I flew all the way to Montevideo, Uruguay to sit down face-to-face with Dr. Ashok Philip (Malaysia), President of the World Medical Association, and this conversation goes straight to the root of why healthcare systems keep failing the people they are supposed to serve.
The World Medical Association (WMA) was born in the shadow of the Nuremberg Trials and the medical atrocities of WWII, and that origin story still shapes its mission today: defend medical ethics, protect physician independence, and advocate for patients across borders. Dr. Philip breaks down what the WMA actually does, why it is often confused with the WHO (it is not the WHO), and how a global network of 115 member medical associations tries to push back when governments, corporations, and insurers prioritize “quick and cheap” over what patients truly need.
If you have ever felt powerless watching insurance denials, bureaucratic delays, cookie-cutter care, or political posturing hijack medicine, this episode will hit home. And if you are a clinician, this is your reminder that policy is not optional, it is where patient outcomes are decided.
In this episode, we unpack:
Why the WMA was founded, and why ethics still sits at the center of global medicine
How private insurance denials and administrative burden are not “just an American problem”
Why prevention and health literacy are always “unsexy,” but essential
Universal healthcare realities, including rationing, access gaps, and technology tradeoffs
How to mobilize younger clinicians, including the WMA’s junior doctors network
AI in medicine, misinformation, and why “tools” still require human accountability
Brain drain from developing countries, and what a fair global solution could look like
🎧 Press play for a rare, behind-the-scenes look at global medicine from the top, and the urgent message Dr. Philip keeps returning to: if we do not address the root cause, we are just managing collapse.
If this episode moves you, follow the show, leave a rating, and share it with one person who needs to hear that change is possible, and collective.