Dr. Shaikh
Mapping Healthcare
Mapping Healthcare is a radio show and podcast where a medic with a map explores ways in which people around the globe improve the world of healthcare and what we can learn from them. The host is a physician, medical educator, and researcher who leads programs that help health systems deliver high-quality healthcare. All past episodes are archived below. Find Mapping Healthcare on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. Mapping Healthcare was awarded the 2025 Peter and Marion London Global Learning Expansion Grant. The grant aims to foster a robust global learning environme...
Where to listen?
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Episodes
36. The Cost of Caring: Keeping Healthcare Workers Safe in Thailand 27.06.2026 27:27
Remember those clanging pots for healthcare heroes? The gratitude has faded but the dangers are louder than ever. In this episode, we explore five hazards - biological, sharps, ergonomic, violent, and psychological - threatening those who care for us. There are two million needle stick injuries each year and 60% of healthcare staff face workplace violence. Piyawan Limpanyalert and I look at soluti...
34. Preventing Maternal Deaths During Childbirth in Ethiopia 13.06.2026 27:54
A mother dies from preventable causes related to pregnancy or childbirth every two minutes. We have the medical knowledge about what works to prevent these avoidable deaths. So why do they still occur? Explore the global maternal mortality crisis and the three delays that turn a joyful event into a tragedy. Abebe Alene tells us how Dessie Hospital in Ethiopia halved its maternal deaths. We talk ab...
35. Healthcare in the Air: Retrieval Medicine in Remote Australia 13.06.2026 29:52
How would you survive a critical emergency hundreds of miles from civilization? Retrieval medicine is a high-stakes flying ICU that brings medical expertise directly to a patient’s side. In this episode we trace the evolution of care in the air, from 1870s mail balloons to modern jets that fight the laws of physics. Shannon Nott from the Royal Flying Doctor Service tells us about delivering lifesa...
33. The Rural Community Pharmacy: A Lifeline on Catalina Island 09.05.2026 27:57
In rural counties most pharmacies are independently owned. When these rural pharmacies close, they don’t just leave a gap in healthcare, they affect a region's economy. Because who wants to move to a town where you can’t get a prescription filled for 40 miles? Hear the audio story that I created at the Transom Story Workshop on Catalina Island about Sue Ponce, the sole pharmacist on Catalina Islan...
32. What Matters to You: A Simple Question That Transforms Care in Switzerland 25.04.2026 29:28
In healthcare, we’re trained to move fast, to diagnose, treat, and fix. But what happens when we slow down just enough to ask a different question: What matters to you? In this episode, we reflect on how one simple question can transform not just clinical decisions, but relationships, trust, and meaning for patients, families, and clinicians. Christian von Plessen shares what happens when we stop...
31. A Voice from the Village: Primary Care in Rural Ireland 11.04.2026 27:59
Today we’re in a place where everybody knows your name, but also where the nearest specialist may be a three hour drive away. In a city, your physician is someone you may see a couple of times a year. In a rural area you see them in the grocery store or at the Friday night football game. This creates a whole new level of social connection. John Brennan tells us about his experience providing prima...
30. Smart Risks in High-Stakes Health Systems from the Netherlands 01.04.2026 29:44
Healthcare faces urgent challenges. Rising complexity, widening inequities, burned-out clinical teams, and health systems stretched to their limits. But what if the biggest risk is playing it safe? Behind every breakthrough in healthcare, there is a moment when someone chose to take a thoughtful, informed risk. Ellen Joan van Vliet tells us how to question the status quo, experiment responsibly, a...
29. Improving Clinical Environments for Nurses from South Africa 14.03.2026 27:45
About 40% of nurses say they plan to leave nursing in the next five years because of unmanageable stress, workload, and understaffing. There are scales to measure the health of a workplace that look at staffing, leadership support, nurse-physician relationships, participation in hospital affairs, and the quality of care delivered. Sabelile Tenza tells us about her research on the relationship betw...
28. Pharmacists preventing medication mix‑ups from Melbourne 01.03.2026 28:59
Transitions of care from hospital to home are some of the riskiest moments in a person’s healthcare journey. Medication lists change, high‑risk medications require careful monitoring, and patients often deal with overwhelming amounts of instructions. Linda Graudins tells us how pharmacists help people on complex medication regimens navigate these challenges safely. We’ll look at a process called m...
27. Bringing the Hospital to Your Home in Australia 14.02.2026 29:30
Ever wish you could skip noisy hospitals and heal in your own bed? We explore Hospital at Home, a game-changing model that brings acute care—from IV meds to 24/7 monitoring—directly to your living room. We trace how this 1990s pilot became a global trend, accelerated by the COVID-19 pandemic and new government payment models. Michael Montalto shares how Hospital at Home prevents unnecessary hospit...
26. Spelling Out Who's Who in the Hospital from South Carolina 31.01.2026 28:25
You're in a hospital. There’s a whirlwind of people in scrubs and white coats. It can be confusing trying to figure out who's who. Is that person a nurse, a respiratory therapist, a resident physician, a senior doctor? Who's actually in charge? It sounds simple but can be quite complicated – knowing who is actually treating you in a hospital. It is a real problem because while those in the medical...
25. Bridging Culture and Mental Health from Bergen 17.01.2026 28:00
How much of our inner world is shaped by the world around us? And does depression in Oslo feel the same as depression in Oklahoma City? The language we use to talk about our pain and even the pain itself can be deeply cultural. For a long time the approach to mental health was to stick on a label and treat the symptoms. That's evolving from a one-size-fits-all approach to viewing mental health thr...
