Brain health is the new economic engine.
Dr. Patton is joined by Dr. Jochen Reiser, president and CEO of UTMB, to unpack “brain capital” in the age of AI. During this conversation, you'll learn how investing in mental resilience, cognitive skills, and neurodiversity can boost productivity, reduce sick days, and future‑proof institutions.
Learn more about Dr. Jochen Reiser:
https://www.utmb.edu/president/home/office-of-the-president-home-page
Learn more about the UTMB Blue Zone Project: https://www.utmb.edu/spph/about-us/news/article/news/2026/03/06/utmb-launches-blue-zones-project-in-galveston
Learn more about Dr. Eddie Patton HERE.
Subscribe to Your Health, Your Wealth on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your favorite podcasts.
Key Takeaways
1. Brain capital combines brain health and brain skills—like adaptability, judgment, and complex problem‑solving—and is emerging as critical infrastructure for growth in an AI‑driven economy.
2. Brain health and mental health are inseparable; untreated stress, burnout, and mental illness erode productivity, increase sick days, and make the overall “brain economy” negative.
3. UTMB is making brain capital a strategic priority by aligning education, clinical care, research, and innovation around brain and mental health, from preferential funding for brain projects to system‑wide AI adoption that elevates, rather than replaces, human roles.
4. Practical initiatives, like connectivity apps that strengthen workplace relationships, broad town halls about AI, and deliberate inclusion of neurology and psychiatry at the C‑suite table, show how organizations can build trust while rolling out new technology.
5. Neurodiversity and prevention matter: recognizing different learning and working styles, investing in dementia prevention, and community efforts like UTMB’s Blue Zones Project Galveston can expand brain capital across entire regions, not just within hospitals.
Timestamped Overview
00:00 Dr. Patton welcomes listeners, introduces Dr. Jochen Reiser, and frames the conversation around brain economy and brain health in a tech‑driven healthcare climate, noting that Reiser is joining from Europe.
00:50 Dr. Reiser thanks him, jokes about staying away from kidney physiology, and sets a collegial tone for the discussion.
01:05 Dr. Patton asks about Reiser’s journey from Germany to UTMB in Galveston, Texas.
01:20 Reiser describes studying medicine in Germany, completing a scientific thesis in molecular kidney disease that became a five‑year PhD, and doing early research at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York before building his physician‑scientist career at Einstein, Harvard, University of Miami, Rush, and ultimately becoming president and CEO of UTMB.
03:02 Patton lays out key stats: brain‑related health issues, lost workdays, and over a trillion dollars in lost productivity, then defines brain capital as the combination of brain health and brain skills and cites estimates that investing in brain capital could add roughly 1.9 trillion dollars to U.S. GDP, before asking what brain capital means to Reiser as a leader.
04:46 Reiser explains that brain health and mental health are inseparable, argues that AI makes investing in the human brain more urgent than ever, and describes the current “negative” brain economy that results when brain and mental health needs are ignored.
06:00 He outlines how improving brain and mental health, and treating related diseases more effectively, can turn the brain economy positive—boosting financial output and positioning people and institutions to harness AI instead of being replaced by it.
07:00 Patton notes how fast AI is advancing and stresses the importance of investing in people, not just technology, to raise institutional productivity.
07:25 Reiser defines brain capital in practice: building brain skills, cognitive resilience, and mental resilience so people can take on more strategic work, earn more, and essentially get a “promotion” in their roles as their brain health improves.
08:15 Patton asks what UTMB is doing specifically to improve productivity and address brain health and brain capital across the organization.
08:28 Reiser describes UTMB as an ecosystem—students, healthcare delivery, research, and innovation—and explains how all of these domains are being aligned around improving brain health, building brain skills, and making people fully AI‑ready.
09:30 He gives an example of research prioritization, where brain and mental health projects are preferred when resources are allocated, sending a clear signal about institutional priorities.
