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Joe DuBose is a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute and the University of Virginia School of Medicine. He performed surgical training at Keesler Air Force Base Medical Center and the University of Virginia from 2001-2006. Additional fellowship training in surgical critical care and trauma surgery was completed at Los Angeles County + University of Southern California Hospital from 2006-2008. Lt Col DuBose has been a staff trauma surgeon and surgical intensivist at Wilford Hall Medical Center and as an assistant professor of surgery at R Adams Cowley Shock Trauma Center / University of Maryland since 2008. During that period he has deployed as a trauma director once to the Air Force Theater Hospital at Balad Air Base in Iraq (2009) and twice in support of Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan (Kandahar-2010; Bagram Air Base 2011-2012). He presently holds the title of Clinical Professor at the University of Maryland Medical Center. In this episode we talk to Dr. DuBose about his training pathway, his experience in the military, and about integrating his vascular training with his trauma background, which includes his thoughts about REBOA. As always, we love feedback and comments, and feel free to email us at podcast.cjs@gmail.com or on twitter @canjsurg . Thanks and enjoy the episode! Links: 1. Evolving Paradigms In Vascular Injury Management. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YfSYEM797Gg 2. Dr. Dubose’s Tiger Country podcast! https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/tiger-country-the-trauma-podcast-joseph-4L9V2rU8x53/ 3. EMCrit 281 – Why Can’t Emergency Medicine and Trauma Surgery Just Get Along?https://emcrit.org/emcrit/emergency-medicine-and-trauma-surgery-just-get-along/ 4. EMCrit170 – the ER REBOA Catheter with Joe DuBose. https://emcrit.org/emcrit/er-reboa/ 5. The AAST prospective Aortic Occlusion for Resuscitation in Trauma and Acute Care Surgery (AORTA) registry: Data on contemporary utilization and outcomes of aortic occlusion and resuscitative balloon occlusion of the aorta (REBOA). https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27050883/
Great leaders are usually also good followers. Leadership, Followership and the importance of focusing on SERVICE. These are the topics today as we talk with Colonel Don Taylor.Colonel Don Taylor has lived a life of service. He understands leadership and followership and service from both sides having served as an officer and of course, as a dedicated airmen charged with following orders from command. Throughout he has maintained a central theme of compassion and courage in leadership.Don is currently the Director for Integration, Southwestern Health Resources in Dallas, Texas.Before this, he served with the VA held many leadership positions in the community, private industry, and the U.S. Air Force. including service as the commander of the Air Force Theater Hospital at Balad Air Base, Iraq.Colonel Taylor is also the author of The Quiet Heroes: Timeless Reflections of an American Airman.Learn more about Colonel Taylor and order The Quiet Heroes here: http://dontaylortx.wi
Great leaders are usually also good followers. Leadership, Followership and the importance of focusing on SERVICE. These are the topics today as we talk with Colonel Don Taylor.Colonel Don Taylor has lived a life of service. He understands leadership and followership and service from both sides having served as an officer and of course, as a dedicated airmen charged with following orders from command. Throughout he has maintained a central theme of compassion and courage in leadership.Don is currently the Director for Integration, Southwestern Health Resources in Dallas, Texas.Before this, he served with the VA held many leadership positions in the community, private industry, and the U.S. Air Force. including service as the commander of the Air Force Theater Hospital at Balad Air Base, Iraq.Colonel Taylor is also the author of The Quiet Heroes: Timeless Reflections of an American Airman.Learn more about Colonel Taylor and order The Quiet Heroes here: http://dontaylortx.wi
This week Adam discusses Fluid Vulnerability Theory with Craig Bryan, PsyD, with the National Center for Veterans Studies at the University of Utah. Dr. Bryan ducked into an empty room at the hospital where he was delivering a talk to chat with Adam. Craig served four years in the Air Force and deployed to Iraq in 2009 as Director of the Traumatic Brain Injury Clinic at the Air Force Theater Hospital in Balad. Later he worked with Dr. David Rudd has Dr. Rudd developed Fluid Vulnerability Theory (FVT). FVT states that “suicide risk is an inherently dynamically changing construct…that risk will fluctuate over time.” And it is through understanding the processes that underlie the “ideation to acting framework” where work and change come about. Listening to these two really discuss FVT is like having a full conference presentation delivered right to you. It is fascinating.
