Avsnitt
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Ulrich’s Biography
Ulrich Nitsche is a medical doctor, a surgeon, researcher and clinical reviewer at Tüv Süd, where he’s also a department manager. He studied medicine in Innsbruck (Austria) and went on to work as a surgeon at the University Hospital of the Technical University in Munich, where he also did research. He did his doctorate thesis, PhD and habilitation in Munich. He also finished his specialization to become a surgeon in Munich.
He went on to work at Tüv Süd as a clinical reviewer three years ago and is now the department manager of the clinical center of excellence there. While working at Tüv Süd, he still works as an emergency physician from time to time, that means he is dispatched in ambulances with paramedics.
Things we talked aboutWhy he chose to become a surgeonHow life is working as a surgeon: Seeing great improvement in patients, but also long shifts and very little free timeHow living 30-40 minutes from the hospital meant it was sometimes easier for him to not come home and sleep at the hospital insteadWhat caused his decision to switch to an “office job” at Tüv Süd, and how the transition from operating theatre to office job felt for himWhy he decided against other job options in consulting and the pharmaceutical industryWhat a typical workday for him looks like and what the hell a “clinical reviewer” doesDifferences working in the industry vs. in hospitals: Less strict hierarchy, more flexible work hoursHow he ended up still working as an emergency physician while working at Tüv SüdLinks As Mentioned In The PodcastUlrich on LinkedIn.Tüv Süd Medical Devices & Healthcare - The Tüv Süd landing page for their medical devices team.Tüv Süd Jobs page filter by either searching for “clinical reviewer” or “klinisches review” to find jobs for physicians. -
Zoe’s Biography
Zoe Lee is a medical student at Keele University in the UK. She’s also a part-time Community Associate at Melon, an EdTech startup which aims to boost Gen-Z’s microlearning process. Besides those two things, she also recently joined a Healthtech fellowship program at BiteLabs Healthtech, where the goal is to get together in groups and build a Healthtech product within a few weeks.
Things we talked aboutWhat Zoe is currently doing in her third year of medical school, and why she chose to study MedicineGetting her first tech startup job at Melon: How she applied, how many other applications she sent out and her small “hack” for (maybe?) improving your chancesWhat she does at Melon and what it means building a community and creating content for TikTokHow she manages to do juggle her tech startup job with her studies in medical school: Remote work, flexible work hours, time off for studying and moreWe discussed whether good “quality” work is rewarded more in tech startups vs. in the hospitalWhat’s more fun: Whether working at a tech startup or as a doctor?Her experience joining the BiteLabs Healthtech FellowshipHer interest in writing and what she would do if she wouldn’t have to earn moneyWhat advice she would give to other medical students / junior doctors who are interested in exploring other opportunities or working in techLinks As Mentioned In The PodcastZoe on LinkedIn.Zoe wrote this article about how she landed her tech startup job as a medical student.Zoe recently posted on LinkedIn with a link to resources she curated on Melon for “breaking into tech with a clinical background”Melon, the startup for which Zoe is working part-time, building their CommunityCompany TikTok account of Melon for which Zoe creates videosThe BiteLabs Healthtech Fellowship, a for-profit fellowship in which groups build a product in Healthtech in a few weeks. -
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Stephen’s Biography
Stephen Gilbert is a veterinarian and professor for regulatory science at the University Hospital Dresden. Before that, he worked as a regulatory affairs manager specializing in clinical evaluation at Biotronik in Berlin, a large and established medical device manufacturer, and then for at Ada Health, also in Berlin, as director of clinical studies and clinical evaluation. Initially, after graduating as a veterinarian in 2001, he worked as a veterinarian and veterinary surgeon for around 10 years in the UK. In addition to studying veterinary sciences a the University of Glasgow, he did a Master’s Degree in Biomathematics, Bioinformatics and Computational Biology at the University of Leeds, and followed that up with a PhD in computational biology.
