Since childhood, she knew she wanted to be in healthcare. Decades later, she found a way to do it from three fronts at once: clinical practice, research, and content creation.
@nad.gcastDoctor · Dentistry · Scientific research · Content creator
Who she is and what she does
Nad is at one of the most fulfilling moments of her career. After years of clinical and academic training, she now works at the intersection of three worlds she is passionate about: clinical practice, scientific research, and education. Projects that combine health, science, and dissemination — and amidst all this, she also finds time to create content.
It's not a common combination. But for her, it makes perfect sense.
Why she chose this path
This was truly a lifelong dream.
As a child, Nad played with her dolls, pretending to treat them as patients. There was no doubt she wanted to be in healthcare — the only question was which branch. For years, she wavered between medicine and dentistry, unable to fully decide.
Ultimately, she chose to be a dentist. And over time, that difficult decision became the confirmation that she had listened well to her own instincts.
"For me, being able to practice this profession was fulfilling a dream I had since I was very little."
What she believes about her work
For Nad, the most valuable part of what she does isn't just in the clinic. It's in the possibility of generating knowledge that benefits others — from clinical practice, from research, from what she shares on social media.
She has always felt that her work has a greater purpose than herself: to contribute something that improves someone's quality of life, or that opens new possibilities in the field of health. Learning and sharing, for her, are not separate activities — they are part of the same cycle.
"It fills me with joy to know that with what I learn and share, I can improve someone's quality of life or open new possibilities in the field of health."
The moment she won't forget
It wasn't a clinical case. It wasn't a particular patient. It was her graduation day.
That day represented something that goes beyond a title: it was the visible proof of years of effort, difficult decisions, sacrifices made by herself and her family. At that moment, she looked back and could clearly see everything she had overcome to get there.
She felt pride. She felt gratitude. And an emotion that, she says, is hard to put into words — because it wasn't just hers. It also belonged to everyone who was by her side along the way.
How she maintains balance
Nad discovered long ago that professional performance and personal well-being are not separate things — one feeds the other.
That's why she intentionally cares for her routine. She likes to start the day calmly, giving herself time to mentally organize before starting work. Walking, listening to music, having coffee. Small rituals that seem simple but make a difference in how she approaches each day.
"For me, personal well-being is closely related to professional performance."
Where she's going and what she tells newcomers
In ten years, Nad imagines herself leading purpose-driven projects — adding value in health and science, without losing balance with her personal life. More than a title or a position, what she seeks is to continue growing, continue learning, and do something that has a real impact on people's lives.
For anyone wanting to follow in her footsteps, she has advice that comes from personal experience:
Trust your process. Don't be afraid to make different decisions, to doubt, to change course if necessary. Passion is the engine — but the path is rarely a straight line, and that's okay too.
Don't compare yourself. Respect your own pace. And remember that every step, even the most difficult or those that don't turn out as expected, are part of what makes you unique as a professional and as a person.
"It's okay to doubt, change course, and start over as many times as necessary."