• Transformative Coaching: Elevating Healthcare Leadership
    Jan 23 2026

    I've seen firsthand how coaching can change everything in healthcare leadership, and today I want to share why it's been such a game-changer for me.

    In this episode of Healthcare Leadership Insights, I open up about my own coaching journey - how it helped me navigate tough times, spot unhelpful patterns, and align my decisions with my true values. We explore what coaching really is (and how it's different from mentoring), why it's backed by solid evidence for building resilience and better teams, and why every healthcare leader should make space for it.

    What You'll Discover

    - Coaching vs Mentoring: Why coaching focuses on unlocking your own answers, while mentoring shares expertise and how both matter in healthcare.

    - My Personal Transformation: The ways coaching gave me clarity during my consultant career, turning external pressures into value-driven choices.

    - Evidence for Real Impact: How coaching builds relational skills, boosts well-being, and creates high-performing teams - just like in elite sports.

    If you're a healthcare leader feeling the weight, coaching isn't a luxury - it's the tool that helps us serve sustainably. I'd love to hear if you've tried it; drop me a note.

    Episode Resources

    NHS Elect Coaching Services

    Dr Stephen Swensen speaking at The King's Fund

    Journal of Management Development: Leadership by Design: Intentional Organization Development of Physician Leaders

    BMJ Leader: What is the evidence base for leadership coaching for postgraduate medical doctors?

    Connect with Healthcare Leadership Conversations

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    Website

    Healthcare Leadership Conversations is produced by Urban Podcasts.

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    16 mins
  • Leadership Insights: The Gift of Reciprocal Mentorship
    Jan 16 2026

    I’m starting 2026 with something close to my heart: mentorship in healthcare.

    In this Leadership Insights episode, I reflect on over 20 years of mentoring and how it’s taught me that true mentorship is reciprocal. It’s not just me giving my time and experience - it’s a two-way exchange where I’ve learned just as much (often more) from my mentees, especially those from global majority backgrounds navigating systems I didn’t face.

    Key Insights

    - Mentorship Is Reciprocal: I’ve learned to navigate medical school as a student from a global majority heritage in ways my own experience couldn’t quite capture - the gift flows both ways.

    - Seek a Mentoring Relationship: If you’re not in one, make it happen – it’s essential for personal growth and building equitable, innovative teams.

    - Organisations Must Support It: Protected time, clear structures, training, and a culture that values these relationships are non-negotiable for mentorship to thrive.

    Mentorship isn’t a nice-to-have – it’s how we transform healthcare culture itself. I challenge you to think about one mentoring conversation you could start this week. The gift of reciprocal mentorship is available to all of us – let’s use it.

    Episode Resources

    Akindolie Medical Scholarship

    Mentorship Unlocked by Janice Omadeke

    NHS Leadership Academy – Inclusive Reciprocal Mentoring Programme

    RCPCH Reciprocal Mentoring Programme

    Connect with Healthcare Leadership Conversations

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    Healthcare Leadership Conversations is produced by Urban Podcasts.

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    11 mins
  • Leadership Insights: Book Club - Unreasonable Hospitality
    Jan 9 2026

    I’ve always believed the best leadership lessons can come from unexpected places, and Will Guidara’s Unreasonable Hospitality – about turning a restaurant into the world’s best – proves it for healthcare too.

    In this special Book Club episode of Healthcare Leadership Conversations, I share my takeaways from the book that’s reshaped how I think about service in the NHS. Will Guidara, former co-owner of Eleven Madison Park, shows how “unreasonable” acts of hospitality – going above and beyond in ways that surprise and delight – can transform any team or organisation.

    I break down why hospital and hospitality share roots, and how small, deliberate gestures can rebuild trust, boost morale, and make healthcare feel truly human again.

    What You’ll Discover

    - Hospitality’s Healthcare Roots: Why “hospital” and “hospitality” come from the same word and how reclaiming that could fix our broken patient experiences.

