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Women in Healthcare Leadership: Mentorship, Boundaries, and Building Community
Description
In this special MGMA Insights Podcast episode for Women’s History Month, Daniel Williams, senior editor at MGMA and host of the MGMA Podcast Network, speaks with Cheryl Mongillo, Delores McNair and Paola Turchi, facilitators of MGMA’s Women Healthcare Leaders Resource Group. The dynamic conversation explores the realities of being a woman leader in healthcare today, including mentorship gaps, work-life integration, leadership isolation, vulnerability in the workplace, and the importance of creating trusted peer networks.
This episode offers a practical perspective for medical practice leaders looking to strengthen leadership development, build support systems, and create healthier workplace cultures.
Key Takeaways
- [0:52] – Why this conversation matters during Women’s History Month
Daniel introduces the episode and frames the discussion around MGMA’s Women Healthcare Leaders Resource Group, one of the association’s most active member communities. The episode sets out to examine what women in healthcare leadership are facing right now and how peer connection can help. - [2:08] – Cheryl Mongillo on the pressure facing independent practices
Cheryl explains how managing private and independent family practices has become far more complex, requiring leaders to understand population health, care management and regulatory change — not just front-office operations. For practice leaders, this reinforces the need to develop stronger administrative talent pipelines. - [3:29] – Delores McNair on bridging clinical and administrative leadership
Delores reflects on moving from the clinical side into management and administration, and why that dual perspective helps her mentor others. Her comments highlight a common challenge in medical groups: helping clinically trained professionals grow into business, operational and strategic leadership roles. - [5:17] – Paola Turchi on leadership isolation and the need for peer networks
Paola shares that leadership can become lonelier the further someone advances. She emphasizes the value of having a trusted group outside one’s organization — essentially a personal advisory board — to provide perspective, problem-solving support and honest feedback. - [8:54] – Women leaders are still struggling with work-life demands and missing mentorship
Cheryl says one of the biggest recurring themes in the group is the pressure to “do it all” at work and at home. She argues that leaders need to stop treating career and life as an all-or-nothing equation and instead build balance through boundaries, moderation and mentorship. - [11:31] – Bridging clinical and administrative leadership perspectives
Daniel asks Delores how her experience on both the clinical and administrative sides informs her leadership. She explains that this dual perspective allows her to translate frontline patient care realities into operational, financial and strategic decisions — helping leaders better advocate for resources, navigate compliance, and align clinical needs with business goals. - [14:27] – Protected reflection time is a leadership necessity, not a luxury
Paola points out that healthcare leaders spend their days putting out fires — provider issues, patient concerns, payer problems, audits and operational disruptions. Her key takeaway for practice leaders: create intentional time to reflect, review root causes and improve processes, or the organization stays stuck in reactive mode. - [17:56] – Vulnerability and psychological safety help teams grow
Cheryl discusses how leaders and teams can create space for vulnerability by not taking every question, critique or differing opinion pers