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The Business of Healthcare Podcast with Tara HumphreyAuthor: Tara Humphrey
Tara Humphrey looks behind-the-scenes at the business side of healthcare by talking to NHS and private healthcare leaders. And, throughout this podcast, she also shares her own project management and leadership insights. Tara has an MBA in Healthcare Leadership and Management and Leadership. She is the Founder and the Managing Director of THC Primary Care a leading healthcare consultancy. Language: en Genres: Business, Health & Fitness, Management Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it Trailer: |
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#370 Returning to Work After Bereavement: What Nobody Tells You About Grief and Work
Episode 370
Thursday, 2 April, 2026
Returning to work after bereavement is one of the hardest things you will ever navigate — and almost nobody talks honestly about what it looks like from the inside. In this episode of The Business of Healthcare, Tara Humphrey shares her personal experience of working while grieving after losing her daughter. This is not a how-to guide. It is an honest, unfiltered account of what grief at work actually feels like — the contradictions, the cost of showing up, and what has genuinely helped. If you are currently working through bereavement, managing a team member who has experienced loss, or trying to understand what grief in the workplace really looks like, this episode is for you. Tara covers: Why professionalism at work is not the same as being okay The deliberate decision to keep work life and home life separate whilst grieving Why well-meaning messages during working hours can make things harder, not easier The difference between distraction and displacement — and why the language matters What hour-by-hour survival actually looks like on the worst days The role of therapy, trusted friendships, and small daily anchors in keeping going What managers and colleagues can do to genuinely support someone returning to work after bereavement Working whilst grieving is incredibly tough. If this reaches even one person who feels less alone because of it, that is enough.












