Upon completing her medical training, Wible worked for several years in a variety of medical settings, including hospital-based clinics and community health centers. when she became increasingly frustrated with short patient-appointments and other restrictions, and so she stopped her work in the year 2004, and then in 2005 she held a series of "town hall" meetings where she invited community members to write out what they felt would be the features of an "ideal clinic". She has also helped do a similar town-hall feedback session with a hospital in
Chippewa Valley in 2010. Wible's clinic includes same-day appointments, appointments that start on time and a smaller practice size. She also emphasizes "patient-focused medicine". She also collects stories of doctor suicides as a way of raising awareness of the problem. Wible's work on doctor suicide prevention is featured in the documentary film
Do No Harm: Exposing the Hippocratic Hoax, by filmmaker Robyn Symon. Wible also has a
blog called
Ideal Medical Care which shares physician's stories of their treatment while being trained and also stories of suicides by physicians and trainees. Wible has also been critical of medical
animal testing. In February 2023, three United States senators sent a letter to the Department of Justice which cited a study by Wible in a call to investigate state medical boards which discriminate against physicians on the basis of disabilities, including mental health issues. ==Published works==