Dr. Kritika Mehra and Dr. Jimmi Patel dissect one of healthcare's greatest tensions: when does clinical judgment override protocol? Inspired by a powerful Virgin River scene where Dr. Mullins loses a patient to insurance bureaucracy, they explore why protocols exist, how clinical judgment develops through pattern recognition, and the critical balance between both. Jimmy breaks down the four stages of patient journey—moving from knowledge to care to skill—while Kritika reveals her approach to meeting patients where they are, not where the textbook says they should be. They challenge the corporate healthcare model and remind us that real medicine happens when protocols provide the framework but human judgment guides the care.
Dr. Kritika Mehra and Dr. Jimmi Patel dissect one of healthcare's greatest tensions: when does clinical judgment override protocol? Inspired by a powerful Virgin River scene where Dr. Mullins loses a patient to insurance bureaucracy, they explore why protocols exist, how clinical judgment develops through pattern recognition, and the critical balance between both. Jimmy breaks down the four stages of patient journey—moving from knowledge to care to skill—while Kritika reveals her approach to meeting patients where they are, not where the textbook says they should be. They challenge the corporate healthcare model and remind us that real medicine happens when protocols provide the framework but human judgment guides the care.
(03:00) Dr. Mullins' dilemma: when protocols cost a patient's life
(08:00) Why protocols exist: industrial evolution meets corporate healthcare
(11:00) Clinical judgment comes from pattern recognition and experience
(17:00) Four stages of patient journey: knowledge, care, and skill
(22:00) Meeting patients where they are, not where you want them
(24:00) Budget and anxiety: the two biggest patient drivers
(27:00) Technical vs adaptive challenges: why you need both