Many people ask me why, after being a rehabilitation physician, head of department, author, and teacher, I chose to become an autonomy coordinator. The answer fits in one sentence: I left my comfort zone to enter my impact zone.
In the hospital, I treated patients. But I saw every day that the real challenge was not only in medical protocols, but in patients’ daily lives: a broken schedule, an uninformed care assistant, a lack of teleassistance, a blocked administrative file. These details undermined autonomy more than many pathologies.
With Jamacare, I chose to act where families need help immediately:
Reliable, supported care assistants,
Already operational teleassistance,
Handling the administrative load that overwhelms caregivers.
Yes, Kinexa is developing promising technology that will strengthen and streamline this work. But in the meantime, I already provide solutions. Because families cannot wait.
I decided to place my medical expertise in service of this mission: building a system where autonomy is secured — not through promises, but through action. And I am convinced that it is by leaving the comfort zone that we create real solutions.
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