Queensland Health Shows Support For Startups

Queensland Health, which manages public hospitals across the entire state, is looking for interested startups to participate in its Expo in October. With a population of 4.85 million across a state area equalling several European countries, it’s an exciting opportunity for startups looking to improve communications, telehealth services, rural and remote access, Indigenous healthcare, and remote monitoring of patients.

More details at http://ehealthexpo.health.qld.gov.au/health-startup-innovation-showcase/

 

View from Mackay Base Hospital, in northern Queensland. Mackayis known for its mining industry (sadly in decline) and sugar production. Queensland’s diversity creates vast opportunities for improving healthcare. Photo: The Medical Startup

 

It is very exciting seeing initiatives like this from state health networks in Australia, just like Sydney Local Health District’s Pitch event, and we can’t wait to hear about similar events from other hospitals across Australia and worldwide. Contact us if you, your hospital or local health network is running similar events.

Book Review: “Bad Science” by Dr Ben Goldacre

First published September 21, 2016

 

In preparation for Dr Ben Goldacre’s Australia/New Zealand tour this week, we’re catching up on his bestsellers.

 

“Bad Science” by Bad Science. Pic: The Medical Startup

A British medical doctor and former Guardian columnist devoted to medical research and epidemiology, Dr Goldacre breaks down the complexities of evidence-based research in his first book, “Bad Science.”  Whether you’re a newcomer to the medical industry or science in general, or even if you’re a full-time health professional who finds research mind-boggling, “Bad Science” tells you what to look out for in scientific papers, without making you feel lost. Using examples from cosmetics, detoxification treatments, homeopathy and more, Ben illustrates the flaws in common marketing claims and helpfully draws the reader to understand the importance of high-quality scientific research.

What makes a poor-quality study? How can a non-scientist understand what to look out for when reading through a product’s claims or a research paper? In medical innovation, quality research data helps to validate your solution, and medical startups have the responsibility to “first do no harm,” just as clinicians do. For startups, health professionals and the public alike, this book is a must – and it’s a quick read, too.

To buy tickets for Ben’s tour this week, click here
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BookDepository.com

What We’re Reading: Forge Magazine

First published October 4, 2016

 

Today I picked up the latest issue of Forge, a quarterly Australian business publication.

 

Forge Magazine. forgemag.com.au. Pic: The Medical Startup

Based out of Melbourne, its writers provide analysis of the latest trends in business and entrepreneurship, with a thorough look into particular topics boosting innovation in Australia.

They launched late 2014, and it’s something I look forward to reading each time. In fact, I first bought an issue in Taree, rural New South Wales!

Not only does Forge provide insight into some of the medical innovation and biotech developments in Australian universities and industries; they also give snapshots of future worldwide economic trends based on international research. This issue tackles the meaning of smart cities, which will fuel more innovation across industries and boost economic growth. It also highlighted a recent Australian study about self-employment opportunities for people with disabilities, and described how entrepreneurship could be better supported for this frequently under-recognised group.

The future of medical innovation is in cross-industry collaboration. We see this at co-working spaces, accelerators, incubators, university libraries, weekend dance groups, and other areas of creativity and innovation. And when clinicians are exhausted after physically or emotionally draining shifts, a good read on a separate topic can help reignite that flame of inspiration for doing good through healthcare.

New ideas grow from exposure to how others think. We’ll be sharing more of our favourite reads and resources; to share your favourite reads, comment below or send us an email via our Contact Us page.

With Great Media Comes Great Responsibility

First published September 15, 2016

 

I was reminded of this as I got off the phone tonight. I’d chatted with two very inspiring individuals, both based in Melbourne, about the intersection of communications and healthcare.

Both shared my awe at the power of media delivering an impactful, inspiring and positive message in healthcare.

Both understood the responsibility of media to respect, educate, engage and entertain a given audience.

And both recognise the impact that a simple Tweet or video can bring to a patient, a loved one, a colleague, a stranger, and a potential new friend.

I was touched by the humility of both individuals; the passion behind their work; the time they both gave me to learn about their stories; and their lessons to share. When a simple message can be conveyed across various age groups, cultures, timezones and professions in the click of a button, and potentially touch millions of lives, it is wondrous that we don’t stop and marvel more at how far we’ve come from pigeon and paper. Just touching one life with an image or message has powerful, long-lasting consequences.

