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Career Options for Clinicians Outside the NHS — Dr Chuk Anyaegbuna

Dr Chuk Anyaegbuna shares his experience working at the intersection of clinical medicine and healthtech, offering practical advice on networking and finding the right role.

Chuk Anyaegbuna

Chuk Anyaegbuna

Featured Clinician

November 15, 2022·8 min read·541 words
Last updated March 16, 2026
Career Options for Clinicians Outside the NHS — Dr Chuk Anyaegbuna
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At BiteLabs, we teach healthcare professionals the skills required to build impactful health tech products. We're profiling some of the amazing clinicians who already work in the field — enjoy!

Dr Chuk Anyaegbuna — Clinician in HealthTech

What is the job?

I am a Clinical Lead at a mental health tech start-up. My company produces apps that help people with their mental health right across the continuum of mental well-being. This includes apps that help people reduce stress, build resilience, and improve their sleep as well as making apps that help people with established clinical conditions such as depression, body dysmorphic disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder manage their condition better, with the support of a therapist.

How does it compare to your clinical career?

I want to be very honest about this. The grass is not always greener. Your career may not look like what you imagined, and you might always wonder 'what could have been.' But try and take solace in the fact that you made the decision for a reason and that all you can do is still continue to grow and impact your very own narrow slice of the world.

Another point of comparison is what's more stressful. I subscribe to the idea that a good life is choosing the type of problems you want to suffer for. For some in clinical medicine, they might choose the stresses of the unpredictability of the rota and the stress of life and death decisions. For those outside it, they are choosing no real respite from work.

How is it related to medicine — why were you suitable?

My role is directly related to medicine as I work in mental health. I think what people would say about my suitability is that I am very curious, believe everything can be figured out, and know a little to be dangerous about a lot of things. These traits help you in the slightly unpredictable world of start-ups, where especially in the earlier stages you need to have a lot of breadth across fields like sales, marketing, technology and data, product, and clinical.

How could someone go about getting into your field?

Learn the basics of what hiring managers and companies are looking for and what the process is (The book *Get Hired Now!* and the resources and job boards by Doctorpreneurs are a good place to start). However, also speak to lots of people and see if you can get in by The Third Door. Once you're inside, be useful.

Anything you'd do differently if you had the time again?

Speak to way more people. This doesn't have to be 'transactional' type networking but understand that a long time working in clinical medicine means you are at a real informational disadvantage as compared to the wider world.

What can I earn?

Really varies, and also depends on how much you negotiate. The best places to get an idea about this are Glassdoor and levels.fyi in the US. Glassdoor says that a clinical lead in London can earn anywhere from 35K to 90K so best to find out a salary band from the employer early on. This ensures you are only spending time on roles that can match your salary expectations.

Chuk Anyaegbuna

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Chuk Anyaegbuna

Featured Clinician

Chuk Anyaegbuna is a contributor to the BiteLabs Resource Library, bringing deep expertise in healthcare innovation and career development for clinicians transitioning to industry roles.

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