From Medicine to UX: Why I Made the Switch
How a medical degree taught me diagnostic thinking, empathy, and systems reasoning — and why I chose to apply it to product design.
The switch from medicine to UX wasn't a pivot away from helping people — it was a pivot toward a different scale of impact.
The beginning
I spent six years studying medicine at Al-Farabi Kazakh National University. Medical school teaches you how to think under uncertainty, how to listen when the stakes are high, and how to build a mental model of complex systems from incomplete data. These are not soft skills. They are survival skills in a clinical setting.
But somewhere during those years, I realized something: the digital tools we used every day — patient management systems, scheduling apps, health portals — were almost universally terrible. Not just ugly. Actively harmful to workflow. Doctors and nurses spent more time fighting the interface than treating patients.
That friction stuck with me.
What medicine taught me about design
Medical training is, at its core, a diagnostic framework. You observe symptoms. You form hypotheses. You test them. You refine your understanding. And you do this under pressure, with real consequences.
UX research follows the same logic:
- Observe — Watch users interact with a product. Note what frustrates, confuses, or delights them.
- Hypothesize — Form a theory about why the friction exists. Is it information architecture? Visual hierarchy? Missing feedback?
- Test — Prototype a solution and put it in front of users.
- Refine — Iterate based on what you learn, not what you assumed.
The clinical mindset also taught me empathy that goes beyond surface-level. In medicine, you learn quickly that patients don't always describe their symptoms accurately. You have to listen for what they mean, not just what they say. The same is true for users describing their pain points.
The actual pivot
After graduating in 2022, I didn't abandon medicine overnight. I studied psychology through Yale's program, deepened my understanding of human behavior, and started exploring UX through structured learning — the Google UX Design Professional Certificate, Figma training, and eventually GenAI for UX Designers.
The more I learned, the clearer it became: I could help more people by designing better systems than by treating individual patients. Medicine saves lives one at a time. Good product design can improve the daily experience of millions.
What I bring that most designers don't
My medical background gives me three things that are hard to teach:
Systems thinking. Medicine is about understanding how interconnected systems affect each other. A symptom in one area often has its root cause somewhere else entirely. I apply the same thinking to product design — looking at the full system, not just the screen in front of me.
Diagnostic rigor. I don't guess at solutions. I investigate. I look at data, talk to users, map the system, and then design based on evidence. This isn't slower — it's more efficient, because you build the right thing the first time.
Clinical empathy. Not the watered-down "we care about users" kind. Real empathy — the kind you develop when someone is scared, in pain, and relying on you to help them make sense of what's happening. That depth of understanding shapes how I approach every interaction design decision.
Where I am now
Today I work at the intersection of UX, product design, and AI. I build AI-native products like Mira — a family AI assistant designed with ADHD-friendly interactions and medical-informed health tracking. I ship developer tools like Linkshot. I design resume builders that use provider-agnostic AI routing.
Every one of these products carries the influence of my medical training. Not in the content, but in the approach: diagnose the real problem, design the clearest solution, test it honestly, and iterate with precision.
The takeaway
If you're considering a non-traditional path into UX, here's what I've learned: your background isn't a weakness. It's your edge. The design world doesn't need more people who followed the same path. It needs people who can think differently about the same problems.
Medicine taught me to think in systems, listen with precision, and design for real human needs. That's not a career change. That's a foundation.