Wisdom Blog

Transforming the world of healthcare requires ideas, insights, curiosity, and healthy challenges to the status quo. Our blog contains abundant doses of all of those things.

Candidates (Job Seekers)

Robin Stewart’s Story and the Birth of MindBody Talent

Robin Stewart envisioned and co-founded MindBody Talent with Richard Hoffmann in April of 2019. Both of them had driving motivations to transform healthcare from an industry focused heavily on pharmaceutical drugs back into a healing profession that understands how to enable the human mind and body to heal itself.  Robin and Rich had both experienced too much that was wrong with a system dominated by pharmaceutical-based management of disease rather than actually curing and reversing diseases and chronic illnesses. In Robin’s case, the disease was her own. This is Robin’s story … After five years in business as MindBody Talent, we’ve now heard similar stories to Robin’s so many times from converted conventional medicine practitioners that we could search and replace “Robin” in this story with 100 other names. The core story would be the same. It’s kind of like a Hallmark channel movie plot … boy finds girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl back again. In this case, it’s health that is lost and found. In both cases, nothing is the same afterwards. Turn the clock back ten years …  As a woman in her mid-40’s, Robin found herself verging on the age and textbook conditions of menopause. Her otherwise vibrant and energetic life was turning south with symptoms that neither she nor her conventional medicine doctors could fully understand or explain. Robin was wrestling with debilitating fatigue, she had brain fog, her sleep was erratic, she had muscle weakness, her hair was thinning and falling out, and (as Robin explains it) she was “putting on weight like it was my job.” All of that was highly unusual for a woman who had lettered in four sports in high school, had a productive career as an Executive Recruiter, and was raising an active daughter as a single mom. She was a busy woman with a busy life. Robin had no time for what had become chronic health symptoms that were constantly dragging her down. The conventional medicine path … Like the majority of people seeking medical solutions, Robin turned to conventional medicine doctors for help. The usual pattern began. Tests were run, prescriptions were written, and Robin went on her way. The symptoms continued and in some cases grew worse. More prescriptions were written with more side effects and more approaches tried. Robin continued to feel awful, struggling with the same and additional symptoms that were continuing to frustrate her and make her life miserable. For almost five years, Robin and her doctors tried prescription after prescription and she was worse off than when she started. The last straw for Robin came when her endocrinologist told her, “I’m going to write you a prescription for an antidepressant. Your labs are normal and everything is fine.  This appears to be all in your head.”  Being a tough and blunt native New Yorker, Robin told the doctor exactly what to do with his prescription pad. She was not depressed. She had an illness that her doctor had no idea how to diagnose or solve.  Robin left his office (and conventional medicine) with a renewed commitment to find a better way out of her health challenges. Discovering Functional Medicine … Coincidentally (or not), Robin had just received a recruitment search assignment to find a Functional Medicine doctor for a high-end health spa that was adding holistic health services to their range of offerings. At that time, Robin had never heard of Functional Medicine, but she was intrigued. The more she researched the field in preparation for her search project, the more she wondered if Functional Medicine could help her.  Robin found a Functional Medicine physician who quickly turned her previously undiagnosed autoimmune disorder into a diagnosis. Robin had been struggling with Hashimoto’s Disease, which was attacking her thyroid and causing all of the symptoms she had been experiencing. What her conventional medicine doctors had been fiddling with for over four years, unable to successfully diagnose and treat, her new Functional Medicine doctor pinpointed and clarified within weeks.  Robin’s new physician recommended a range of nutritional supplements and some lifestyle changes that included different food choices, modified exercises, and better sleep hygiene. Within five months, Robin had been weaned off of all of her previous pharmaceutical medications, her range of symptoms were gone, and her Hashimoto’s Disease was in remission.  A new mission and the birth of MindBody Talent … As important as her health recovery, Robin had the seed of a new mission … to help other people to not endure what she had endured on her journey back to health. She also had a new one-liner to use when describing her experience, “Once you see Functional Medicine, you can’t unsee it.“ In MindBody Talent’s daily discussions with physicians, Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants, and specialty nurses across the U.S. who have converted away from conventional medicine, the stories are often a repeat of Robin’s story. Either they or someone close to them became sick, really sick, with a chronic illness or complex disease. Months, years or decades of searching for answers in the conventional medicine world yielded nothing but bottles of prescription drugs and a range of side effects, on top of their core base of symptoms. In her book, “A Nation of Unwell: What’s Gone Wrong?” Kristine Gedroic, MD tells her own identical story. Through her illness and recovery, Dr. Gedroic was awakened to the fallacies she was taught in medical school, including the devastating consequences for patients treated with the conventional medicine approach.  In her book, Dr. Gedoric explains the problems clearly, “As physicians, we are not trained to consider why patients are having symptoms in an attempt to correct the underlying cause. We are taught to ask the questions we need to have answered in order to add up to a particular disease or diagnosis, and we are trained to consider what medicine will help with the symptom and make the patient more comfortable or less at risk. We then discard all the other elements that seem