    - Unreasonable Acts That Work: Real examples like a New York hot dog cart for fine diners and how I’ve used similar surprises to lift NHS teams.

    - Leading with Humanity: The simple challenge: one act of “unreasonable hospitality” this week could change your ward, clinic, or entire service.

    Will’s story reminds me the NHS isn’t saved by tech or policy alone – it’s leaders choosing humanity that make the difference.

    Giveaway Details:

    Win a copy of Unreasonable Hospitality by Will Guidara

    To celebrate the latest episode of Healthcare Leadership Conversations, we’re giving away 5 copies of Unreasonable Hospitality by Will Guidara.

    How to enter:

    - Follow us on Instagram

    - Like, share and comment on the Podcast Episode Instagram post

    - Follow us on Apple Podcasts

    - Join our Linkedin Group - Healthcare Leadership Conversations

    Closing date:

    - Entries close at Midnight GMT on Friday 23rd January 2026

    Winner selection:

    - Five winners will be selected at random from all eligible entries and contacted via Instagram within 7 days of the closing date.

    Eligibility:

    - Open to UK residents aged 18 or over

    - No purchase necessary

    - One entry per person

    Prize:

    - One copy of Unreasonable Hospitality per winner

    - No cash alternative

    - The prize is non-transferable

    Other important information:

    This giveaway is not affiliated with or endorsed by the publisher, author, Instagram or LinkedIn

    By entering, you agree to your name being announced if you win

    Personal data will be used solely for the purpose of administering this giveaway and will not be shared or retained afterward Grab one, read it, and let’s chat about what you think.

    Healthcare Leadership Conversations is produced by Urban Podcasts.

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    16 mins
  • Leadership Insights: Dr Khadija Owusu - A Live Case Study of the NHS Management and Leadership Framework
    Dec 19 2025

    What does good leadership actually look like in practice - beyond policy documents and frameworks?

    This week’s conversation with Dr Kadija Owusu stayed with me long after we stopped talking. There was so much richness in her leadership journey that I struggled to choose a single theme to explore further. At the same time, I’d been reading the newly published NHS Management and Leadership Framework, and as I worked through it, I kept noticing moments of striking alignment with Kadija’s story. That’s where this episode was born.

    Rather than treating the framework as something abstract or theoretical, I use Kadija’s leadership journey as a living case study - an applied illustration of what the framework’s values look like when they are embodied, tested, and sustained in the real world.

    At the heart of the framework sits a code of practice built around six domains: accountability, integrity, compassion, curiosity, inclusion, and collaboration. In this episode, I walk through each one in turn, grounding it in concrete examples from Kadija’s work as a medical doctor, global health advocate, and founder of the Akaya Foundation.

    What I Explore in This Episode

    Why This Framework Exists: I explain the context behind the NHS Management and Leadership Framework, including the findings of the CQC and Messenger Reviews, and why leadership capability, confidence and consistency matter so much in today’s healthcare environment.

    Accountability in Action: Using Kadija’s early work in Ghana and the evolution of the Akaya Foundation, I reflect on accountability as a pattern of behaviour - identifying gaps, committing to action, and iterating beyond the initial idea.

    Integrity as Stewardship: I explore integrity through Kadija’s decision-making, including knowing when to step back, set boundaries, and prioritise sustainability over status.

    Compassion at the Centre: We look at compassion not as a soft add-on, but as a leadership discipline - one that creates dignity, psychological safety and growth, particularly in work centred on girls’ wellbeing and health equity.

    Curiosity and Iterative Leadership: From pilots to scale, I reflect on how curiosity shows up through learning, feedback, experimentation and continuous improvement.

    Inclusion Beyond Tokenism: I unpack Kadija’s critique of symbolic participation and her advocacy for co-creation, resourcing youth-led organisations, and intergenerational collaboration.

    Collaboration Across Boundaries: From community partnerships to global policy spaces like the United Nations, I explore collaboration as trust-building, bridge-building leadership.

