
Putting the Mouth Back into the Body Politic | Sara Hurley
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Public Service = Designing Fairness at Scale.
In this episode of Messy, Daniel Atlin is joined by Sara Hurley, former Chief Dental Officer for England, a leader whose career spans frontline clinical care, military service, and senior government leadership. Few have operated as consistently at the intersection of individual care, institutional complexity, and public policy.
Sara offers a deeply reflective account of leadership in the mess.
Drawing on her experience during COVID, she describes what it feels like to make decisions when there are no good options — only trade-offs. In these moments, she argues, leadership is not about projecting certainty, but about holding uncertainty on behalf of others, while maintaining trust, clarity, and integrity.
The conversation moves fluidly between the personal and the systemic:
• The shift from authority to trust as the foundation of leadership
• The emotional labour of carrying responsibility in complex systems
• The challenge of leading in environments where outcomes are delayed, diffuse, and often invisible
• The importance of stewardship — leaving systems better than you found them, even if the impact unfolds long after you’ve left
Sara also makes a compelling case for public service as one of the last places where fairness can be intentionally designed into systems at scale — an idea that feels increasingly urgent in a time of institutional mistrust.
At its core, this episode is about sensemaking: how leaders navigate ambiguity internally, while shaping systems externally.
It’s a conversation about leadership in the real world: messy, human, and deeply consequential.
If you like this episode please write a review and share it with a friend.
In this episode of Messy, Daniel Atlin is joined by Sara Hurley, former Chief Dental Officer for England, a leader whose career spans frontline clinical care, military service, and senior government leadership. Few have operated as consistently at the intersection of individual care, institutional complexity, and public policy.
Sara offers a deeply reflective account of leadership in the mess.
Drawing on her experience during COVID, she describes what it feels like to make decisions when there are no good options — only trade-offs. In these moments, she argues, leadership is not about projecting certainty, but about holding uncertainty on behalf of others, while maintaining trust, clarity, and integrity.
The conversation moves fluidly between the personal and the systemic:
• The shift from authority to trust as the foundation of leadership
• The emotional labour of carrying responsibility in complex systems
• The challenge of leading in environments where outcomes are delayed, diffuse, and often invisible
• The importance of stewardship — leaving systems better than you found them, even if the impact unfolds long after you’ve left
Sara also makes a compelling case for public service as one of the last places where fairness can be intentionally designed into systems at scale — an idea that feels increasingly urgent in a time of institutional mistrust.
At its core, this episode is about sensemaking: how leaders navigate ambiguity internally, while shaping systems externally.
It’s a conversation about leadership in the real world: messy, human, and deeply consequential.
If you like this episode please write a review and share it with a friend.
Chapters
- 00:01 Introduction to Sara Hurley and her leadership philosophy
- 02:15 Career reflection and coherence of service
- 05:55 Comparing Military and Government leadership contexts
- 09:00 Defining the role of Chief Dental Officer
- 12:08 Global connections and strategic impact
- 14:34 Public Service as personal calling
- 19:16 Family legacy of service
- 22:45 COVID-19 leadership challenges
- 26:52 Managing dental services during pandemic restrictions
- 30:53 Holding uncertainty as leadership responsibility
- 31:32 Building support networks during crisis
- 35:30 The emotiona weight of leadership
- 37:35 Transition to new chapter
- 40:46 The continued importance of public service
- 45:49 Advice for young leaders
- 48:59 Guidance for messy system leaders
- 51:08 Final reflections on leadership challenges