This is why healthcare needs to embrace social media and new media technologies. And why we, in healthcare and healthcare startups, must learn how to use it effectively.

Over the next few weeks, I’ll be sharing more stories, including those of the two above, in conjunction with the Mayo Clinic Healthcare and Social Media Summitin Melbourne in November 2016. The Mayo also has a dedicated Social Media Network which offers courses in this area. I look forward to hearing your thoughts on this unique and evolving topic, and how you use social media in healthcare or with your healthcare startup. Hashtag #MayoinOz if you’re interested in attending the Summit or want to share your views.

 

Thoughts: Validating Medical Career Choices Through Impact

First published September 12, 2016

 

I was catching up with two medical friends yesterday over a traditional Melbourne brunch, and as you do over flat whites and mushroom burgers, we chatted about our careers and our dreams for the rest of the year and beyond.

One friend is launching an app, a new platform that could transform the future of hospital medicine, no hyperbole intended. Looking at the prototype, as a clinician, I was impressed. This person had taken the frustrations of staff across many hospitals, departments, training specialties (eg. Obstetrics and General Medicine junior doctors don’t often interact at work unless there’s a referral or they’re friends), locations, and years of operation, united those frustrations, and summarised them to create this product. I have met several others who have given up months and even years of college training time to devote themselves to their own solutions for higher-quality, high-efficiency healthcare, and the focus and determination they all demonstrate are incredibly inspiring. They don’t realise it, but they rejuvenate me, when I feel worried or anxious about my own work.

The other friend is getting their letters at the end of the year. He’d had startup aspirations for many years, but had shelved those aspirations to complete his training, and despite the long, arduous exams, he’d somehow managed to keep his other interests alive. He is still a fountain of ideas bubbling over today, and will no doubt do something incredible very soon.

 

Then there’s me. A very keen, slightly travel-weary but ever-inspired writer whose head simmers constantly with ideas on how to energise the medical system in Australia; how to learn from others’ experiences within and overseas; how to inspire students, junior and senior doctors and other healthcare professionals alike; how to connect with others who don’t normally interact day-to-day with our professions in hospital, bar multidisciplinary meetings;  and most of all, how to celebrate the uniqueness and creativity that every single one of us exhibits when we apply ourselves to a self-made project aimed at a greater impact. 

The three of us are happy because we’re each creating impact. The one who’s about to become a specialist, and who was the one who brought up this Impact concept, had to push aside his many ideas and that creative energy whilst knuckling down with training. The other friend and I had waited long enough- it’s an individual decision, and you know when you’re ready to take that leap.

I’m surrounded by inspiration and hope when talking to friends like these. People who can relate to thinking outside the box, and are driven by that internal fire for achieving greater impact than they could one-on-one with a patient, yet still value the sacredness of the clinician-patient interaction. (And when I say “clinician” or “healthcare professional,” I also mean physiotherapists- “physical therapists” in the States; occupational therapists; nurses; dietitians; dentists; and so forth.)

Yet, as I mentioned in my previous editorial, our conversations as healthcare workers are often restricted or self-censored as we fret over whether our projects will be recognised and validated by external medical training colleges; whether we are jeopardising our future careers by deviating from well-worn paths; and whether there will be anything external to show when we’ve given it that shot.

How can we become a more Impact-Driven profession? 

We have to show that education is also about life experience and applying that experience to a greater cause. The trials of forming and running a startup or social impact project are like a real-life, practical exam.

And you fail instantly by not trying. 

To make it easier for people transitioning from stable clinical job to startup or social impact project, the conversation has to start with you. We need to celebrate the individuality of healthcare professionals who value the interactions between clinician and patient (and their loved ones), and nourish that environment of creative thinking in medicine. And by creative, it can mean anything from brainstorming better patient flowcharts between hospital departments on a nursing unit whiteboard, to improvising novel bandages in a resource-poor setting when on a field trip or rescue mission with the Flying Doctors or other emergency services.

Or it can be through sharing stories, like me.

