POPULARITY
Dr. John Sweetenham shares highlights from Day 4 of the 2025 ASCO Annual Meeting, including new research on maintenance therapy in small cell lung cancer and a virtual reality psychosocial intervention for patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Transcript Hello, I'm Dr. John Sweetenham, the host of the ASCO Daily News Podcast, with my takeaways on selected abstracts from Day 4 of the 2025 ASCO Annual Meeting. My disclosures are available in the transcript of this episode. Today's selection features reports of 3 randomized trials in very different clinical settings: maintenance therapy in extensive small cell lung cancer (SCLC), upfront surgery in advanced ovarian cancer, and a supportive care intervention for patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The first of these studies, Abstract 8006, was presented by Dr. Luis Paz-Ares from the University Hospital [October 12] in Madrid, Spain, and reports the primary results of the IMforte trial. This was a phase 3 trial evaluating the combination of lurbinectedin and atezolizumab as first-line maintenance therapy in patients with extensive small cell lung cancer. Despite some improvements in the first-line treatment of extensive small cell lung cancer with the use of checkpoint inhibitors in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy, most of the patients experience early disease progression and long-term survival remains very limited. This provides a rationale for considering a maintenance intervention. Lurbinectedin is an alkylating agent and transcription inhibitor [that is] already approved in the United States for patients with relapsed/refractory metastatic SCLC following platinum-based chemotherapy. It has been shown to synergize with immune checkpoint inhibitors in pre-clinical studies and has also been evaluated in early-phase clinical trials. The IMforte trial is a global, randomized trial in which patients are initially treated with atezolizumab, and those patients who do not progress on induction therapy are then randomized to maintenance therapy with atezolizumab alone or atezolizumab with lurbinectedin. The primary endpoints of the study were progression-free and overall survival. Four hundred and eighty-three patients were randomized and at a median follow-up of 15 months, the median progression-free survival for patients who received the combination was 5.4 months and the median overall survival was 13.2 months. This compares with 2.1 and 10.6 months, respectively, in patients who received atezolizumab only. The lurbinectedin and atezolizumab combination was generally well-tolerated, with no new or unexpected safety signals. The benefit was consistent in magnitude across all the relevant patient subgroups. This is the first phase 3 study to show a progression-free and overall survivial improvement with first-line maintenance in extensive stage SCLC and the result is likely to be practice-changing, establishing a new standard of care in this tough-to-treat disease. Next up is LBA5500, presented by Dr. Sven Mahner from LMU University in Munich, Germany. This describes the results of the TRUST study, a randomized trial of upfront surgical therapy in advanced ovarian cancer. As background, total macroscopic tumor resection with maximal effort cytoreductive surgery is the cornerstone of treatment in patients with advanced ovarian cancer. The optimal timing of such surgery remains controversial, whether it's more beneficial as a primary cytoreductive surgery before chemotherapy or in the form of interval cytoreductive surgery after 3 cycles of neoadjuvant chemotherapy. Previous studies have addressed this issue, but results have been confounded by issues of patient and center selection. The TRUST study is a randomized, international, multicenter phase 3 trial that compares the outcomes of the timing of surgery in surgically fit patients with seemingly resectable FIGO stage IIIB/IVB ovarian, tubal, and peritoneal carcinoma. To ensure consistent and adequate surgical quality, participating centers in the trial were required to obtain accreditation and undergo an onsite quality assurance review. This included assessment of infrastructure, surgical proficiency, complete resection rates, and surgical volume. Seven hundred and ninety-seven patients with advanced ovarian cancer were randomized to undergo surgery prior to therapy with 6 cycles of carboplatin and paclitaxel along with bevacizumab and a PARP inhibitor, or to have the surgery between the third and fourth cycle of the same systemic therapy. Of the initial 797 patients, 688 comprised the intent-to-treat population, of whom 345 received primary cytoreductive surgery and 343 received neoadjuvant chemotherapy followed by interval cytoreductive surgery. The results show that patients undergoing primary surgery had significantly improved progression-free survival compared with those who had interval cytoreductive surgery (median progression-free survival was 22.1 months versus 19.7 months). No difference in overall survival was observed between the 2 arms of the study. This is the first study to show a benefit for primary cytoreductive surgery, although the progression-free survival improvement