What if LESS tech is the key to overcoming physician burnout? How? 1. Don’t use tech at all 2. Use only one tool at a time. 3. Make tech your assistant—not a replacement
In medicine, speed is rewarded—but it erodes connection and fuels burnout. Slowing down restores agency, deepens relationships, and makes us better doctors – as Health Architects.
“I thought I could outrun burnout by working harder.” Dr. Rachel Bennett, a retired family doc, shares her insights about perfectionism, career longevity, and the power of self-compassion, especially for women physicians. #burnout#physicianburnout#physicianwellness @atscommunity @ucsdpccm
Burnout isn’t solved by more tech, waiting for the system to change, or spa-day self-care. Health Architects see change as both gain and loss—and burnout as a homeostatic signal to rebalance.
🩺 What if better clinical care is a story, a pause, or a moment of true presence? Dr. Evonne Kaplan-Liss & Val Lantz-Gefroh at UCSD Center for Compassionate Communication show us how.
A conversation with Dr. Seema Khosla, a sleep medicine physician and host of the AASM Talking Sleep podcast on real-world strategies for clinician burnout.
My OpEd piece today in the Los Angeles Times in response to the strange email request that showed up in almost 2 million federal workers' email boxes this past Saturday.
Medical school is where our scientific attitude and our identity as physicians are shaped. Health Architects reclaim passion for medicine by affirming both.
Overcoming Physician Burnout as Health Architects: Episode 7. My examples of how Health Architects like me need a scientific attitude as an antidote to burnout.
I explain how Health Architects cut through the noise of possibilities in their practice model by using evidence to help them avoid the pull of burnout.