Would love to hear how you gain inspiration to continue your journeys when you feel discouraged, or how you rejuvenated yourself when you felt overwhelmed by opposition. feel free to share your comments below, tag us on Twitter @themedstartup, tag your photos on Instagram at @themedicalstartup, or send me an old-fashioned email via the Contactpage.

Enjoy your working day :) 

Interview with Dr Lloyd Nash, Co-Founder of Global Health Startup “Global Ideas”

First published September 2, 2016

Dr Lloyd Nash is a General Medicine Physician working between Australia and Vanuatu, who co-founded Global Ideas, a series of conferences and events where people from diverse industries unite to learn about Global Health issues, social ventures, and career pathways. Lloyd and his friends created this as they found a severe lack of opportunities for people at various stages in their studies or professional lives to explore career options in Global Health. This weekend, their fifth Global Ideas Forum will be held in Melbourne, featuring international guest speakers and small group sessions. During the year, they also host the Design Jam and Global Ideas Labs, where people brainstorm particular issues in Global Health over three hours, using human-centred design thinking.

Lloyd has successfully brought together healthcare workers, architects, graphic designers, lawyers, NGO founders, social entrepreneurs and more into a Global Health powerhouse that energises people at all levels of education to build solutions to Global Health problems. We’d been blown away by the enthusiasm at last year’s Global Ideas Forum, and got talking to Lloyd about his journey combining traditional clinical training with building his own Global Health organisation.

Dr lloyd nashjpg

Dr Lloyd Nash. Photo: Supplied

How did Global Ideas begin?

It started around the board table at an AMA (Australian Medical Association) meeting in 2011. I was there as the chair of the College of Physicians’ Trainees’ committee. I was sitting with young, inspiring people who were passionate about global health, including Dr Rob Mitchell, Dr Ross Roberts-Thomson, and Dr Jake Parker, and we were lamenting the status of Global Health career opportunities.

The lament was, there’s a lot of passion and energy around medical students and campuses, lots of activity and initiatives, then people get into the early part of their careers, whether in healthcare or not, and get buried. Often they might come to Global Health at the end of their career, but there’s a sort of donut (where their Global Health opportunities are lacking). That was a frustration for us, realising there wasn’t a lack of enthusiasm about Global Health, more of a lack of pathways, opportunities and engagement.

Also, looking at my own career path, as I trained in Infectious Diseases for awhile, the Global Health models that were around were either, do an internship at the WHO, or via NGOs- volunteer in the field for two years, then we might give you a job as a program officer. It seemed both of those were very bureaucratic, unresponsive pathways, not fit for purpose, and hadn’t adapted to the 21st century realities of technology, using the skills and passion coming through from the next generation. Most people were told to go do a Master’s degree or camp in the jungle for five years, then come back and look for work. It seemed to be the wrong way to harness the energy and enthusiasm of younger people.

So we started Global Ideas with the Forum in 2012. Our mission is to create and connect the next generation of Global Health leaders. It’s a leadership capacity building project, from Education through to Action.

The structure was Learn, Share, Develop and Connect, as an educational and networking enterprise. We wanted people to learn about new initiatives, share their own ideas, any research they might have done, any social enterprises and other new initiatives they may have developed, and connect with a broad, diverse interdisciplinary community.

We ran three conferences, then had a strategic review and thought, what more do we need to be doing? We were doing well at engaging and inspiring younger people, but I wanted to do more knowledge and skills development, so we launched a couple of new programs- the Labs and Design Jam.

Labs is an extension of the Forum- Labs engages people on a more regular basis to dive deeper into issues over 3 hours. We have a Lead (facilitator), and intimate group discussions. It revolves around the Sustainable Development Goals framework, so connections between health and development, and advocating for the Sustainable Development agenda amongst the next generation of Global Health leaders. We wanted to have events like edutainment, so people can be, like, “I could go to the cinema tonight, or go to the Lab, and I could have more fun and learn more by going to the Lab.”

The Design Jam program extends that educational journey into Action. We partner with organisations doing Global Health work, Design organisations and other groups, and smash those together with our participants to help people become more aware and comfortable applying the tools of Human-Centred Design Thinking.

How can you motivate anyone to care about Global Health and see themselves as change-makers?