was not reflected in an overall survival difference. A subgroup analysis for patients who underwent complete cytoreduction suggests a progression-free survival and survival benefit, although it isn't clear to me that the study was powered for this endpoint. Nevertheless, these are very difficult studies to perform, and the investigators should be congratulated for this robustly conducted clinical trial. Today's final abstract is 1504, presented by Dr. Hermioni Amonoo from Harvard Medical School. The trial evaluated BMT-VR, a virtual reality psychosocial intervention for patients undergoing bone marrow transplantation. This randomized trial included adult patients undergoing autologous and allogeneic transplantation. The BMT-VR platform included, among others, modules addressing psychoeducation, coping, acceptance, and gratitude. BMT-VR patients were provided with VR headsets and completed all modules during their hospitalization. Patient-reported outcomes were then assessed at 2, 4, 12, and 24 weeks post-BMT. Use of the VR tool was tracked during hospitalization. Control patients received usual care during their hospital stay and were then assessed at the same intervals post-BMT. Eighty evaluable patients were randomized, 39 to BMT-VR and 41 to usual care. Completion rates for the BMT-VR modules were high [at] around 70-75%. Patients who received the BMT-VR intervention experienced significantly improved anxiety, quality of life, and coping at 4 weeks post-BMT. In the longer term, sustained benefits were seen at 24 weeks for some endpoints including quality of life, with some benefits, including for depression and PTSD symptoms, improving longitudinally over the study period. These data are preliminary and will need to be confirmed in larger multicenter studies, but this trial demonstrates the feasibility of using virtual interventions in our patients and also provides intriguing preliminary data that they may be effective. Thanks for listening to today's report and I hope you will join me again tomorrow to hear more top takeaways from the final day of ASCO25. If you value the insights that you hear on the ASCO Daily News Podcast, please remember to rate, review, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Disclaimer: The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. Find out more about today's speaker: Dr. John Sweetenham Follow ASCO on social media: @ASCO on Twitter @ASCO on Bluesky ASCO on Facebook ASCO on LinkedIn Disclosures: Dr. John Sweetenham: No relationships to disclose
Send us a textThis episode is what happens when a luxury leatherwork lunatic, a snake-breeding psycho, and a jiu-jitsu savage walk into a podcast studio—and it's the same damn guy. We sit down with AG, the founder of Toehold Flip-Flops and covert overlord of the reptilian fashion empire. From $65,000 snakes (yes, danger noodles with price tags) to handmade American flip-flops that slap harder than your DI at BMT, AG unpacks his borderline obsessive pursuit of excellence, legacy, and customer service that's so savage it answers DMs on Christmas morning. If you're into craftsmanship, combat sports, counter-culture, or calling BS on corporate clowns, welcome to your new religion.
This week, we're all about the 10's. From Sam Prendergast's rising stock at Leinster to Marcus Smith's magic (and mayhem) for Quins. We dive into the big-names lighting up Europe. Dan Biggar's swansong in Toulon, Finn Russell fracturing things at Bath, Jack Crowley's BMT, and Pollie's big move. Who's thriving, who's surviving, and who's quietly waiting in the pocket? Could Owen Farrell, still be in the Lions frame? With class permanent and the tour looming, it's a conversation worth having. Bold takes, plenty of chirps, and classic My Fok Tjom moments.
Game developer, Morby recounts an experience from 19 years ago, during his Basic Military Training (BMT) on Tekong Island. Towards the end of BMT, his unit went on a six-day, five-night camping trip in the forest. On the last day, they rested in an abandoned Malay schoolhouse. While sitting in a circle in a classroom, one of Mob's platoon mates, Ah Lun, suddenly stood up and stared downward at a 45-degree angle, with wide eyes and seemingly unable to breathe. The platoon leader shouted loudly, and Ah Lun returned to normal, denying anything had happened.Back at the barracks, a fellow soldier noticed four distinct bruise marks on Mob's right hand. Mob initially thought someone had pinched him in his sleep, but he then realized that he had been sitting in a corner of the room. He also remembered that Ah Lun had been avoiding looking in his direction during the incident. Mob concluded that the incident was focused on him, not Ah Lun, who may have been trying to protect him...See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
