceive, Erica’s personal fertility journey reshaped both her career and her philosophy of care. As a new attending, she recognized a troubling pattern: patients weren’t failing treatment — they were drowning in anxiety, fear, and nervous system overload.That realization led her to integrate coaching, mindset work, and nervous-system regulation into infertility care — especially for physicians who struggle to become patients themselves.Episode HighlightsBeing told you may be infertile — while training to be a doctorThe mental load of infertility in medical trainingWhy anxiety blocks comprehension and healingReframing infertility as a disease, not a personal failureCoaching physicians through long, unsuccessful fertility journeysAlignment as burnout preventionLearning to say no — and why your “yes” must be full-bodiedMotherhood, divorce, and redefining successWhen stepping back clinically allows deeper impactTop 3 TakeawaysInfertility doesn’t mean failure.Burnout doesn’t mean weakness.And alignment — not perfection — is the path to sustainability.About Dr. Erica BoveErica Bove, MD is a double board-certified OB-GYN and reproductive endocrinologist, physician coach, and educator dedicated to helping physicians navigate infertility, loss, and identity shifts in medicine.She serves as faculty and program director at the University of Vermont and is the founder of Love & Science Fertility, a coaching practice that supports physicians facing infertility when traditional treatments alone aren’t enough. Drawing from both clinical expertise and lived experience, Dr. Bove integrates evidence-based medicine with mindset work, nervous-system regulation, and values-based coaching to help physicians restore hope and alignment during some of the most challenging seasons of their lives.Dr. Bove is especially passionate about helping doctors learn how to become patients themselves—reducing shame, isolation, and burnout while empowering them to reconnect with their bodies, their purpose, and their humanity.Learn more at https://loveandsciencefertility.com Physician & patient referrals: https://www.loveandsciencefertility.com/patient-referral-formAbout the Host:Dr. Peter Crane is a board-certified physician, educator, and storyteller with a heart for service and a calling to spotlight doctors who make a difference—in their communities, in medicine, and in the lives they touch.Through Doctors Making a Difference, he brings you into intimate conversations with physicians who have overcome challenges, redefined success, and found purpose in and beyond the clinic. His goal is simple: to help more doctors stay in medicine by showing them what's possible.About the Show:Doctors Making a Difference is more than a podcast—it’s a movement to highlight the good, the gritty, and the deeply human side of medicine.In every episode, Dr. Peter Crane interviews physicians whose stories defy the script. From burnout recovery to bold career pivots, health challenges to quiet leadership, this show honors the truth that healing begins with connection—and doctors, too, deserve to be whole.Visit: doctorsmakingadifference.comLMC Series Note:Living with Metastatic Cancer (LMC) explores the science, decisions, and day-to-day realities of life with advanced disease—through candid physician–patient conversations. The Doctors Making a Difference Podcast is for informational purposes only and does not substitute for medical, legal, or professional advice. Always consult appropriate experts regarding your unique circumstances. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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    41 分