If you think about how to create change or develop leadership influence, think about people’s motivations and passions. We encourage people to reflect on their world view to influence others’ behaviour. To do this, you’ve got to learn about Global Health. You’ve got to develop skills to apply in the field, not just vertical skills, but a reproducible thought model that is creative, innovative, and collaborative, to apply to complex challenges in their own careers. That came screaming at us as Human-Centred Design and Design Thinking, and I use both terms interchangeably.

We want to have discussions that feel comfortable, usually taking the form of expert, but I really wanted to challenge the idea of expertise. The concept that you have to be an old professor who’s published a lot of papers, I didn’t think that was true. We wanted to promote the idea that younger people who’ve taken time to reflect and had experiences can be experts in their own right.

I ran a Lab in June on ethics and leadership, discussing Sustainable Development Goal 16- Peace and Justice- how you build societies that encourage dialogue and discussion around conflict.

So I was nominally a discussion lead, and brought a friend and colleague, Professor Paul Komesaroff, who’s a clinician and philosopher, who also led the discussion, but we’re not there to teach or preach. We facilitate connections and help the crowd, and reflect insights back to people. That’s the essence of good facilitation.

We’re creating pathways because, maybe, someone will meet someone working in Global Health, or an organisation that has opportunities through what is a pretty complex system.

How quickly did Global Ideas evolve to what it is today?

It was remarkably quick actually, our meeting was end of 2011, our first forum was held 2012, and now we’re at our fifth forum.

We were kind of powered by medical doctors in the beginning, mainly through my networks. The four of us, Jake, Rob, Ross and I sat and decided we needed a more diverse board, so we brought on Jenny Jamieson who is also another doctor; an accountant, and a lawyer; then we ran into a young doctor who was very passionate about Global Health, Natalie Wright, and literally over a coffee I said, “I have an idea to run a conference, will you help me?” and she was like, “Yes,” and she was effectively our CEO and forum convenor. We literally sat in a cafe on the back of an envelope and sketched out what a great forum would look like.

We brought in other people. Our first academic officer, was also a doctor, Aaron, a really bright guy who created a great experience for people that was grounded in Global Health with many career development angles. This became Global Cafes, sitting in small groups talking to people who’d worked in Global Health, and could reflect back to others about their leadership journeys, and people could ask how they could consider their own career pathways, educational opportunities, and opportunities for action. We had a Career Corner, and Family Time- threaded throughout the conference, in small groups where they stayed with each other during the conference to build intimate connections. Family Time has now become Reimagine Time, which still runs throughout the conference to address global health issues via human-centred design thinking.

How did you get the word out to designers and other professional groups?

Once you diversify your leadership team, you can diversify your management team, your content, and everything else. As the board evolved, it became more diverse, we brought on a designer, a business development person, and a human-centred design service designer. The board became radically diverse.

We always took a more upstream look at Global Health, in that we’re not here to just look at tech solutions for global health. We’re looking at drivers of ill health, particularly social and environmental determinants of ill health. Health is intimately connected with development and vice versa, and people felt it was very accessible and our events were not swamped in health, and that health touches all aspects of their lives.

Once you have content that’s engaging for these people they come along.

What’s your biggest tip for people wanting to do what you’re doing?

There’s a lot of ways to create impact. We identified five personas at Global Ideas, ranging from Grassroots advocacy to Entrepreneurial activities to Policy-making. You may fit into one or more personas. Start with what you’re passionate about, and how you can influence the world, and you’ll quickly identify with one or more of these personas. Once you’ve identified what you’re passionate about and what gets you out of bed in the morning, decide, how do I want to create influence? Do I need a bigger network? More education? And that’s partly planning, part serendipity. But you’ve got to know where you want to get to.
Don’t be intimidated by vertical pathways that are wound up with social status. If you want to change the world, work out how you want to change it, and make it happen.

The Global Ideas Forum 2016 kicks off tonight in Melbourne. Tickets are still available, including day and student passes, here

Hospitals Helping Innovators: Sydney Local Health District Hosts “The Pitch”

First published July 21, 2016

We’ve shared our thoughts on the barriers to medical innovation faced by Australian medical doctors. The Sydney Local Health District is overcoming this barrier by once again, running its Pitch event.

