Dr. George Adams joins us for a powerful conversation on leadership, resilience, and what it really looks like to push a field forward when most people are still holding back.
In this episode, George shares what it felt like to be criticized for doing things “too early” and why those same critics eventually came to him privately for advice. He reflects on the experiences that shaped his mindset long before medicine, including the work ethic he learned from his father and the losses that gave him clarity on what really matters.
We talk about how he approaches innovation, the decisions behind treating intermittent claudication, and why he believes progress in medicine is messy but necessary. If you’ve ever felt resistance for doing things differently, this one will resonate.
🎧 A real conversation about leading with integrity, learning from pushback, and staying grounded in the middle of it all.
00:00 Meet Dr. George Adams
03:42 What happens when you move faster than your field
10:12 Why some doctors stay silent
18:05 Personal loss and the power of showing up
30:41 Quality of life in the IC conversation
42:20 When the data is there but the system isn’t ready
51:44 What it means to lead from the inside
💡 Who Should Listen?
This episode is for physicians, interventionists, and anyone building something new in healthcare. If you’ve ever been told you were moving too fast or coloring outside the lines, this conversation is for you.
It’s also for leaders who believe patient care comes first, even when the system says otherwise.
About Dr. George Adams
Dr. George Adams is an interventional cardiologist, educator, and the Chief Medical Officer at Cordis. He’s known for his leadership in limb preservation and for building strong outpatient networks across the country. George brings clinical experience, strategy, and heart to everything he does.
Connect with George
🌐 UNC Health
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