The MeidasTouch Podcast - Meidas Health, Episode 11: Dr. Tina Shah and the Nation's Most Flippable House Seat
Episode Date: July 13, 2025Dr. Tina Shah—pulmonologist, public servant, and technology leader—joins host Dr. Vin Gupta to discuss the launch of her campaign to unseat one of the most vulnerable Republicans in the country in... 2026. NJ-7 is already gaining national attention, and with the repeal of Medicaid and RFK’s remake of HHS, Dr. Shah highlights her platform, her vision, and what it’s going to take to win—and help Democrats take back the House. This is a must-listen! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi, everybody. Welcome to Midas Health. The reason we're doing Midas Health is the same
reason we've done it since day one. We're trying to bring
the nation's best healthcare leaders to all of you. It's a wide listenership. Midas Touch
is doing amazing work and we get to reach all of you across the country. What we've
been doing since day one is bringing you the best healthcare thinkers, leaders, doctors,
you name it, because clearly those people are not populating the highest reaches of government.
I'm really excited to have my friend, colleague, Dr. Tina Shaw, fellow pulmonologist, joining
us for episode 10.
She just announced her candidacy in the Democratic primary for the New Jersey 7th congressional
district.
It's one of the top flip opportunities for the Democrats in 2026.
So we're trying to get control of the house. Tina and her district and her race is critical.
So even if you don't live in Jersey, this is a race that is going to get national attention
and for good reason. And she's going to be the front runner to take that seat. And that's
why we have her here today. So Dr. Tina Shock, thanks for having, thanks for coming on and
letting us take a little bit of your time. I know this is a busy week.
Well, I love it. Thank you so much for having me, Vin. It's so nice to be introduced by
fellow pulmonologists. Maybe we can nerd out about lungs later.
Yeah, yeah. But you know, we want to make sure that people stay engaged. So maybe that's
a, that's going to be a lower priority here, but I always want to do that with you. And I'm thrilled to see somebody with your backgrounds, frankly, fellow pulmonologists,
practicing clinician, Obama-Biden administrations and deep, deep serious policy goals.
Tina, tell us a little bit about yourself and why you decided to jump into this race.
You know, I'm a Jersey girl and I was privileged to become a doctor.
And what I always wanted to do was take care of people.
I envisioned my whole life,
I would be this full-time practicing doctor.
And what I can tell you now is that
it feels like it doesn't matter what I do.
I practiced just like you.
You know, I was just working last week in the hospital
and I know exactly
what to do, but there's so much bureaucracy and there are so many roadblocks and there's
so many patients that just say, hey, my insurance denied care that I literally feel like I can't
take care of my fellow human beings as much as I want to.
And then you mentioned, I've been privileged to try and think through how do we actually change US healthcare?
I've served in the White House, I actually served in VA and for the Surgeon General.
And it just feels like I keep hitting my head up against the ceiling.
It really is time to go upstream.
We now have this threat to science with cutting funding for the research that has allowed
us to be able to provide medical treatments.
We just passed a bill that is cutting Medicaid, and I know you've spoken a lot about that. And that is going to affect millions of people, especially folks in my district.
But really, it has a ripple effect. So no matter who you are, if you want to maintain your health,
it's now at risk. And that's why I'm running in New Jersey seventh. I have a member of Congress, Tom Kane Jr.
who literally just voted and he cast the deciding vote
to cut Medicaid as he passed this, you know,
big ugly bill.
It's just not okay, enough is enough.
Yeah, and I should make sure our listeners know
this is in 24, and correct me if I'm wrong here
on the numbers, this is an R plus two district in 24, something similar in 22.
Biden won it in 20 by I think plus four.
So I mean, this is as flippable as it gets.
Is that right?
That's right.
That's right.
And I think people are really starting to show their true colors.
This is a district of folks that are moderate, that really just want to be
able to live their lives. And it is one of the top 10 flippable districts in the country.
You know, it's interesting to say that because I know you and I have had this conversation
offline, but yesterday, as people start to understand what the big, ugly bill as you pointed out, what that's
actually doing to Medicaid, which reaches 80 million people.
It's not even the fine print.
It's fundamentally Medicaid provides more healthcare access for children than any other
health insurance program in the country.
And when I say that to people, it surprises them.
And just the lack of understanding on some of
what actually is at stake here because the top line is work requirements. There's so
much misunderstanding, misinformation and confusion. I'm wondering how you're going
to break through that. Let's look past the binary. I'm treating you as the nominee because
I think you're going to be the nominee. How are you going to deal with that? Because I'm sure Keem's going to throw everything
and the kitchen sink at you.
Well, I think this is just about focusing to say, look,
health care is under threat right now.
We literally have a country that's in critical condition.
And I am a doctor who takes care of patients day in and day
out and can feel the pain because I'm
in the mix with everyone.
And I want to tell you, Vin, I saw someone, I took care of a patient who got hospitalized, day in and day out and can feel the pain because I'm in the mix with everyone.
