wRight to the Root

Stephanie Wright

In a cryptic world, Stephanie Wright is a beacon of authenticity. Her no-nonsense approach to practice management has made her a bold authority on understanding and solving complex medical industry problems. Join Stephanie as she takes her expertise on the road to explore hot topics in medical care with experts around the globe. In each episode Stephanie and her guests cover topics like insurance, healthcare tourism, education domestically versus abroad, international care systems & more.

  1. Insulin Under Fire, Diabetes Care in Crisis Zones with MSF’s Dr. Phillipa Boulle

    5H AGO

    Insulin Under Fire, Diabetes Care in Crisis Zones with MSF’s Dr. Phillipa Boulle

    On this episode of wRight to the Root, Stephanie Wright sits down with Dr. Phillipa Boulle, a non-communicable disease (NCD) advisor with Doctors Without Borders (MSF) Switzerland, based in Geneva, to expose what it really takes to treat chronic illness in the middle of crisis. Dr. Boulle breaks down the growing global diabetes emergency, including why the vast majority of people living with diabetes are in low and middle income countries, and why sub-Saharan Africa is experiencing the fastest rise. She explains how MSF teams work to deliver care in war zones, displacement camps, and protracted humanitarian emergencies, where access to insulin, monitoring supplies, and even consistent food can disappear overnight. This conversation goes straight to the root of the problem, including: Why insulin access is still dangerously limited and overpriced, especially for people with type 1 diabetes who need it to survive The hidden crisis of missing glucose monitoring tools, making insulin use far more dangerous in humanitarian settings How emergencies like Gaza reveal life-threatening gaps in continuity of care when people are forced to flee repeatedly MSF research showing insulin can remain stable at higher temperatures than labels suggest, changing what is possible in settings without refrigeration The double standard in diabetes care, and why patients in the harshest conditions often get the hardest-to-use tools What’s at stake in the UN High-Level Meeting on NCDs (September in New York), and why emergency diabetes care must be explicitly included How patient advocacy and government pressure can shift corporate behavior, and how Americans can support global health equity A powerful, grounded conversation about survival, dignity, and the urgent fight to treat healthcare as a human right, not a business.

    45 min
  2. Inside the World Medical Association with Dr. Ashok Philip, WMA President

    JAN 28

    Inside the World Medical Association with Dr. Ashok Philip, WMA President

    I flew all the way to Montevideo, Uruguay to sit down face-to-face with Dr. Ashok Philip (Malaysia), President of the World Medical Association, and this conversation goes straight to the root of why healthcare systems keep failing the people they are supposed to serve. The World Medical Association (WMA) was born in the shadow of the Nuremberg Trials and the medical atrocities of WWII, and that origin story still shapes its mission today: defend medical ethics, protect physician independence, and advocate for patients across borders. Dr. Philip breaks down what the WMA actually does, why it is often confused with the WHO (it is not the WHO), and how a global network of 115 member medical associations tries to push back when governments, corporations, and insurers prioritize “quick and cheap” over what patients truly need. If you have ever felt powerless watching insurance denials, bureaucratic delays, cookie-cutter care, or political posturing hijack medicine, this episode will hit home. And if you are a clinician, this is your reminder that policy is not optional, it is where patient outcomes are decided. In this episode, we unpack: Why the WMA was founded, and why ethics still sits at the center of global medicine How private insurance denials and administrative burden are not “just an American problem” Why prevention and health literacy are always “unsexy,” but essential Universal healthcare realities, including rationing, access gaps, and technology tradeoffs How to mobilize younger clinicians, including the WMA’s junior doctors network AI in medicine, misinformation, and why “tools” still require human accountability Brain drain from developing countries, and what a fair global solution could look like 🎧 Press play for a rare, behind-the-scenes look at global medicine from the top, and the urgent message Dr. Philip keeps returning to: if we do not address the root cause, we are just managing collapse. If this episode moves you, follow the show, leave a rating, and share it with one person who needs to hear that change is possible, and collective.