Things we talked aboutWhy he stopped working as a vet: “List-based” work vs. “project-based” workLearning self-sufficiency as a vet while having to perform all sorts of operations after graduatingHow he was involved in handling the food and mouth disease outbreak and how that relates to project managementTransitioning into “wet lab” scientific research and simulationsHow he joined Biotronik, a medical device manufacturer based in Berlin, and worked there to acquire the first-ever CE certificate for a medical device under the new Medical Device RegulationThe benefits of doing a Master’s degree and/or PhD as a doctor and which sort of program / research area to look forWe both talked about the German system of doing a “Dr. med” research degreeWhat does a Professor of Regulatory Science do? And what is Regulatory Affairs?The “implant files” which led to the uncovering of implants which caused harm in patients and their effect on subsequent medical device regulationAre we over-regulating medical devices? Do we even have any data to answer that question?AI in Healthcare: Chances and risks of ChatGPT and large language models (LLMs)LLM medical software currently on the market, their features and considerations whether they are medical devices -
Things we talked aboutWhy Johan first worked as a doctor but then left the hospital because working as a doctor doesn’t scale and it’s hard to have a larger impactWhy it’s hard to change a hospital from insideHis first job (scholarship) after leaving the hospital which was about identifying problems in hospitals and how to solve themBuilding his first own Healthtech company producting wearable sensors for patients in hospitalsBeing a professional poker player, doing that during medical school, and what made him stopHow the knowledge of poker is useful in other aspects of lifeWhy he didn’t aim for good “grades” in examsWhat a product manager actually does and how to learn itWhy many doctors underestimate their usefulness“The rise and fall of Europe’s largest telemedicine provider”Working at Kry while it grew from 60 to 1.200 peopleIn which areas you could build successful Healthcare companies nowWhat he’s doing at his own company, 4scale, nowThe pros and cons of venture capital (VC) funding for startupsLinks As Mentioned In The PodcastJohan on LinkedIn.Johan on Substack where he publishes his writing: Big world - Small world and Mini mental models.4scale Ventures: Johan’s company which he co-founded. They support companies to reach their ambitions on growth efficiency and leadership. They also invest in companies and offer consulting and coaching.womanly: The female health ecommerce startup which Johan is currently building.Kry: Telemedicine company where Johan was the director of product. Kry is available in Sweden, Germany, Norway, France and the UK (slight correction here as I didn’t mention the UK in the podcast).
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Things we talked aboutHow she got her first job in digital health already during her studiesWhy she decided to continue working in digital health upon graduating versus working in a hospitalHow it’s like to work from Bali: Surfing, productivity, time zone differences, coworking spacesWhy working in a different time zone makes her more productiveAn example of a study they did in Tanzania which compared mid-level healthcare professionals using software versus physicians without software (with very interesting results)How a typical work day looks like for herHow she had to start managing people a few months in to her jobWhy she’s considering going back to work in the hospital to work as a physician in Dermatology some time in the futureLinks As Mentioned In The PodcastFabienne on LinkedIn.Ada Health: Where Fabienne currently works. A healthcare company in Berlin developing a symptom checker. Note that Matthew Fenech, a prior guest on this podcast, also worked at Ada Health, and I also worked there as Ada was my first consulting customer back in 2020.
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Things we talked aboutHow he got into evoluationary biologyHow become the first doctor to join the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology as a researcherHis research on modelling cancer in softwareWhy he moved back from the US (doing research at the Cleveland Clinic) to GermanyHow he managed to leave research to join the startup industry, getting his job at BulbitechWhat he did at Bulbitech: Detecting diseases through eye movementsWhy writing skills are so importantLinks As Mentioned In The PodcastLuka on LinkedInCancerSim: The software (python package) which Luka co-developed for the simulation of cancer.Bulbitech: The startup Luka worked at, building software for detecting diseases through eye movements.
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Paulina on LinkedIn.Dama Health: Paulina’s startup which aims to help women and their clinicians in choosing the right contraceptive.Post on Dama Health on the website of the Imperial College Accelerator: We briefly talked about accelerator programs and Paulina mentioned that the Imperial College Accelerator was quite helpful for their company.
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Matt on LinkedIn.Una Health: Matt’s startup developing a diabetes app.Ada Health: Well-known healthcare company in Berlin developing a symptom checker. Matt worked there as the Medical Safety Lead which was his second job. Also, the two of us met there as Ada was one of my first consulting clients when I became self-employed.Future Advocacy: A think tank and Matt’s first job out of the hospital.
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Ramin Azhdari is a doctor, software engineer and now a co-founder of his own startup, Vie de Médecin. We talk about how he transitioned to becoming a software engineer, why he thinks developing software is really exciting as a doctor, how he got his first software engineering job and about his own startup, a social network for doctors.