Mistakes I Made as a New Physician Leader: Lessons to Avoid Burnout and Build Capacity | Ep56 Titelbild

Mistakes I Made as a New Physician Leader: Lessons to Avoid Burnout and Build Capacity | Ep56

Mistakes I Made as a New Physician Leader: Lessons to Avoid Burnout and Build Capacity | Ep56

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What if your drive to "do it all" as a clinician leader is fueling chaos, not results?

In this vulnerable solo episode of Designing Healthcare That Cares, Dr. Laura Suttin gets transparent about her stumbles transitioning from private practice to health system leadership: inflating her irreplaceability, mirroring toxic after-hours work culture, avoiding peer-to-report conversations, and blasting misaligned emails that sparked backlash. Highlighting the gap between clinical excellence and leadership training. She shares mindset shifts like embracing "you're replaceable" for delegation, themes of unclear roles, emotional pressure, and team bottlenecks.

Perfect for underprepared clinician leaders feeling reactive or resentful, this episode offers reflective questions to spot over-functioning, plus a promo for her upcoming Clinician Leadership Compass course (10 CME hours). Learn to prioritize, engage early, and lead without burnout, because untrained leaders cost organizations dearly.

Join the Clinician Leadership Compass Waitlist: thepurposefulmd.com/courses

This is a self-paced online course with tools for delegation, tough talks, and accountability

Three Actionable Takeaways:

  • Embrace Replaceability for True Capacity: Overextending signals "indispensable" but breeds bottlenecks. Dr. Laura's coach gut-punch: "You're replaceable" freed her to delegate. Reflect: Audit your plate; delegate one task this week to a team member, building their skills while reclaiming focus and preventing burnout.
  • Model the Culture You Want, Not the One You Inherited: Late-night emails "cast a shadow," normalizing exhaustion. Use delay-send or offline mode to protect boundaries. Scan your habits; if undesired behaviors echo in your team (e.g., weekend replies), initiate a no-after-hours norm via a team huddle, owning your role in the tone.
  • Engage Stakeholders Early to Avoid Backlash: Solo-planning big changes ignores expertise, amplifying friction. Dr. Laura's email fiasco taught: Bring in dissenters sooner. For your next initiative, list 3-5 key players (even intimidating ones); schedule input sessions upfront to co-create and reduce resistance.

About the Show

Designing Healthcare That Cares is where leadership meets humanity. Hosted by Dr. Laura Suttin, the show explores what happens when compassion, connection, and courage come together to transform how we care—for our patients, our teams, and ourselves.

About the Host:

Dr. Laura Suttin is a physician, leadership coach, and lifelong advocate for designing systems that truly care. After years of navigating the complexities of healthcare, she realized that compassion and connection aren’t just nice-to-haves—they’re the foundation of great medicine.

Today, Laura brings that vision to life through her work as a consultant, speaker, and host of Designing Healthcare That Cares. She helps healthcare leaders and clinicians rediscover their purpose, build resilient teams, and lead with both strategy and soul.

When she’s not interviewing changemakers or guiding organizations, you can find her sharing stories that remind us all why we got into medicine in the first place—to make a difference, together.

🌐 Website: drlaurasuttin.com
🔗 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/laura-suttin-md/
📸 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/purposefulMD

The Designing Healthcare That Cares Podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical, legal, or professional advice. Always consult qualified professionals regarding personal or organizational decisions.

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