And you know, I want to tell you, Vin, I saw someone, I took care of a patient who got
hospitalized recently who had, you know, this life-threatening pneumonia, got put on a ventilator
and his lungs were too weak for us to take him off.
And he actually needed to go to a rehab for his lungs and he didn't have health insurance.
But guess what?
He was eligible for
Medicaid. And we were actually able to enroll him and send him to a rehab center. So now he will
eventually get off the ventilator and be able to go back to living his best life. You know, Tom Kane
Jr., he's not surrounded by people that have this story. I see these stories every single day. And
that's exactly what's happening in the district. So for me, this is really about bringing science
and sanity back to Congress.
And this is the right time for more doctors
to come into Congress because this is our calling,
it's our service.
We take care of our patients and our community.
Thanks so much.
I think so much of this is about the moment, Tina,
and timing. And this is incredible the moment, Tina, and timing.
And this is incredible timing.
This is an incredible moment.
And I think you just, your background especially, I want to take a step back and it wasn't just
public service with Dr. Tina Jha.
You've seen, you've seemingly seen every element of society, especially across the healthcare
ecosystem. Tell us, tell us about your role at a bridge, sort of, you had a, a stint there
at an interesting health technology company. And I say that because for our listeners here,
it's really important to have people in Congress that understand where the puck is headed in society, much less healthcare,
but even more broadly.
7% of your future potential colleagues are part of the AI task force.
That shocks me.
The lack of just involvement and deep understanding of something like artificial intelligence
at the highest levels of government.
And I'm wondering, one, if you can tell our listeners about your
multidisciplinary background, especially in tech and what, and how
are you going to leverage that, uh, you know, to, to be a different type of leader.
I love this question, Ben.
And what I'll say foundationally is that I think one of the most sacred
things that we should protect is that relationship between a patient
and their doctor and their nurse.
And what I've experienced being a family member, being a patient myself, being a doctor, is that for some reason we've literally designed health care to blow that up and put obstacles in our way.
So my career trajectory has been about trying to take the things that are in between me and my
patients out of the room so that we can just be together
and then focus on their health. So yes, you know, I've been privileged to practice. And
recently I worked for a company as the chief clinical officer, which is the chief medical
officer and this company's name is ABRIDGE. Now we've all gone to the doctor and you know,
the doctor is kind of paying attention to you, but also kind of paying attention to the computer, right?
You and me do this.
We have to document for all those reasons to work.
We want to do the right thing and be present for our patients, but just the way things
have been designed, we just can't.
What I want to share is that I was privileged to work for an AI company that is actually a great use case of
how we can safely use AI and it's completely transforming US healthcare. So again, with this
theme of how do we get rid of the barriers and the friction in healthcare, when I was Chief
Clinical Officer, we took this company that literally was an app on your phone that listened
to the doctor and the patient and you patient and whoever else was in the room,
let's say the nurse or the spouse,
and actually wrote the doctor's documentation
and at the same time wrote a summary for the patient
about what the heck was talked about during that visit.
And so we have all of a sudden this shift of,
I'm a doctor, I'm distracted, I'm trying to type,
and I'm trying to listen to my patient, and I feel all this pressure to get things done quickly to it's just you and
me in the room. I'm looking at you straight in your eyes and what we've seen is remarkable.
We've seen this actually completely transform how physicians feel. We're now actually bending the
curve where physicians are starting to stay in the healthcare workforce and patients are saying, my doctor listened to me.
So what I want to do when I go to Congress is help bring this understanding of how we
can leverage AI in a safe way and quickly because there really is a lot there.
And you're right, we actually have an AI literacy problem up on the hill.
I want to solve for that.
I love that. And just for our listeners here, Dr. Tina Shaw is a different type of leader.
You know, there's other physicians in Congress, and she'll actually just on the numbers, tend to be Republican. All of them, by the way, as a reminder, voted for this bill that passed. And so just being a doctor doesn't necessarily mean you're going
to vote in the best interests of the American people. We just saw that play out multiple
times across a range of votes. You know, RFK getting confirmed, the bill yesterday, especially
defunding a huge portion of Medicaid,
taking it for 80 million Americans.
And so just being a doctor isn't enough anymore.
It's being the right type of doctor.
It's being a modern physician.
That's Dr. Tina Shaw.
She understands the public sector.
She's been at the front lines of COVID.
She still is a practicing physician since she sees exactly what we're
seeing in hospitals. And oh, by the way, she's versed in things like generative artificial
intelligence where the puck ascended. We need future facing leaders that understand where
we're headed as a society now, you know, where we were at 30 years ago. And so Tina, I love
that about you. You know, curious if you can give not just your future constituents, but all listeners across
the country, a sense of what your top priorities will be day one Congress.
Well, I think this is really a pivotal moment because what we're watching is the act of
destruction of US healthcare.
Now, I'm not saying our system didn't have problems to begin with, but we're literally
dismantling it at a faster and faster clip.
So one of the things that will happen when I become a member of Congress and flip the
seat is that we'll contribute to the House now turning blue.