    As I reflect on Kadija’s journey, what becomes clear is that the NHS Management and Leadership Framework isn’t asking leaders to become something new. It’s asking us to be more intentional about the behaviours that already define good leadership and to make them observable, teachable and embedded across our systems.

    The question this leaves me with and perhaps leaves you with too is not whether the framework is sound, but how we choose to live it: in appraisal, recruitment, governance, and everyday leadership practice.

    Episode Resources

    NHS Management & Leadership Framework

    The Kark Review

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    14 mins
  • Dr Khadija Owusu: Michelle Obama, Melanin Medics and Ghana Forever
    Dec 17 2025

    Picture the eldest daughter who carried the family from primary school, shook Michelle Obama’s hand twice as a teenager, and then quietly decided to fix two broken systems at once.

    In this inspiring episode of Healthcare Leadership Conversations, I sit down with Dr Khadija Owusu - co-founder of Melanin Medics and founder of the Akaya Foundation. From Elizabeth Garrett Anderson School to building a national charity that’s transformed Black representation in medicine, to delivering menstrual health education and reusable pads to thousands of girls across Ghana, Khadija proves real change begins with lived experience and relentless action.

    What You’ll Learn

    - Energy as Superpower: How growing up shouldering family responsibility became the foundation for leading national and continental movements.

    - Melanin Medics Revolution: Building a community that’s gone from medical-school support group to powerhouse charity lifting the next generation of Black doctors.

    - Akaya’s Quiet Miracle: In just three years, turning menstrual shame into school attendance and dignity for thousands of Ghanaian girls - one reusable pad at a time.

    Dr Khadija Owusu is living proof that leadership isn’t about titles - it’s about seeing a gap, refusing to accept it, and building the bridge yourself. A luminous, uplifting reminder that the future of healthcare belongs to those bold enough to centre the people it’s meant to serve.

    Connect with Khadija Owusu

    Website

    LinkedIn

    Instagram

    TikTok

    Akaya Foundation

    Melanin Medics

    Episode Resources

    Khadija’s United Nations General Assembly Speech

    Khadija’s TED Talk

    Connect with Healthcare Leadership Conversations

    Instagram

    LinkedIn (Dr. Mo Akindolie)

    Website

    Healthcare Leadership Conversations is produced by Urban Podcasts.

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    54 mins
  • Leadership Insights: Dr Mo Akindolie - The Courage to Pause, Learn and Grow
    Dec 15 2025

    Is it irresponsible to talk about sabbaticals during a workforce crisis or is it exactly the leadership conversation we need to be having?

    In this Leadership Insights episode, I return to one theme that stood out in my recent Me, Myself and I reflection: sabbaticals. As a self-confessed sabbatical evangelist, I take 10 minutes to make the case for why stepping away from work - thoughtfully and intentionally - is not indulgent, but strategic. Drawing on my own sabbatical year as a Commonwealth Fund Harkness Fellow in Boston, conversations with colleagues across healthcare, and a robust evidence base, I explore what sabbaticals really offer leaders, clinicians, and organisations.

    I share what led me to take a sabbatical after 25 years of continuous NHS service, what I learned from stepping outside my system, and why distance can reveal what proximity conceals. I also address the very real barriers that stop many people even considering a sabbatical and why none of them are as insurmountable as they may feel.

    What I Explore

    - The Evidence for Sabbaticals: I walk through what research consistently shows: reduced burnout, improved psychological wellbeing, greater creativity, higher retention, and stronger leadership pipelines when sabbaticals are supported.

    - Naming the Barriers Honestly: I openly about money, family disruption, career momentum, guilt, and uncertainty and how each of these concerns can be reframed and navigated with planning and clarity.

    - Identity Beyond the Job Title: I reflect on how deeply our roles can shape who we think we are, and how a sabbatical can reconnect us with the truth that the job is what we do - not who we are.