24. Resistance is Real – Safer and Smarter Antibiotic Use in Argentina 27.12.2025 28:15
Antibiotic resistance is when bacteria evolve to withstand the medicines designed to kill them. About half the time that we use an antibiotic, it's not actually needed or is the wrong one for the job. That misuse is what's driving antibiotic resistance. Resistant infections lead to longer illnesses, hospital stays, higher costs, disabilities, and deaths. Facundo Jorro-Baron tells us about how a gr...
23. Caring for Children with Medical Complexity – Navigating Choppy Waters Across the Atlantic 13.12.2025 29:05
Behind so many children with complex medical needs there is an often invisible support system. The people we're talking about are family members of children with medical complexity. Pediatric neurodisability specialist Helen Leonard shares her experience navigating the healthcare system with her son, Matthew. We hear why health systems are generally better at handling heart attacks or injuries, bu...
22. Changing Health Systems Through Clinician Advocacy from Chicago 22.11.2025 29:00
When we think of healthcare professionals we usually picture them treating illnesses. But the reality is that major health gaps aren't usually caused by clinical failures – they are the result of social, political, economic, or educational factors. Advocacy in healthcare involves using your voice and expertise to influence not only individual health, but the health of our society. Susan Kressly, p...
21. Health and the Human Factor in Glasgow 08.11.2025 28:52
The field of Human Factors emerged during World War II because of the need to improve the design of aircrafts and military equipment, while paying attention to human fatigue, perception, thinking, understanding, and usability. It's where psychology meets engineering to design processes that make it easy for people to do the right thing. Paul Bowie tells us how Human Factors expanded into health ca...
20. Preventing Unnecessary Cesarean Sections in Latin America 25.10.2025 29:20
We’re dealing with another delivery dilemma, the rising global rates of medically unnecessary Cesarean sections. Latin America has some of the highest C-section rates in the world and Pedro Delgado tells us about the complex interplay of factors related to childbearing women, societal norms, clinicians, and healthcare systems that drives this practice. It’s about striking a delicate balance — ensu...
19. Increasing Access to Lifesaving C-Sections in Bihar 04.10.2025 28:37
Too little, too late. And too much, too soon. This and the next episode are about the c-section paradox: the rising rates of medically unnecessary C-sections globally and the underuse of c-sections when they are really needed. Hear about the complex interplay of factors that come into play for a birthing mother not getting a c-section when it's medically needed, and how this causes medical problem...
18. Dispatch from Dublin – Little Babies Big Risks 20.09.2025 28:00
In today’s episode the tables are turned and I am a guest on the The Walk and Talk Improvement Podcast in Ireland. This is a special episode to mark World Patient Safety Day 2025. This year’s theme is “Safe care for every newborn and every child” and it highlights the need to prevent avoidable harm in child health settings. I’m interviewed by John FitzSimons, a consultant pediatrician at Children’...
17. 20/20 Vision for Millions of Cataract Surgeries from Madurai 06.09.2025 28:58
When most people hear about lean they think of assembly lines and car factories. Hear how this management philosophy streamlines healthcare and involves healthcare teams in delivering high value care. Aravind Srinivasan tells us how Aravind Eye Care System uses lean to increase access to eye surgeries for millions of people in India. It is a non-profit that does not rely on donations or government...
16. Soaring to New Heights to Prevent and Treat Blindness from Ecuador 23.08.2025 28:16
Preventable blindness affects millions of people. That's the dark reality for far too many, even when treatments are available. While medical advances have lowered rates of blindness, our global population is growing and aging rapidly. And the longer people live, the more likely they are to develop age-related eye conditions. Visual loss profoundly affects people physically, psychologically, econo...
15. Healthcare Leadership that Inspires Purpose from Massachusetts 26.07.2025 28:35
Healthcare faces rising costs, quality problems, and workforce shortages, and the ability to rally people around a shared, meaningful purpose is more critical than ever. So, how do healthcare leaders begin to inspire this sense of purpose to fuel innovation? Don Berwick, President Emeritus of the Institute for Healthcare Improvement and former Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid...
14. Building Breast Cancer Awareness in Jordan 12.07.2025 28:00
Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women and the leading cause of cancer deaths in women globally, with outcomes that are drastically different based purely on where you happen to live. What's fascinating is how much this challenge isn't just a medical one, but is deeply entangled with social factors, cultural norms, and economics. Salma Jaouni Araj shares how the Jordan Breast Cancer P...
13. Caring for Home Care Workers in Nigeria 28.06.2025 28:36
There’s no place like home when it comes to comfort, health, and healing. Home care lets people with illnesses or disabilities live where they feel most comfortable. And it's a whole world of care delivered by an essential workforce that is vital to our health systems, but one that often operates in the shadows. Reliance on home care is growing, with a move away from nursing homes towards care in...
12. Co-designing Telehealth in Remote Communities on the Tiwi Islands 14.06.2025 28:25
Primary care is the foundation of any health system but it faces massive challenges globally, especially in geographically isolated communities. One solution is telehealth or virtual care, a natural fit for remote areas. Bridging geographic distances makes it easier to connect with clinicians and reduce travel time and costs. Tim Shaw shares how Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders on Australia’...
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