Episode Description:
Healthcare systems are operating under sustained pressure. Expanding the workforce has not translated into improved access or stability. In some regions, increasing training places has exposed deeper infrastructure gaps,like placement bottlenecks, geographic mismatches, funding constraints and outdated care models that no longer reflect the burden of modern disease.
How does capacity strain show up in day to day clinical work and why doesn’t supply alone resolve demand? The panel explores alternative models of care: task shifting to mid level providers, telemedicine beyond video visits, asynchronous pathways, AI driven follow up agents and technology enabled antenatal support. As patients increasingly seek 24/7 guidance through digital tools, the conversation turns to risk, guardrails and accountability, and how to integrate new forms of care without compounding system instability.
Key Topics:
- Workforce expansion and the limits of “more doctors”
- Training bottlenecks and infrastructure gaps (including the UK 5,000 GP example)
- Chronic disease and the limits of hospital-era care models
- Asynchronous and agentic care pathways
