Biography

Dr. Bryant Adibe is the Jay S. Sugarman Practitioner in Residence in the School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University.

Previously, Dr. Adibe served as System Vice President and Chief Wellness Officer at Rush University System for Health in Chicago, Illinois. He also held the distinction of off-site, full Professor of Organizational Change and Leadership at the University of Southern California.

At Rush, he founded the Center for Clinical Wellness, an innovative facility designed to study and treat the effects of burnout and emotional exhaustion on healthcare workers. His work has been featured by the National Academy of Medicine, American Medical Association, American Psychiatric Association, and other leading outlets.

Dr. Adibe is a graduate of Cambridge University. He earned his medical degree from the University of Florida College of Medicine. He completed clinical clerkships in Emergency Medicine at both Harvard Medical School and the Stanford School of Medicine. As a graduate student, he studied health policy and evidence-based healthcare at Oxford University.

Select Publications

Clinician Wellness Is an Operations Issue

Watch the video here.

Episode 8: Who’s Caring for the Caregiver? Strategies for Reducing Clinician Burnout

“Host Heather Howard explores the drivers of clinician burnout along with the rising costs with Dr. Bryant Adibe, Sugarman Practitioner in Residence at Princeton's School of Public and International Affairs, and Dr. Wayne Jonas, a practicing family physician and President of the Healing Works Foundation.”

Systems Summit on Clinical Wellbeing

The Systems Summit on Clinical Wellbeing at Princeton University was a first-of-its-kind event designed by Dr. Bryant Adibe to bring together thought leaders from across disciplines to catalyze fresh ideas and elevate new perspectives in the pursuit of clinical wellbeing. Co-sponsored by the American Medical Association (AMA), Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), Healing Works Foundation, and Princeton University’s Center for Health and Wellbeing and the Kahneman-Treisman Center for Behavioral Science & Public Policy, this invitation-only gathering was limited to fewer than 100 key individuals from a myriad of backgrounds including clinical medicine, health system leadership, healthcare economics, behavioral science, and health policy.

Watch the video here.

vitals.

A quarterly publication exploring clinical wellbeing through the lens of health policy, economics, and technology.

Contact@BryantAdibe.com