Entrants who are based at the SLHD’s hospitals are welcome to submit their ideas, no matter their size or stage of development, and will have the opportunity to pitch and have their idea picked up for coaching, training and development in conjunction with the Health District. (New South Wales Health divides the management of the whole state’s public hospitals into Local Health Districts, or LHDs, similar in concept but different in terminology to other states.)

To apply, read the competition details here

If your hospital or health network is running similar programs and competitions, feel free to let us know via our Contact page or comment below! 

Congratulations to the Medical Interns of 2017!

First published July 11, 2016

 The Medical Startup would like to congratulate everyone for their efforts in applying for Australian medical internships in 2017!

It’s getting more and more competitive, and with tight spots, coveted positions in metropolitan hospitals, and more graduates than post-grad specialty college training positions down the track, it may seem like one hurdle after another.

But my advice?

Enjoy your journey!

It’s not where you start from. It’s what you make of it. 

Even if you got your lowest preference for a spot, make the most of it! Medicine is a journey, and you’d be amazed at the number of tight friendships you will make in your first year as a doctor, whether you’re in the bustle of metropolitan Melbourne, or in the canefields of Queensland for the year.

Do your best, be your best self, acknowledge that you can pick yourself up from a down day, and be aware that you’re not alone. Look towards your long-term goals, and realise that with care and strategy, you can get there, even if it seems impossible from your current standpoint.

Good luck from The Medical Startup!

Creative Spotlight: Dr Nelson Lau, Photographer

First published July 1, 2016

 

The Medical Startup believes that creativity is the life-force of good in healthcare, technology and business. We’ll be regularly featuring the faces of health professionals and medical startups who excel in creative pursuits beyond their medical and startup careers.

Dr Nelson Lau is a General Practitioner, telehealth doctor, professional photographer and filmmaker. His company, Looking Glass Photography, has exhibited on multiple occasions, including twice at Head On, Australia’s largest photography festival. Nelson’s current exhibition, “Timeless,” is finishing on a high note this weekend as part of Head On in Sydney.

Timeless” photo exhibition by Dr Nelson Lau, Looking Glass Photography. Photo taken with Dr Lau’s permission.

Inspired by the languid beauty of Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai’s film “In The Mood For Love”, “Timeless” takes viewers on a suspenseful journey of hope and longing, following two star-crossed lovers through The Rocks and other iconic Sydney locations.

The characters of “Timeless” are styled in the nostalgic fashion of Hong Kong in the 60s, with beautiful cheongsams, delicate wristwatches and the female protagonist’s iconic bouffant nodding to Wong Kar-Wai’s depiction of the era.

The Rocks was once a thriving marketplace where many Chinese immigrants sold their wares in the 1800s. “If you look outside, there is still a wall on one of the buildings with the name of a Chinese merchant painted from back then,” says Nelson. He had the honour of Claudia Chan Shaw, daughter of acclaimed fashion designer Vivian Chan Shaw, speaking at “Timeless”’ opening night.

We met Nelson at his exhibition and chatted about his work.

 

How did you get started with photography?

In med school, I made time for life drawing, sculpture and photography, and reading literature. I believed in the benefit of keeping something outside of medicine. It’s really important to try find your identity outside of medicine. In high school, what really inspired me was literature and the arts, even though I was much better at science and maths.

How did you evolve from school days to med school, and develop your careers in medicine and filmmaking?

I’ve worked in a lot of places- I trained and then worked in both metropolitan and rural Western Australia. I’ve also worked in the Northern Territory, Queensland, Horn Island, the New South Wales Central Coast, and now, Sydney. I grew up in Swaziland and Hong Kong. You see huge inequalities in health in Swaziland. The percentage of the population between 15-49 years of age with HIV is 29%! One of the highest rates in the world.

My student elective was in Mauritius- Quatre-Borne- in Paediatrics. Again, I was faced with more health inequalities. There’d be six kids to one cot! Very different from the holiday resort depictions of the country.

Dr Nelson Lau, Looking Glass Photography, at his latest exhibition, “Timeless.” Photo taken with Dr Lau’s permission.

I began taking photographs in high school, and continued throughout med school. I started out using manual SLRs, then learnt how to create Super8 videos from my dad. I also have a lot of friends in Med who are very creative.

