Our profession can by its very nature be isolating and a bit secluded; this podcast aims to explore the lived experiences of small business owner psychiatric providers doing the work, whilst simultaneously navigating the challenges of running their own businesses. Listen to peers who have faced the similar business challenges in their psychiatry practice, and how they solved them. Find out how they got from A to B, how well their schooling prepared them to be a small business owner ( ha!), and how their previous careers have informed and shaped their current practice.
In this episode of Minding Your Psychiatry Business, host Lisa Weldon interviews Amy who runs a small group practice in North Carolina, Swift Creek Mental Health Services.
On this episode of the Minding Your Psychiatry Business podcast, Lisa talks to Sharon Fisher, an author, psychiatric nurse practitioner, and the director of Nurtured Well, a New Hampshire-based private psychiatric clinic focusing on women’s well-being.
In this episode of Minding Your Psychiatry Business, host Lisa Weldon interviews Lauren…. [show notes coming soon]
In this episode of Minding Your Psychiatry Business, host Lisa Weldon interviews Jen…. [show notes coming soon]
On this episode of Minding Your Psychiatry Business, Lisa sits down with Mark, a psychiatric nurse who runs a solo practice. Mark has had an interesting career as he worked for 25 years as an IT professional and transitioned into working in psychiatry after a redundancy. Once he began psychiatric nurse training, he set himself the goal of starting his own private practice and was able to achieve it after a brief period working as a nurse practitioner in a hospital.
In this episode of Minding Your Psychiatry Business, host Lisa Weldon interviews her friend, Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner Roberta Stanhope. Robbie has been a clinician for over 25 years, and maintains a solo practice. Together, Lisa and Robbie discuss some of the behind-the-scenes frustrations of being a solo practitioner in the psychiatry industry. They cover a broad range of topics, from the difficulties of obtaining prior authorizations for Medicare and Medicaid patients, to other barriers such as the inability to practice across state lines.