

Ep 46 | "Aging While Caregiving" | Dr. Renee Dua | Nephrologist & Serial Co-Founder
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🎧 Episode Summary:
In this episode of NerdMDs Efficiency Unlocked, nephrologist and serial healthtech founder Dr. Renee Dua dives into the personal and systemic challenges of "aging while caregiving." From her pioneering days building a paperless medical practice to co-founding Heal and later Renee (a digital health assistant), she shares how her professional journey intersects with her personal experiences caring for aging parents. The conversation explores the invisible burdens placed on Gen X and Millennials, the financial and emotional toll of caregiving, and the systemic gaps in policy and innovation. Dr. Dua offers candid insights into the cultural, technological, and policy shifts needed to better support caregivers—without sacrificing their own health and future security.
🔹 00:00 – Introduction & BackgroundHost welcomes Dr. Renee Dua, introducing the episode’s theme of “aging while caregiving.” Renee recounts her path from practicing nephrologist to tech founder, including launching Heal, which grew to 13 states before being acquired by Humana. Her entrepreneurial drive emerged from a desire to amplify her reach beyond “hand-to-hand” patient care.
“Everybody should receive care this way—kids, moms, dads, parents—everyone in the community.”
🔹 04:33 – Founding Heal & Transition to Caregiver TechRenee shares how building Heal was both exhilarating and all-consuming—launching in multiple states while raising her children. After Heal’s acquisition, she co-founded Renee, a health assistant platform inspired by her experience managing her father’s medical needs. She reflects on the inefficiency of humans doing tasks software could automate, and the deeper realization of how caregiving impacts one’s own health and finances.
🔹 08:28 – The Caregiving Burden for Our GenerationThe discussion turns to the everyday challenges caregivers face—monitoring recurring medical issues, coordinating logistics, and balancing work, family, and self-care. Renee emphasizes how health and finances are intertwined, and how these pressures compound when caregivers lack medical knowledge or support networks.
“We are not able to both save for college and make sure our parents don’t keep falling.”
🔹 14:43 – Cultural Expectations & Uncompensated LaborRenee discusses cultural norms, such as the expectation in some Asian families that eldest daughters will care for aging parents. She points out that caregiving has been unpaid labor for so long that society assumes it should remain that way, despite its economic and emotional costs. She notes that startups in the space face a tricky go-to-market challenge, as neither employers nor insurers consistently see caregiving support as their responsibility.
🔹 21:24 – Policy Blind Spots & Certification BarriersRenee critiques the lack of robust caregiver policy across political administrations and questions why informal caregivers must be certified to be recognized or compensated. She suggests caregivers could be essential partners in closing care gaps—if health plans and policymakers valued their role.
🔹 26:02 – Global Models & InspirationFrom India’s multigenerational housing to Cuba’s community doctors, Renee outlines international examples of more integrated caregiving systems. She argues the U.S. could adapt similar models, combining cultural respect for elders with cutting-edge technology, but is hindered by a healthcare system designed to maximize profit over care.
🔹 34:28 – Looking Ahead: Caregiver Assessment & AIWhile still in early development, Renee’s next venture aims to use AI to assess future caregivers early in life, helping them prepare financially, emotionally, and medically before the caregiving stage begins. She stresses the need for proactive planning, rather than crisis-driven response.
🔹 38:29 – Nerd Alert RoundIn a lighter segment, Renee shares her love for morning walks and audiobooks (listening to 50–60 a year), her desire to master the stock market, and recent book recommendations including They Called Us Exceptional and Bono’s memoir. She also reflects on ignoring bad advice to “slow down” during fellowship—a choice that has shaped her rich, unconventional career.
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