Working as a doctor has also allowed me to travel to many interesting places around Australia. I met I met Torres Strait Islander and ARIA-award-winning musician, Seaman Danwhen I was working on Horn Island, which is next to Thursday Island at the northern tip of Queensland. He would take the ferry with his Zimmer frame across every week to play gigs at the pub, and then return the same night! I shot a photo documentary about him.

I also shot a documentary photography series about Ron Williams’ David and Goliath journey against the High Court challenge relating to the National School Chaplaincy Program. Multiple interests have led me to different projects.

Can you describe your photography?

It took awhile for me to pinpoint my style. I finally realised, that I create fine art portraiture in a narrative sense.

“Timeless” represents key frames of a film about the couple’s life. I also created a short nine-minute film at the exhibition, featuring 2.5D animation techniques. I shot the scenes over four days, over the course of three years. Serena, the female model, is also a big fan of Wong Kar-wai’s work, and of Maggie Cheung (the lead actress from “In The Mood For Love”). Then I tried to write a story about it.

It’s interesting that Wong Kar-wai’s films are never scripted..

Yes, and I tried to do that with Timeless, too. Initially, I was writing the story myself. This idea that they’d be in parallel worlds and travel through time. Then I came across Emily Dickinson. I realised her words would help enhance the key frames, and the viewer can then relate their own interpretations of the story.

The Rocks Discovery Museum, where Nelson’s exhibition, part of Head On Photo Festival, will run til July 3rd. Photo: The Medical Startup

How did your interest in Telehealth begin?

I started six years ago, when Medibank called out for GPs to help with their telehealth project. Patients were dialling from rural locations where the closest doctor could be over 500kms away. The service provided patients across Australia with free after hours’ GP advice. Often, the patients wouldn’t know how to use their prescribed medications properly, or needed other simple advice that they would have otherwise travelled to the nearest ED for, after hours.

Now, I am a consulting GP for ReadyCare, which is a part of TelstraHealth.

At the moment, Telehealth consults aren’t directly covered by the Government or Medicare. There’s no MBS rebate for the patient. It’ll be great when the Government sees the benefit of Telehealth in Australia. It’ll improve access for rural communities to healthcare.

We need data to show the benefit of telehealth in certain areas. It’s not a replacement for a regular GP living in the area. Telehealth’s function is to be complementary to the patient’s own regular GP’s care. It’s really important for us that we promote and ensure the continuity of care between the patient and their own GP.

What’s some advice you’d like to share with others interested in pursuing a similar journey?

I heard some advice from Google’s founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page: “Don’t think in terms of limitations now- think in terms of possibilities in the future.”

Timeless” as part of Head On Photo Festival will be showing until 3 July 2016 at The Rocks Discovery Museum. Entry is free. Visit https://www.headon.com.au/exhibitions/timeless and lookingglassphotography.com.au to learn more about the exhibition and to follow Nelson’s work.

Opening Hours:

Monday – Sunday: 10:00 am-5:00 pm

THE ROCKS DISCOVERY MUSEUM

Kendall Lane (off Argyle St)

2000 The Rocks , NSW

Doctors Want To Be Innovative, But They Don’t Know How

First published June 20, 2016

 

Since embarking on this journey, I’ve been fortunate to explore innovation in medicine and learn what makes a medical entrepreneur, by talking to people first-hand outside of hospitals and clinical environments.

From working full-time in hospitals, I know first-hand what it’s like to want to create change, but not know how to. The constraints of protocols, hierarchies, specialty college milestones, and expectations of supervisors- not to mention full-time rosters- they all exist for safety and for high-quality medical training. I value my time in that world like nothing else. It made me into the doctor and person I am today.

Yet, I had to forcibly step away in order to figure out my odd journey.

Looking up at the possibilities. Gaudi built his vision, which millions enjoy today. Credit: The Medical Startup

 

Medicine is a long road, signposted by those milestones I mentioned earlier. You graduate from med school. You start Internship. You score your first Resident job in the field you want to enter. You gain entry into the specialty college of your choice. You survive your first day as a Registrar. You pass your college exams. You become an Advanced Trainee. Then you’re a Fellow.

Then, one day, you finish that, and you’re finally a Consultant. (What many in the public refer to as a “specialist” or, in the case of General Practitioners, Fellows of the RACGP– fully qualified and accredited family doctors.)

It is odd if you step away.