And we've, you know, I think it's astounding that RFK and Trump allowed the experts that
determine our vaccines so that kids can stay healthy, adults can stay
healthy, they just wiped out the experts.
And they put folks on there, on the board to advise about the vaccines for the country
that are not scientists and are not medical professionals.
So my first thing is going to be healthcare first and foremost.
We just need to make sure we restore science when we make health care and hold RFK accountable.
And what I can tell you is that in the seventh district, the current member of Congress,
Tom Kane Jr., is just not doing that.
So I think we really need to stabilize how U.S. health care is.
Beyond that, I think there are many different aspects that we need to address.
If you just take a step back, the biggest theme that's cross cutting is affordability.
We can't afford medicines. I took care of a patient the other day who said he's rationing
his insulin, taking it every other day, and he showed up with a life threatening complication
called DKA, which I know you take care of as well, where his sugar is way too high.
But he had insurance and his insurance company said, Hey, this is not part of our,
our plan. You got to pay out of pocket. That's unbelievable. But housing is affordable. You
know, education is unaffordable. And these are the lived experiences that I will bring
to the table so that I can help not only for the folks that live in New Jersey seventh,
but this is a national issue. We really need to think about affordability because
everyone is working harder these days, yet somehow our quality of life has gone down.
Absolutely. Actually, you know, it's three seats, right? We need some, the Democrats
need three seats to flip the house. Is that, is that the motion?
That's right. And that's why we should consider my race, New Jersey 7th, a national race.
This is one of the highest ranked seats that could flip.
And when it flips and I become that member, then it'll be one of the three required to
flip the house.
And then we start seeing the checks and balances come back.
Unfortunately, we're not seeing Trump being held accountable.
It's playing out in every single facet of American life.
That's right.
Again, New Jersey seventh, it's been rated by the political report, other forecasters,
Larry Sabato, you know, I was going through it right before we came on.
This is one of the top most competitive races in the country.
Make no mistake about it. So everything that Dr. Shah is mentioning, this is not just if you live in New Jersey seven,
this is for all of us because Tina's vote can really flip how we think about things
like affordability, Medicaid access, you know, everything that's happening right now does
not have to be irreversible. Everything is reversible. Tina, I know you have a busy weekend ahead.
So I do want to give you a chance
to let our listeners know how we can be helpful to you.
What are the best ways
and where can we learn more about your bio?
If we're inclined to donate, where can we donate?
Well, I would love for you to join the team and I'd like to direct you to go to dr.
Tina Shaw for congress.com.
That is our official campaign website and we're looking for everybody that wants to
help because this really is about building a coalition and a movement to restore science
and sanity back in Congress.
You know, I want to say it's not rocket science,
but it is really hard.
And I really need your help to help unseat Tom Kane Jr.
If you're able to, I'd love for you to donate to the campaign.
It's a multimillion dollar race.
And that's just the reality of what
it takes to put a doctor back into Congress.
And we really need more.
So Vin, I just want to say, this is such an exciting time in a way.
The silver lining is that we might finally be able to address the broken parts of US healthcare and
all these challenges we have with affordability because of where we are as a country. And I hope
folks will be willing to join me because I'm going to need your help to do it. You know, whether it's $20, whether it's 200, if it's something more,
go to dr.
Tina Shah, dr.
Tina Shah for congress.com to learn more about Dr.
Shah. I promise you, and I don't say this slightly, I really do not say this
slightly. Her background is that of the modern physician, the modern healthcare leader.
And what I think needs to be more and more common, the type of person that should be
representing the United States in Congress.
We need people that are actually credentials, that actually know what they're talking about,
that understand things that are going to dominate our future like artificial intelligence.
And Tina checks all those boxes.
By the way, she's also just a great person. I've gotten to know her recently and I've loved every part of it. Tina,
I want to do whatever I can to be helpful to get more doctors like you in Congress,
especially, you know, as I used to call the cake day, you're a fellow pulmonologist.
So Tina, I'm going to give you your last word here. Just give us some, you know, I know a lot of people are struggling, given the events
of yesterday and give us, leave us with some words of optimism and hope.
Well, you know, we're sitting here recording on 4th of July and it always gives me pause
to say what I love about being American is that we are a democracy.
We are allowed to be allowed.
We are allowed to have our own opinions
and share them and express them.
And the American dream is real.
And I don't want folks to forget that.
While we are disappointed with what Congress has done,
there are people like me that are stepping up now
to be the real voice of everyone in our communities
to make sure that we protect reproductive rights,
that we protect access to healthcare and restore Medicaid,
and we make sure that it is affordable to live in the US.
So this is a time to take a beat
and then to take out your arms and your hands and link them
because we are going to win the house again
and we are going to improve America to its highest heights.
I'm so excited about this and I just can't wait to help and do that work.
Awesome. Dr. Tina Shaw. Thanks so much. Dr. Tina Shaw for being here.
And we're going to have you back on soon.
All right. Thank you.
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