From Patient Care to System Change: Glenn D. Steele Jr., M.D., Ph.D. on the Future of Healthcare
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🔍 Episode Summary:
What does it take to reshape the healthcare system from the inside out? In this powerful episode, Dr. Glenn D. Steele Jr. reflects on his multi-decade career—from hands-on patient care to pioneering leadership roles in academic medicine and health system innovation.
Nicole and Dr. Steele talk candidly about:
- How trust shapes patient outcomes
- The critical shift from fee-for-service to value-based care
- What really matters in patient-doctor relationships
- How high-trust systems can transform lives, especially in cancer care
- The surprising failures that taught the biggest lessons
Whether you’re a patient navigating a diagnosis or someone working in healthcare, this episode is packed with wisdom, vulnerability, and actionable advice.
📌 Key Topics:
- Transitioning from surgeon to healthcare leader
- Working with high-performing, “hard to manage” innovators
- The evolution of cancer care: from radical surgeries to patient-centered innovation
- How to advocate for yourself or loved ones in complex medical systems
- The importance of trust between patients, providers, and healthcare organizations
- Building systems that support — rather than overwhelm — doctors
- Lessons learned from failure and transformation in leadership
📝 Listener Takeaways:
- How to identify a high-trust healthcare organization
- The most important question to ask your doctor:
- “How will this test or treatment change my care?”
- Why even “routine care” deserves serious attention
- You shouldn’t have to choose between clinical expertise and compassionate care
📍 Quote Highlights:
“There's no such thing as an impertinent question in healthcare.” – Dr. Glenn Steele“If your provider gets nervous or defensive when you ask something simple, that’s a red flag.”“In the 1980s, letting women lead in surgical training was radical — now it's a given. That kind of change matters.”“You can’t expect individual doctors to keep up with everything — they need a system behinSupport the show
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