Selling in a Skirt with the Memorial Day Celebrationwith guest Donald Taylor & Linda Shaffer-Vanaria Donald E. Taylor was appointed as the Associate Director for Facility Support effective April 2014. He came to the FHCC after serving in leadership positions in the community, private industry and the U.S. Air Force. He retired in the grade of Colonel in 2006. During his career, he served in various positions across military medicine, where he developed strategy and served as health policy/plans advisor to the Air Force Surgeon General. He has served in various command positions and culminated his 27 year military career as the Vice Commander of the 59th Medical Wing (Wilford Hall Medical Center) in San Antonio, Texas. He also served as the commander of the Air Force Theater Hospital at Balad AB, Iraq in 2006. Among his military awards are the Legion of Merit (3), Bronze Star and Iraqi Campaign Medal. He is on the Board of Directors of the Air Force Association and chairs their national Wounded Airman Program. Linda Shaffer-Vanaria is a thought leader, executive coach, consultant and speaker working internationally with some of the world’s finest companies. She is the CEO and founder of Enterprise Coaching of Carlsbad based in San Diego. She is an expert on blueprinting instinct and decisive engagement for Edge Performance and has created models and concepts that enable those leaders and companies she works with to expand their envelope. http://fedhealthdogz.com/ Linda has 16 years of experience in learning, development and performance growth and has worked with a wide range of businesses across many industries. She works with business enterprises and leaders crossing corporate, non-profit, government and military. Linda has personally coached approximately a thousand leaders across all ages and leadership levels. http://www.pilotingyouredge.com/index.html
Selling in a Skirt with the Memorial Day Celebrationwith guest Donald Taylor & Linda Shaffer-Vanaria Donald E. Taylor was appointed as the Associate Director for Facility Support effective April 2014. He came to the FHCC after serving in leadership positions in the community, private industry and the U.S. Air Force. He retired in the grade of Colonel in 2006. During his career, he served in various positions across military medicine, where he developed strategy and served as health policy/plans advisor to the Air Force Surgeon General. He has served in various command positions and culminated his 27 year military career as the Vice Commander of the 59th Medical Wing (Wilford Hall Medical Center) in San Antonio, Texas. He also served as the commander of the Air Force Theater Hospital at Balad AB, Iraq in 2006. Among his military awards are the Legion of Merit (3), Bronze Star and Iraqi Campaign Medal. He is on the Board of Directors of the Air Force Association and chairs their national Wounded Airman Program. Linda Shaffer-Vanaria is a thought leader, executive coach, consultant and speaker working internationally with some of the world's finest companies. She is the CEO and founder of Enterprise Coaching of Carlsbad based in San Diego. She is an expert on blueprinting instinct and decisive engagement for Edge Performance and has created models and concepts that enable those leaders and companies she works with to expand their envelope. http://fedhealthdogz.com/ Linda has 16 years of experience in learning, development and performance growth and has worked with a wide range of businesses across many industries. She works with business enterprises and leaders crossing corporate, non-profit, government and military. Linda has personally coached approximately a thousand leaders across all ages and leadership levels. http://www.pilotingyouredge.com/index.html
Selling in a Skirt with Judy Hoberman with her guest Donald Taylor & Linda Shaffer-Vanaria Donald E. Taylor was appointed as the Associate Director for Facility Support effective April 2014. He came to the FHCC after serving in leadership positions in the community, private industry and the U.S. Air Force. He retired in the grade of Colonel in 2006. During his career, he served in various positions across military medicine, where he developed strategy and served as health policy/plans advisor to the Air Force Surgeon General. He has served in various command positions and culminated his 27 year military career as the Vice Commander of the 59th Medical Wing (Wilford Hall Medical Center) in San Antonio, Texas. He also served as the commander of the Air Force Theater Hospital at Balad AB, Iraq in 2006. Among his military awards are the Legion of Merit (3), Bronze Star and Iraqi Campaign Medal. He is on the Board of Directors of the Air Force Association and chairs their national Wounded Airman Program. Linda Shaffer-Vanaria is a thought leader, executive coach, consultant and speaker working internationally with some of the world's finest companies. She is the CEO and founder of Enterprise Coaching of Carlsbad based in San Diego. She is an expert on blueprinting instinct and decisive engagement for Edge Performance and has created models and concepts that enable those leaders and companies she works with to expand their envelope. http://fedhealthdogz.com/ Linda has 16 years of experience in learning, development and performance growth and has worked with a wide range of businesses across many industries. She works with business enterprises and leaders crossing corporate, non-profit, government and military. Linda has personally coached approximately a thousand leaders across all ages and leadership levels. http://www.pilotingyouredge.com/index.html
Finding the Kachadoorians Lu Lobello My unit was ambushed in Baghdad and was engaged in one of the fiercest firefights of the invasion according to the New York Times and our 13 wounded. After our radio operator was shot through the head he was later saved by Sanjay Gupta. Our unit has affectionately been called the Sinners and The Saints because half of us were from Las Vegas and the other half were from Salt Lake City, Utah. Unfortunately, during our firefight there was multiple families and innocent civilians caught in the crossfire, some were killed and some were wounded. One of the families caught in the crossfire were the Kachadoorians. Their father and two sons were killed and the rest of the family was stuck in the middle of an open field when our unit conducted a rescue. Dr. Craig J. Bryan, PsyD, ABPP, is a board-certified clinical psychologist in cognitive behavioral psychology, and is currently the Associate Director of the National Center for Veterans Studies at the University of Utah. He was Chief of the Primary Care Psychology Service and the Suicide Prevention Program Manager for Lackland AFB. Dr. Bryan deployed to Iraq in 2009, where he served as the Director of the Traumatic Brain Injury Clinic at the Air Force Theater Hospital. He currently researches suicidal behaviors, suicide prevention, and psychological resiliency. He chaired the American Association of Suicidology's Primary Care Task Force to develop training curriculum for primary care medical providers in the assessment and management of suicidal patients, and is a consultant to the Department of Defense for psychological health promotion and suicide prevention.