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A Physician Entrepreneur’s Playbook for Fixing America’s Specialty Care Gap

The U.S. healthcare system is facing a quiet but accelerating crisis: a widening gap between where specialists are needed and where they actually practice. In urology alone, there are roughly 1,100 open positions but only about 400 new specialists trained each year—a mismatch that’s only getting worse. As physician burnout rises and more clinicians…

By Kevin Stevenson · May 11, 2026, 6:00 AM UTCDr. Joe PazonaHealthcare OperationsPhysician EntrepreneurshipRural Healthcare
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Key takeaways

01

healthcare system is facing a quiet but accelerating crisis: a widening gap between where specialists are needed and where they actually practice.

02

In urology alone, there are roughly 1,100 open positions but only about 400 new specialists trained each year—a mismatch that’s only getting worse.

03

As physician burnout rises and more clinicians…

The U.S. healthcare system is facing a quiet but accelerating crisis: a widening gap between where specialists are needed and where they actually practice. In urology alone, there are roughly 1,100 open positions but only about 400 new specialists trained each year—a mismatch that’s only getting worse. As physician burnout rises and more clinicians seek autonomy and flexibility, traditional care delivery models are being pushed to their limits. The stakes aren’t abstract—they show up in delayed diagnoses, long travel distances, and communities left without access to care.

So how do you deliver specialty care differently in a system that no longer fits how physicians want to work?

On this episode of I Don’t Care, host Dr. Kevin Stevenson sits down with Dr. Joe Pazona, CEO of VirtuCare, to unpack a deeply personal and highly practical journey: from clinical frustration to entrepreneurial innovation. The conversation explores how one physician turned systemic gaps into scalable solutions—rethinking how specialty care can be delivered across underserved communities while improving physician quality of life.

Top insights from the talk…

  • The physician workforce shortage is no longer just a rural problem—it’s spreading into urban markets due to shifting lifestyle priorities and structural inefficiencies.
  • “Top-of-license care” and team-based models are essential to scaling access without overburdening physicians.
  • Entrepreneurship in medicine isn’t glamorous—it’s messy, risky, and full of failure—but it may be one of the most viable paths forward.

Dr. Joe Pazona is a board-certified urologist and CEO of VirtuCare, where he develops scalable, team-based specialty care models that expand access and drive revenue for rural hospitals through hybrid care delivery. He has over a decade of clinical and leadership experience, including launching robotic surgery programs, building private practices, and pioneering telehealth-enabled service lines. As an entrepreneur, he specializes in healthcare innovation, physician workforce optimization, and aligning clinical operations with sustainable business models to address systemic gaps in specialty care.

Article written by MarketScale.

About the author

KS
Kevin Stevenson

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About the Expert

KS
Kevin Stevenson

Host, I'm Home: A Podcast About Health

Kevin Stevenson is a healthcare entrepreneur and podcast host focused on innovation in specialty care delivery. He has experience working at the intersection of physician practice, technology, and healthcare access. Stevenson is known for exploring solutions to structural gaps in the U.S. healthcare system.