Will people point you out for daring to be different? – Grand Canyon. Photo: The Medical Startup

It is odd if you take a break. (Okay, maternity/paternity leave, marriage, other life events, they obviously do happen.) In the recent past, not even five years ago, it may have been more acceptable to take a break for a year. But with the ferocity of job competition amongst junior and senior doctors alike in Australia, the walls are closing in on flexibility.

And now, taking a step away from training; even for just a few months; even by remaining employed but putting off an exam for a year; even if you just need a 6 month “half-gap” of a year, because you’ve not had a proper study break since you were 5 years old – even if – sorry to hear –  a tragic life event has shaken your world – it can be seen as detrimental to a person’s chance of being rehired.

And when you’re surrounded by colleagues and well-meaning friends who don’t understand, and who actually say that those who take a break, even to work on a startup, are “unambitious” or “unmotivated” – is it any wonder, then, why doctors feel isolated and stay under the radar when they come up with an idea?

And, even if a hospital or clinic is supportive (and they usually are; unfortunately, it tends to be particular influential individuals who aren’t) – you have to go a step higher, and try explain to colleges that you’re still doing valuable work in healthcare, by working on your startup- it just doesn’t fit their definition of training.

And this is why doctors find it hard to Innovate.

Leaping through the clouds- daring to dream. Photo: The Medical Startup

How can you innovate when you are feeling weighed down by all these pressures?

How can you innovate where your environment is slow to respond to change, and, despite best intentions, has trouble understanding the few (or many) employees who want to do more, but can’t articulate their feelings?

How can you innovate when you risk being penalised or even kicked out of a specialty college that you’ve worked so hard to enter?

How can the medical profession realise that a step away doesn’t equate a permanent career change, and that it is vital for the future of healthcare for motivated health professionals to gain experience building something outside of their day-to-day work environments in order to bring optimal change for their patients and colleagues? 

Entrepreneurship doesn’t suit everyone. This is not a comment on forcing everybody to become entrepreneurial. It’s about creating the supportive ecosystem for those who are motivated and capable of change, to create that good change.

We should connect our different ways of thinking, and allow ourselves to shine. Credit: The Medical Startup

Many Australian hospitals have rotations in Clinical Redesign and Innovation, or other similarly-named Medical Resident positions. A junior doctor has the opportunity, usually for 10-12 weeks (the standard duration for hospital rotations) to work on innovating within the hospital system. They are usually assigned a senior Supervisor and observe, advise, discuss, formulate, and strategise solutions and carry out these solutions during these ten weeks.

Projects are varied. They can improve the efficiency of completing discharge letters sent to the GP when patients go home. They can improve the allocations of night shift duty. They can create more structured Handover meetings at the start of each shift, so the staff finishing can “hand over” outstanding tasks and patient updates to incoming team members. These roles give junior doctors the opportunity to innovate. However, very few of these roles exist, and to be honest, I am not sure of the demand for doctors who want to rotate in these roles over Cardiology, Nephrology or other critical specialties that count towards training and clinical care. (Feel free to let me know.)

I’ve been really fortunate (and also worked hard!) to attend events where I get to meet people in the health tech space; and others who are medical entrepreneurs in non-medical fields; and I find, that non-medical people are, very graciously, applauding those of us who innovate. Those of us who choose to step away. This whole post has been stimulated by yet another Twitter comment by a non-medical entity encouraging more doctors to innovate. It’s fantastic that the non-medical community are eager to see more doctors and health professionals innovate. If they only knew how hard it was, and how much doctors risk by choosing to innovate, they might understand why there are, perhaps, fewer Australian doctors in the entrepreneurial spotlight than in other fields.

Dreaming big at Yosemite National Park. Photo: The Medical Startup

I’m going to shine this spotlight on inspiring health professionals who are doing great things with their time, to help normalise this situation, and to celebrate their wins as well as their journeys. And I challenge you, too, to be inspired, to value your time, and give your best to the world, no matter what field you’re in.

Do you agree? How can healthcare ecosystems and communities in general improve inclusion for health professionals to innovate, in and out of their workspaces? What cultural issues need to be addressed and how can they be fixed? Or do you think things are fine as they are? Feel free to comment below, or send us an email via our Contact page.