    37 min
  3. Medicare Advantage or Medicare Disadvantage? Dr. Ed Weisbart on Denials, Delays & Single Payer

    12/31/2025

    Medicare Advantage or Medicare Disadvantage? Dr. Ed Weisbart on Denials, Delays & Single Payer

    On this episode of wRight To The Root, Stephanie Wright sits down with Dr. Ed Weisbart — a retired family medicine physician, former Chief Medical Officer at Express Scripts, and longtime healthcare advocate with Physicians for a National Health Program (PNHP). Dr. Weisbart shares what pushed him from fighting for patients in the exam room to fighting for them in the streets and in policy: years of watching people delay or skip care because of copays, deductibles, denials, and fear of medical debt. Together, Stephanie and Dr. Weisbart unpack why “getting sick” in America has become financially terrifying — and how prior authorization, Medicare Advantage, and corporate profiteering are shaping who gets care and when. You’ll hear a powerful real-life example of how traditional Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage can mean the difference between next-day testing and weeks of delay — delays that, for many patients, can be life-or-death. The conversation also tackles the biggest myths that stall progress (especially the fear of taxes), and why multiple analyses show Medicare for All could cover everyone with no copays or deductibles for the same or less than we already pay. This episode connects the dots between healthcare access, corporate greed, and democracy — while offering real hope: new momentum in Congress, growing coordination among advocacy organizations, and a clear message for both patients and clinicians—silence won’t change the system, but collective action can. If you’ve ever been denied care, overwhelmed by bills, or told to “wait for approval,” this conversation is for you.

    47 min
  4. From Iceland to Sweden - how functional, prevention-forward system's work

    12/19/2025

    From Iceland to Sweden - how functional, prevention-forward system's work

    Note on this episode’s audio: This conversation was recorded in October 2025 in Reykjavík. Due to a camera malfunction, we were only able to recover the audio—and it was saved on a note-taking device, so it’s not studio-quality. That said, I’m genuinely pleased with how it turned out, and I’m excited to share it with you. In this Reykjavík sit-down, Stephanie Wright visits withBrynja Björk, an Icelandic dentist who graduated from the University of Iceland and then practiced in Sweden for 11 years—giving her a rare, inside view of how dentistry works across two Nordic systems. Together, we dig into what happens when healthcare is treated as a public good (with rules, guardrails, and faster payments) versus a profit engine (with denials, delays, and debt). We talk access, affordability, workforce shortages, and what the U.S. could learn—without pretending any system is perfect. In this episode, we cover: Why Brynja became a dentist (and how dental anxiety shaped her mission) Dentist shortages and what it means when patients wait months for an appointment How licensing can be surprisingly portable across Nordic countries The U.S. reality: $300k–$500k+ dental school debt and the barriers for foreign-trained dentists Iceland’s “hybrid” coverage: kids covered, support for seniors, and what limitations look like Reimbursements that arrive in days, not months—and denials you can actually respond to Continuing education requirements and the stakes of losing government contracts A big surprise for Americans: Iceland doesn’t train hygienists, so dentists do the hygiene Sweden’s tiered reimbursement approach: the people who need the most get the most Fluoride, misinformation, and why policy + prevention beats fear If you’ve ever wondered what a more functional, prevention-forward system could look like—this is a powerful place to start. 🎧 Listen in, then share this episode with someone who still thinks “insurance” equals “care.”

    47 min
4.7
out of 5
12 Ratings

About

In a cryptic world, Stephanie Wright is a beacon of authenticity. Her no-nonsense approach to practice management has made her a bold authority on understanding and solving complex medical industry problems. Join Stephanie as she takes her expertise on the road to explore hot topics in medical care with experts around the globe. In each episode Stephanie and her guests cover topics like insurance, healthcare tourism, education domestically versus abroad, international care systems & more.