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Doctor Friends

Doctor Friends

By: Doctor Friends
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A group of friends, who happen to be doctors, try to make sense of American healthcare.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Doctor Friends
Hygiene & Healthy Living Physical Illness & Disease Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Student Perspectives
    Apr 7 2026

    Christian and Tomás interview Joshua, a medical student focused on informatics, immunology, and improving trust and communication in healthcare. Josh describes how early exposure his oncologist father's work and an interest in science led him to medicine. He shares a clinical encounter in which a patient’s narrative conflicted with her chart history, prompting discussion about why patients might omit details, ways in which power and identity dynamics shape disclosure and how clinicians should respond. The doctors weigh up “chart lore” and push for the need of multiple perspectives to build understanding. Josh also introduces Alethia, a student group he co-founded that is aimed at countering health misinformation through interdisciplinary education.


    Dhruv Khullar - The Role of Doctors Is Changing Forever (The New Yorker, Dec 2025)


    This episode was recorded remotely in February 2026. Presented by Christian and Tomás. Music by Nylonia. Produced by Ilia Rogatchevski.


    Follow Doctor Friends on Instagram @doctorfriendspodcast

    Or write to us on doctorfriendspodcast@gmail.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    44 mins
  • Why We Should Unionize
    Mar 24 2026

    Tomás, Christian and Rosny interview Michael, an emergency physician and healthcare administrator who founded a major public sector physician union in California. Emphasizing the contrast between public and private legal frameworks, Michael outlines what a union is, the history of unionisation in the US and argues for the advantages of joining one as a physician.


    The conversation highlights how physician unions agitate for better working conditions with patient care in mind. The doctors discuss the tensions between professionalism and unionism as well as public perception of unions, citing the Committee of Interns and Residents’ 1970s patient care fund and the 2026 nurses’ strike in New York. They also cover the ethics of strike action and predict growing physician unionization efforts amid the twin economical landscapes of corporate medicine and private equity.


    “The meaning of professionalism evolved over the past two centuries, from sacred vocation to secular occupational identity. During the 19th century and most of the 20th centuries, taking up a profession was a socially approved route to middle class status. Samuel Haber puts it this way – a profession in the 18th century was an occupation that a gentleman could take up ‘without demeaning himself and, more wondrously, an occupation that might make someone a gentleman simply by his taking it out’”. – Grace Budrys - When Doctors Join Unions (Cornell University Press, 1997)


    This episode was recorded remotely in March 2026. Presented by Christian, Tomás and Rosny. Music by Nylonia. Produced by Ilia Rogatchevski.


    Follow Doctor Friends on Instagram @doctorfriendspodcast

    Or write to us on doctorfriendspodcast@gmail.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    42 mins
  • Chatbot MD
    Feb 18 2026

    Why do people turn to chatbots when seeking medical advice? Is it due to cost, out-of-hours access or simply wanting to feel heard? Christian, Tomás and Grace discuss why patients and clinicians are increasingly using Large Language Models (LLMs) in medical contexts and what that means for the American healthcare system.


    The doctors examine how certain attributes of LLMs such as sycophancy and engagement incentives can amplify anxiety, delusions or unrealistic expectations. The lack of accountability by big tech can also undermine trust for patients and healthcare practitioners alike. They raise concerns about training data quality (medical journals mixed with sources like Reddit) and the need for citations, transparency and regulation comparable to healthcare quality oversight. They also ask ChatGPT what it thinks about guardrails and risk controls!


    This conversation is spurred on by two New York Times articles (What OpenAI Did When ChatGPT Users Lost Touch With Reality; Empathetic, Available, Cheap: When A.I. Offers What Doctors Don’t).


    If you or someone you know needs help, in the US, you can call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline on 988, chat on 988lifeline.org, or text HOME to 741741 to connect with a crisis counselor. If you’re listening in another part of the world, international helplines can be found at befrienders.org.


    The episode was recorded remotely in November 2025. Presented by Christian, Tomás and Grace. Music by Nylonia. Produced by Ilia Rogatchevski.


    Follow Doctor Friends on Instagram @doctorfriendspodcast

    Or write to us on doctorfriendspodcast@gmail.com

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins
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