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Candidates (Job Seekers)

Physician Assistant Work-Life Balance: Everything You Need To Know

If you talk to people who have decided to pursue a career as a physician’s assistant (PA), they will often tell you that they chose the profession because the work-life balance is fantastic. This may not always be the case; for some, it can deter them from moving forward with the demanding career choice. Today we will look at some caveats you need to be aware of when choosing your career as a physician assistant and what you can expect. So let’s dive in! Are you looking to get into a career in Functional Medicine? Let MindBody Talent guide you in the right direction by pairing you with the perfect employer focused on the field of holistic healthcare. Visit our website today to talk to one of our specialists! Benefits Of Being A Physician Assistant 1. Training is Much Shorter To begin, even though a physician’s and a PA’s hours are similar, the physician assistant will have a much shorter training period than a physician. There have been a lot of regulations in the past ten years that have reduced the residency periods for physicians, which is a good thing. For example, if you would like to be a doctor, your residency and medical schooling is going to be at least 4-5 years longer than a PA’s training.  Opting for a physician assistant position then gives you the opportunity to start living a balanced life sooner than a doctor, and you can start enjoying the benefits of a good work-life balance earlier on in your life. 2. Geographic Flexibility Most physicians and doctors will move where their residency is, and eventually, their job takes them.  PAs might have to move to attend a physician assistant school, but the time commitment is much less than if you were a doctor relocating for residency. Once certified by the NCCPA as a PA, you can look for job openings in the cities where you want to live. Typically there are several different cities looking for physician assistants at any given time, which allows you to find a city to live in first and then look for jobs after you get there. Working with a skilled, qualified talent acquisition team can help you land the best jobs across the nation.  Related Links: The Hero’s Journey Of Functional Medicine in 2022 3. Flexibility to Work In Different Specialty Areas Choosing a career as a physician assistant also offers a lot of flexibility in working in different specialty areas of medicine. This flexibility lets you take your time and decide which specialty you want to pursue long term.  Several other parts of the job are flexible, including switching from full-time to part-time work, working clinical shifts in a hospital versus regular business hours, and moving back and forth from a small practice to a larger medical practice. Ultimately, you can find a schedule that works for you and brings you the work-life balance you want. Related Links: Health and Wellness Branding Tips For Functional Medicine Practitioners The Work-Life Balance of a Physician Assistant  Flexibility is key to choosing a career as a physician assistant. With that flexibility comes the work-life balance that everyone dreams of having. After all, throughout the education process, you get taught to go into the specialty of your passion, work the hours you want, and live in a location that best suits your needs. You will hear a lot about team-based healthcare methods and how they increase the effectiveness and efficiency of medical practices around the country. Physician assistants are educated in two or three different areas throughout their careers, making them highly versatile within their industry.  Are you a Functional Medical practice looking for the ideal candidate with holistic medicine experience? Visit MindBody Talent to find the perfect match for your practice! Provider Burnout Every job is not without its downsides. As regulations continue to increase, the complexities of the physician assistant career do as well. As it evolves, the responsibilities, administrative duties, general tasks, and red tape can impose restrictions, add weight to your sense of freedom. An early study shows physician assistants burning out at an alarming rate due to not having the ability to fully practice what their license allows, not achieving the work-life balance they wanted, and not being able to dedicate enough time to patient’s overall care.  This burnout leads to depression, fatigue, productivity decreases, lack of interest in their work, social withdrawal, and increased use of drugs and alcohol. While many studies are focused on physicians, more and more studies are being looked at among physician assistants and the burnout rate many are experiencing.   Related Links: Embracing Lifestyle Health Finding Balance The key to enjoying a career as a Physician’s Assistant is ensuring you can find balance without burning out. It might take some time to test out different ideas, but getting ahead of the things that directly affect you inside and outside the practice – in and out of your home, and other things that surround you in your life will help tremendously. For example, making sure to keep your job at the practice and not bring it home with you is a big way to segregate work from your home life and kids. Another good idea is to try and eat dinner together, not watch as much TV, and stay off the phone during peak family time.  Taking time for yourself can also be greatly beneficial – find out the 8 Factors of Optimum Health and how you can apply these to your journey. Simply leaving a job to find a new one is typically not an option for healthcare workers. This is why finding solutions to the stress you may be feeling as a PA is crucial for creating a fruitful, long-lasting career. For more information on how MindBody Talent can help with your recruiting efforts for your holistic medicine practice, visit our website today! Conclusion Many physician assistants think they are going into a career that will be easier than

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