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If you’re a clinician, practice owner, allied health professional, or healthcare leader, this episode matters.
For years, many health professionals have been told that if work feels unsustainable, the answer is better boundaries, more resilience, or improved self-care.
But what if the issue isn’t personal failure?
What if it’s psychosocial risk — a legally recognised work health and safety issue?
In this episode of The Entrepreneurial Clinician, Jo unpacks:
This is not a fear-based conversation.
Because when we name the problem correctly, we stop misdiagnosing ourselves.
Psychosocial risks are not random.
They include:
For too long, clinicians have internalised these pressures as personal weakness.
But under modern Work Health and Safety law, psychosocial harm must be identified and mitigated, just like physical injury risk.
This is no longer optional.
Burnout describes an individual experience.
If we only talk about burnout, responsibility stays with the individual.
If we talk about psychosocial risk, we start asking better questions about the design of work.
Psychosocial risk rarely arrives as collapse.
It arrives gradually:
Until one day you’re exhausted — but you can’t point to a single cause.
That isn’t fragility.
Managing psychosocial risk does not require perfection.
It requires:
Good leadership doesn’t eliminate pressure.
Jo shares reflections from her own career in rehabilitation counselling, her work assessing psychosocial job demands, and her lived experience of navigating capacity after serious illness.
This season is not about hustle culture.
It is about designing work that respects human limits.
These conversations continue because people value them.
The podcast is supported by listeners and aligned partners via Buy Me a Coffee.
If this episode gave you language for something you’ve been carrying:
Website: https://jomuirhead.com/
YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@JoMuirheadTV
Future Proofing Health Professionals (Facebook Group):https://www.facebook.com/groups/634559664981699
In the next episode, we shift the lens slightly — but the theme remains the same.
Because leadership doesn’t just show up inside the workplace.
I’m joined by Megan Walker from Market Savvy, a trusted voice in ethical health marketing and regulatory compliance in Australia.
We explore what ethical marketing really means for clinicians — not fear-based marketing, not performative compliance, but marketing that aligns with professional integrity, regulatory responsibility, and genuine care.
If psychosocial risk asks us to examine how work is designed internally, ethical marketing asks us to examine how we show up externally.
As health professionals, we have extraordinary influence.
The question is:
By entrepreneurialclinician5
44 ratings
If you’re a clinician, practice owner, allied health professional, or healthcare leader, this episode matters.
For years, many health professionals have been told that if work feels unsustainable, the answer is better boundaries, more resilience, or improved self-care.
But what if the issue isn’t personal failure?
What if it’s psychosocial risk — a legally recognised work health and safety issue?
In this episode of The Entrepreneurial Clinician, Jo unpacks:
This is not a fear-based conversation.
Because when we name the problem correctly, we stop misdiagnosing ourselves.
Psychosocial risks are not random.
They include:
For too long, clinicians have internalised these pressures as personal weakness.
But under modern Work Health and Safety law, psychosocial harm must be identified and mitigated, just like physical injury risk.
This is no longer optional.
Burnout describes an individual experience.
If we only talk about burnout, responsibility stays with the individual.
If we talk about psychosocial risk, we start asking better questions about the design of work.
Psychosocial risk rarely arrives as collapse.
It arrives gradually:
Until one day you’re exhausted — but you can’t point to a single cause.
That isn’t fragility.
Managing psychosocial risk does not require perfection.
It requires:
Good leadership doesn’t eliminate pressure.
Jo shares reflections from her own career in rehabilitation counselling, her work assessing psychosocial job demands, and her lived experience of navigating capacity after serious illness.
This season is not about hustle culture.
It is about designing work that respects human limits.
These conversations continue because people value them.
The podcast is supported by listeners and aligned partners via Buy Me a Coffee.
If this episode gave you language for something you’ve been carrying:
Website: https://jomuirhead.com/
YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/@JoMuirheadTV
Future Proofing Health Professionals (Facebook Group):https://www.facebook.com/groups/634559664981699
In the next episode, we shift the lens slightly — but the theme remains the same.
Because leadership doesn’t just show up inside the workplace.
I’m joined by Megan Walker from Market Savvy, a trusted voice in ethical health marketing and regulatory compliance in Australia.
We explore what ethical marketing really means for clinicians — not fear-based marketing, not performative compliance, but marketing that aligns with professional integrity, regulatory responsibility, and genuine care.
If psychosocial risk asks us to examine how work is designed internally, ethical marketing asks us to examine how we show up externally.
As health professionals, we have extraordinary influence.
The question is: