
Sarah Peters
Healthcare Sector ManagerIntrobaSarah Peters is a Sector Manager for the Healthcare practice at Introba. She is a mechanical engineer by training and has 9 years of experience in the design and planning of healthcare facilities. She has worked with privately owned, state owned and managed, and government properties to deliver engineering design, facility condition assessments, and master plans. She enjoys collaborating with architects and owners to deliver safe, efficient, and sustainable healthcare spaces. She is passionate about mentorship and organized national programs at former companies, served as co-chair of the mentorship committee for Women in Healthcare DC, and mentored many staff through their first healthcare projects.
R09 – Effective Mentorship for Building Leaders
Healthcare projects require rapid decision making, deep technical expertise, and steady leadership - often before individuals formally hold leadership…Healthcare projects require rapid decision making, deep technical expertise, and steady leadership - often before individuals formally hold leadership titles. As healthcare project complexity and delivery speed increases, gaps in experience, confiden…Healthcare projects require rapid decision making, deep technical expertise, and steady leadership - often before individuals formally hold leadership titles. As healthcare project complexity and delivery speed increases, gaps in experience, confidence, and cross-disciplinary understanding can introduce risk to project outcomes. This facilitated roundtable will explore how intentional, project embedded mentorship partnered with more formal progra…Healthcare projects require rapid decision making, deep technical expertise, and steady leadership - often before individuals formally hold leadership titles. As healthcare project complexity and delivery speed increases, gaps in experience, confidence, and cross-disciplinary understanding can introduce risk to project outcomes. This facilitated roundtable will explore how intentional, project embedded mentorship partnered with more formal programs can be used to develop healthcare leaders early, strengthen succession planning, and reduce burnout. Participants will discuss strategies for identifying potential, assigning responsibility incrementally, and creating safe stretch roles on live projects to allow emerging professionals to learn and grow without compromising project quality and delivery. The discussion will focus on mentorship in high-stress, fast-track healthcare environments, where redline-based teaching and reactive problem solving often falls short. Facilitators and attendees will share approaches to decision-based mentorship that help staff understand the "why" behind technical, operational, and design decisionsShow MoreClick the title to see all detailsShow More