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Social Rounds

Social Rounds

Von: Hippocratic Collective
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Two of the happiest surgeon dropouts you’ll ever meet, Tony Chin-Quee, MD and Frances Mei Hardin, MD, have traded the OR for the mic. On Social Rounds, they give their wildly unsolicited opinions on the state of medicine, the absurdities of healthcare culture, and the chaos of the world at large. From inside-baseball medical news to pop culture drama, space doctors to Taylor Swift, no topic is too sacred (or too ridiculous) to roast, dissect, and laugh about. Smart, irreverent, and occasionally unhinged, Social Rounds is what happens when surgeons leave the scalpel behind and decide to say everything out loud.Copyright 2026 Hippocratic Collective Hygiene & gesundes Leben Sozialwissenschaften
  • How To Survive A Bad Interview: A Dress Rehearsal for Public Scrutiny
    Feb 6 2026

    This week on Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee takes on his most unhinged role yet: hostile interviewer.

    In a special Social Rounds Book Club episode, Frances Mei Hardin sits down for a deliberately uncomfortable, occasionally inappropriate, and deeply revealing mock interview ahead of the release of her debut memoir, Surgeon on the Edge. What starts as a Groundhog Day cold open quickly devolves into brutal questions about shame, failure, race, crying at work, bystander silence in medicine, and whether writing a vulnerable physician memoir is brave—or just bad PR.

    What unfolds is part satire, part media training, part cultural critique, and part love letter to anyone who has ever survived medical training and lived to tell the story (even imperfectly).

    If you’ve ever wondered:

    1. how authors actually prepare for press,
    2. why likability is still weaponized against women in medicine,
    3. or how to hold your composure when an interviewer is clearly trying to break you,

    this episode is for you.

    Pre-order Surgeon on the Edge now, and consider this your warning: the real interviews will be easier than this one.

    Hosted by:

    Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat

    Frances Mei Hardin: @francesmeimd

    Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

    https://www.amazon.com/Surgeon-Edge-Frances-Mei-Hardin/dp/B0G3JWCCH4

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    28 Min.
  • From Janitor to Doctor: Rewriting the Rules of Medical Training
    Jan 30 2026

    What does medicine look like when the next generation refuses to be broken by it?

    In this episode of Social Rounds, we’re joined by Shay Taylor Allen, a fourth-year medical student at Howard University, class vice president, and future anesthesiologist—whose journey took her from working as a hospital janitor to interviewing for residency in the same system she once cleaned.

    Together, we talk about the growing generational divide in medical training:

    Why younger doctors are pushing back on brutal hours,

    Why “that’s how we did it” isn’t a solution,

    And how mental health, mentorship, and purpose are reshaping what it means to become a physician.

    Shay shares her perspective on Gen Z and nontraditional medical students, the reality of burnout culture, and why healthier doctors make safer patients. We also dig into communication breakdowns between trainees and attendings, whether medicine mistakes resilience for suffering, and what real change could look like inside a system that resists it.

    This conversation is about more than medicine—it’s about who gets to belong, who gets heard, and how one person’s story can expose what’s broken in an entire profession.

    Hosted by:

    Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat

    Frances Mei Hardin: @francesmeimd

    Guest: Shay Taylor Allen

    Connect with Shay: @shayy.taylor

    Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

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    41 Min.
  • Herd Immunity, Cocaine Surgeons & Sexy Gay Hockey
    Jan 23 2026

    This week on Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee is joined by fan-favorite guest host Joan Chan, MD for a wide-ranging, wildly unfiltered episode that somehow connects vaccines, cocaine-addicted founding surgeons, and prestige gay hockey television.

    First up: a much-needed PSA on flu shots, herd immunity, and why “you can still get sick” is not the dunk anti-vaxxers think it is. From there, Tony dives into one of medicine’s most unhinged origin stories — how William Halsted’s cocaine addiction helped shape modern residency training — sparking a serious (and hilarious) debate about whether doctors should experience more of what patients actually go through.

    Then, Joan takes us deep into the cultural phenomenon of Heated Rivalry: why gay hockey romance has taken over the internet, why the sex scenes actually matter, and why sometimes what burned-out clinicians really need is a well-written, deeply horny escape with a guaranteed happy ending.

    Come for the public health facts. Stay for the medical ethics, pop culture analysis, and elite-level yapping.

    Hosted by:

    Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat

    Joan Chan, MD: @joanchanmd

    Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

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    41 Min.
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