The Podcast For Doctors (By Doctors)

The Podcast For Doctors (By Doctors)

https://anchor.fm/s/f9d28e68/podcast/rss
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Join Dr. Michael Jerkins and Dr. Ned Palmer, practicing physicians and co-founders of Panacea Financial, a national financial platform for doctors, as they have real talk on what matters to doctors and their lives.

Episode List

Peter Brodeur, MD – AI in Healthcare: What Helps, What Hurts, and What Comes Next

Mar 11th, 2026 11:00 AM

Internal medicine resident and AI healthcare researcher Dr. Peter Brodeur joins Dr. Michael Jerkins for a grounded, practical conversation on how artificial intelligence is actually showing up in medicine today and where it’s headed next. From AI scribes and automated workflows to clinical decision support, Dr. Brodeur breaks down what’s delivering real value versus what’s still more promise than payoff. The discussion explores AI’s impact on physician burnout, workflow efficiency, and patient engagement, while unpacking critical concerns around safety, liability, automation bias, and the risk of deskilling clinicians. Dr. Brodeur also shares insights from recent research on where AI performs best, why “human-in-the-loop” systems matter, and how medical education may evolve alongside these tools. Can AI truly improve care without compromising clinical judgment? And how should doctors think about adopting new technology without losing the human side of medicine? Dr. Brodeur closes with a look at what responsible AI integration could mean for the future of healthcare and why cautious optimism, not blind adoption, is the path forward. 

ArNelle Wright, DMD, MS - From Associate to Owner: The Realities of Practice Ownership

Feb 18th, 2026 12:00 PM

Practice owner and dentist Dr. ArNelle Wright joins Dr. Michael Jerkins for an honest conversation about what it really looks like to acquire and lead a dental practice. Drawing from her firsthand experience, Dr. Wright shares the financial surprises she encountered post-acquisition and why mental preparation is just as important as due diligence. The discussion explores how thoughtful patient communication can make or break a transition, from personalized outreach to humanizing leadership during times of change. Dr. Wright also reflects on her commitment to mentorship, building strong team culture, and leading with intention in an increasingly corporate dental landscape. Together, they examine how legislative changes, student borrowing caps, and economic pressures are shaping the future of dentistry and why financial literacy is no longer optional for today’s doctors. What should future dental owners know before taking the leap? And how can leadership, adaptability, and mentorship shape a more sustainable path forward? Dr. Wright closes with reflections on her non-traditional journey into dentistry, balancing ownership with motherhood, and her vision for empowering the next generation of dental leaders. 

Miechia Esco, MD, PhD, MBA, RPVI, FACS – Locum Tenens Explained: Flexibility, Physician Shortages, & the Future of Healthcare

Feb 4th, 2026 12:00 PM

Board-certified vascular surgeon and chief medical resource advisor at Locum Tenens Dr. Miechia Esco joins Dr. Michael Jerkins for an in-depth conversation on the realities—and misconceptions—of locum tenens medicine. Drawing from a career that spans academia, military medicine, private practice, and locum work, Dr. Esco offers a firsthand look at how locum physicians adapt across diverse clinical environments and why experience, not transience, defines the field. The discussion highlights the critical role locum physicians play in underserved rural and urban communities, helping to bridge gaps created by physician shortages and hospital closures. Dr. Esco and Dr. Jerkins explore the growing demand for locum physicians across all specialties, the flexibility and autonomy locum work can provide, and how it compares to traditional employment in today’s evolving healthcare landscape. They also touch on the influence of technology and AI while reinforcing why human judgment, compassion, and trust remain irreplaceable in patient care. What does it really take to succeed as a locum physician? And how can mission, ethics, and culture shape a more sustainable future for healthcare? Dr. Esco closes with advice for physicians considering locum work, reflections on legacy and leadership, and a reminder that meaningful impact in medicine often comes from meeting communities where they need you most. 

Avery Wooten, MS4 – What They Don’t Tell You About Medical School and the Match

Jan 21st, 2026 12:00 PM

Fourth-year medical student and anesthesiology residency applicant Avery Wooten joins Dr. Michael Jerkins for a candid conversation about navigating medical school on the road to the Match. Avery reflects on her path from UNC Chapel Hill to UCSF, the mentorship that helped shape her journey, and how social media became an unexpected tool for transparency and guidance. She shares how she balances clinical rotations, content creation, and interview prep, while offering insight into the modern residency application process from virtual interviews to the power of personal storytelling. The discussion also explores the financial pressures facing today’s medical students, shifting priorities around work-life balance, and why authenticity matters more than ever in the Match. What does it really take to stand out as a residency applicant today? And how can mentorship—both online and offline—help demystify the process for the next generation? Avery closes with reflections on burnout, humor, and staying human while navigating one of the most demanding seasons of medical training. 

Will Kang, MD – From Concert Halls to Operating Rooms: Orthopedics, Identity, and Life Beyond the Scalpel

Jan 7th, 2026 2:49 PM

Board-certified orthopedic surgeon, social media personality, and former professional violinist Dr. Will Kang joins Dr. Michael Jerkins for an engaging conversation on unconventional career paths, surgical culture, and building a life in medicine that extends beyond the operating room. Dr. Kang reflects on his early years as a classically trained musician, the role of parental influence in high-level performance, and how a career-altering shoulder injury ultimately redirected him from the concert stage to medicine. He shares how the COVID-19 pandemic reignited a long-standing interest in media, leading him to create educational and humorous content on social media. The discussion weaves through the realities of surgical training, the stereotypes surrounding different specialties, and why surgeons often develop thick skin, big egos, and an efficiency-first communication style just to survive the field. Dr. Kang also offers a candid look at balancing a demanding surgical career with family life, emphasizing why he’s chosen to prioritize being present at home, even when it comes at a professional cost. Looking ahead, he weighs in on the future of orthopedic surgery, including the growing role of robotics, AI, and real-time imaging. What does it take to pivot when your original dream no longer fits? And how can surgeons build resilience, maintain perspective, and define success on their own terms? Dr. Kang closes with advice for aspiring surgeons, reflections on criticism and self-healing, and why—despite the challenges—he still believes medicine is a career worth choosing. 

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