This week, Aashi Arora sat down with Dr. Saba Fatima, a pediatric hospitalist, researcher, writer, and creator of Muted in Medicine, for a conversation about identity, grief, belonging, and the hidden emotional labor carried by people in healthcare.From her childhood in Karachi, to medical training in Philadelphia, to caring for hospitalized children in Kansas, Saba’s story offers a close look at what happens behind the curtain of modern medicine. She reflected on the loss of a pediatric patient early in her career, the isolation of litigation, the search for community, and the moment she realized she had to create the resources she once needed.She spoke about identity as an immigrant woman of color, the relief of embracing her real self, and the power of narrative medicine to help people name the experiences they have been taught to hide. Through her honesty, she gives voice to the struggles that many clinicians keep quiet for years.
💡 Leadership Lessons from Dr. Saba Fatima’s Episode
🔸 Silence Creates Harm. Saba explained how the culture of perfection in medicine discourages people from sharing fear, grief, or uncertainty. By speaking openly, she invites others to release the weight they have been carrying alone.
🔸 Systems Shape Outcomes More Than Individuals. Her work in patient safety highlights that errors rarely come from one person. They come from imperfect environments, staffing gaps, and pressures that compound. Real progress begins when we study the system instead of the individual.