10:42 Patton frames this as a mindset shift for healthcare leaders who have historically focused mainly on efficiency and cost, and asks how hard it has been to get people to embrace investing in employees’ brain health.
11:44 Reiser shares the story of a new connectivity app that lets staff across campuses recognize and compliment each other, noting that it quickly reached about 20,000 subscriptions and revealed a strong desire for connection.
12:40 He explains how visible, implemented projects like this build trust, showing that leadership is not just pushing technology down but helping people “lift up” into higher‑level roles, and shares that engagement survey results have been very positive.
13:30 Reiser emphasizes that UTMB is both heavily invested in AI across the organization and deeply committed to “human” or “actual” intelligence, and that supporting brain and mental health actually makes staff more willing to adopt AI in their daily work.
14:08 Patton calls UTMB a trendsetter and asks Reiser to look 10 years ahead: what will the conversation around brain capital and brain health look like?
14:28 Reiser describes a growing global and regional movement—from World Economic Forum efforts, to Houston’s Project MEDIS, to the UTMB transformation—focused on raising the brain economy, and shares that international audiences are excited about Texas’s approach.
15:30 He hopes that in 10 years we’ll see fewer sick days, more mentally resilient people, and an AI landscape where humans focus on long‑term strategy and ethics while AI handles routine tasks.
16:00 Reiser also hopes for less mental illness and dementia, citing Texas’s Dementia Prevention Research Institute and the state’s opportunity to be a model for brain‑health‑driven policy and practice.
17:02 Patton connects this to the financial bottom line, noting that worry about jobs and the future can undermine productivity, and highlights the opportunity to unlock hidden economic value by investing in human capital.
17:57 Reiser warns that telling people “don’t worry, it will be okay” is not enough, because AI will keep advancing; instead, organizations must actively prepare people for AI and focus on brain health and mental health as “the new gym” of the next decade.
18:40 He points out that brain capacity has declined over recent years despite more technology, partly because we are not engaging with tech in brain‑healthy ways, and notes the brain fog many people feel after long days on screens.
19:22 Reiser says UTMB is developing programs to help people use technology more positively, and Patton reinforces the idea with a quick explanation of “use it or lose it” and neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to rewire with use.
19:55 Reiser offers a simple brain‑exercise tip: on your next drive home, skip the navigation app and consciously remember your route to challenge focus and memory.
20:11 Patton moves to closing themes and asks for practical steps healthcare leaders can take, even on a small scale, to start implementing brain health and brain economy principles across their workforce.
20:45 Reiser suggests re‑shaping leadership teams so that AI, neurology, and psychiatry voices are regularly at the C‑suite table, emphasizing bottom‑up design instead of top‑down edicts.
21:30 He stresses the importance of honest, ongoing conversations about AI’s impact paired with realistic hope about the ways organizations are elevating human brain and mental capital.
22:10 Reiser introduces neurodiversity as a key theme, arguing that instead of forcing everyone toward the “middle,” organizations should recognize and support diverse learning and working styles to unlock greater productivity.
23:08 He criticizes narrow, small‑group pilots as the only forum for AI discussions and urges broader, more inclusive conversations that engage more of the workforce.
23:34 Patton says he’s even more excited after the conversation and encourages embracing AI while also investing in ourselves and our brains, then asks where listeners can learn more about UTMB’s initiatives.
24:10 Reiser points listeners to UTMB town halls and describes UTMB’s leadership of the Blue Zone project in Galveston—a four‑year effort to create healthier environments, food options, and community activities to support long‑term health and brain capital.
25:20 He shares his optimism that other organizations will follow and that humans can continue to “dominate” AI by leveraging uniquely human brain and mental capacities.
25:43 Patton thanks Reiser for the conversation on brain health and brain capital and expresses hope to have him back for future updates.
26:06 Reiser thanks Patton and the audience for the opportunity.
26:14 Patton closes the episode by encouraging listeners to share the show, apply key takeaways, and “exercise, relax, and take care of your brain” because it is a core part of their capital and contribution to society.

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