    - What Distance Makes Visible: From learning new research methodologies at Harvard to understanding health inequities on a global scale, I share how stepping outside my system fundamentally reshaped how I think as a leader.

    - The Organisational Case: I make the argument that sabbaticals are not workforce gaps, but investments - strengthening succession planning, innovation, resilience, and organisational culture.

    - Different Models of Sabbatical

    From policy and leadership fellowships to research, clinical, and restorative sabbaticals, I outline the many ways time away can be structured and why alignment with your values matters most.

    As I reflect on my own experience, one truth stands out clearly: rest is not abandonment - it is preparation. For leaders working in high-stakes, emotionally intense environments, sabbaticals protect compassion, restore perspective, and create the space needed for long-term thinking.

    Stepping away, when done with intention, can be the most powerful way to step forward.

    Connect with Healthcare Leadership Conversations

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    Website

    Healthcare Leadership Conversations is produced by Urban Podcasts.

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    18 mins
  • My Journey from Lagos to the NHS
    Dec 10 2025

    In this rare and deeply personal solo episode of Healthcare Leadership Conversations, I invite you into the moments, values, and turning points that shaped my life: growing up in Lagos as the daughter of two doctors, the weight (and gift) of Nigerian expectations, choosing medicine in the UK, and the long, winding road from junior doctor to national leadership roles.

    What You’ll Learn

    - The Four Acceptable Careers: How growing up in a Nigerian doctor family made medicine feel both inevitable and like a genuine calling.

    - Privilege as Responsibility: Why I see the advantages I was given not as luck, but as something to be used deliberately in service of others.

    - Service as a Verb: Leadership isn’t a title in the NHS; it’s the daily choice to put patients, teams, and equity first.

    This isn’t a lecture. It’s my honest reflection on identity, courage, uncertainty, and why, for me, leadership will always mean one thing: being in service to others.

    Episode Resources

    Akindolie Medical Scholarship

    Mayo Clinic Book: Strategies to Reduce Burnout

    Harkness Fellowship

    My Substack Blog

    Connect with Healthcare Leadership Conversations

    Instagram

    LinkedIn (Dr. Mo Akindolie)

    Website

    Healthcare Leadership Conversations is produced by Urban Podcasts.

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    52 mins
  • Leadership Insights: Dr Femi Sunmonu - Rethinking Where We Learn From Innovations from the Global Majority
    Dec 5 2025

    What if the future of healthcare isn’t being invented in London, Boston or Berlin… but in rural Nigeria, Bangladesh and southern India?

    In this Leadership Insights episode, I reflect on Dr Femi Sunmonu’s extraordinary journey and the game-changing healthcare models Femi discovered while building PurpleSource. From a legendary Nigerian surgeon who built operating tables from corn husks and car parts to the world’s largest eye-care system and a mental-health revolution run by grandmothers, these aren’t “low-resource workarounds” - they’re world-class innovations born from absolute necessity.

    What You’ll Learn

    - Necessity Is the Mother of Invention: Why constraint breeds far more creativity than endless budgets ever could.

    - Global Majority Genius: The Awajabi Clinic, Aravind Eye Care, and Friendship Bench: three revolutionary models delivering elite outcomes at a fraction of Western costs.

    - Stop Looking Only West: The dangerous bias that assumes innovation only flows from high-income nations and how to break it.

    My challenge is simple but seismic: next time you hunt for a healthcare solution, ask yourself whose knowledge you’re centring. The most humane, equitable, and imaginative ideas aren’t coming from where the money is - they’re coming from where the need is greatest.

    Episode Resources

    The Friendship Bench

    Aravind Eye Health Care System

    Commonwealth Fund - International Insights Newsletter

    Connect with Healthcare Leadership Conversations

    Instagram

    LinkedIn (Dr. Mo Akindolie)

    Website

    Healthcare Leadership Conversations is produced by Urban Podcasts.

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    10 mins