NAPOLI (ITALPRESS) - “La prima novità di Busitalia è che entro l'estate arriveranno 111 bus di ultima generazione, un investimento di 44 milioni che vogliamo mettere in campo nel settore del turismo”. Lo annuncia l'amministratore delegato di Busitalia, Serafino Lo Piano, parlando a margine di un panel alla Bmt di Napoli per svelare le nuove soluzioni per la mobilità turistica pensate dall'azienda del gruppo Ferrovie dello Stato. “Ci sono dei collegamenti che facciamo con degli aeroporti - spiega Lo Piano -. Il primo è con l'aeroporto di Salerno, poi Perugia, Orio al Serio verso Brescia e Verona e ci saranno delle novità che anticipo perché faremo dei collegamenti da Padova verso Cortina. Ci sono poi anche dei collegamenti all'interno del Lago Trasimeno: molti pensano che Busitalia sia soltanto bus, ma noi abbiamo anche delle navi. Vogliamo far entrare - spiega Lo Piano - il concetto del bus intermodale verso altri mezzi di trasporto e impianti come possono essere gli aeroporti. L'obiettivo è muovere il turismo italiano, e non solo, anche a livello internazionale”.xc9/pc/gtr
NAPOLI (ITALPRESS) - “La prima novità di Busitalia è che entro l'estate arriveranno 111 bus di ultima generazione, un investimento di 44 milioni che vogliamo mettere in campo nel settore del turismo”. Lo annuncia l'amministratore delegato di Busitalia, Serafino Lo Piano, parlando a margine di un panel alla Bmt di Napoli per svelare le nuove soluzioni per la mobilità turistica pensate dall'azienda del gruppo Ferrovie dello Stato. “Ci sono dei collegamenti che facciamo con degli aeroporti - spiega Lo Piano -. Il primo è con l'aeroporto di Salerno, poi Perugia, Orio al Serio verso Brescia e Verona e ci saranno delle novità che anticipo perché faremo dei collegamenti da Padova verso Cortina. Ci sono poi anche dei collegamenti all'interno del Lago Trasimeno: molti pensano che Busitalia sia soltanto bus, ma noi abbiamo anche delle navi. Vogliamo far entrare - spiega Lo Piano - il concetto del bus intermodale verso altri mezzi di trasporto e impianti come possono essere gli aeroporti. L'obiettivo è muovere il turismo italiano, e non solo, anche a livello internazionale”.xc9/pc/gtr
Listen to ASCO's Journal of Clinical Oncology Art of Oncology article, "I Hope So Too” by Dr. Richard Leiter from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. The article is followed by an interview with Leiter and host Dr. Mikkael Sekeres. Leiter shares that even in the most difficult moments, clinicians can find space to hope with patients and their families. TRANSCRIPT Narrator: I Hope So Too, by Richard E. Leiter, MD, MA “You're always the negative one,” Carlos' mother said through our hospital's Spanish interpreter. “You want him to die.” Carlos was 21 years old. A few years earlier he had been diagnosed with AML and had undergone an allogeneic bone marrow transplant. He was cured. But now, he lay in our hospital's bone marrow transplant (BMT) unit, his body attacked by the very treatment that had given him a new life. He had disseminated graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) in his liver, his lungs, his gut, and, most markedly, his skin. The BMT team had consulted us to help with Carlos' pain. GVHD skin lesions covered his body. They were raw and weeping. Although the consult was ostensibly for pain, the subtext could not have been clearer. Carlos was dying, and the primary team needed help navigating the situation. As his liver and kidney function declined, the need to address goals of care with Carlos' mother felt like it was growing more urgent by the hour. Difficult cases, like a young person dying, transform an inpatient unit. Rather than the usual hum of nurses, patient care associates, pharmacy technicians, and unit managers going about their daily work, the floor becomes enveloped in tension. Daily rhythms jump a half step ahead of the beat; conversations among close colleagues fall out of tune. “Thank goodness you're here,” nurse after nurse told my attending and me, the weight of Carlos' case hanging from their shoulders and tugging at the already puffy skin below their eyes. I was a newly minted palliative care fellow, just over a month into my training. I was developing quickly, but as can happen with too many of us, my confidence sat a few steps beyond my skills. I thought I had a firm grasp of palliative care communication skills and was eager to use them. I asked for feedback from my attendings and genuinely worked to incorporate it into my practice. At the same time, I silently bristled when they took charge of a conversation in a patient's room. Over the ensuing week, my attending and I leaned in. We spent hours at Carlos' bedside. If I squinted, I could have convinced myself that Carlos' pain was better. Every day, however, felt worse. We were not making any progress with Carlos' mother, who mostly sat silently in a corner of his room. Aside from occasionally moaning, Carlos did not speak. We learned little, if anything, about him as a person, what he enjoyed, what he feared. We treated him, and we barely knew him. Each morning, I would dutifully update my attending about the overnight events. “Creatinine is up. Bili is up.” She would shake her head in sadness. “Doesn't she get that he's dying?” one of the nurses asked us. “I feel like I'm torturing him. He's jaundiced and going into renal failure. I'm worried we're going to need to send him to the ICU. But even that won't help him. Doesn't she understand?” We convened a family meeting. It was a gorgeous August afternoon, but the old BMT unit had no windows. We sat in a cramped, dark gray family meeting room. Huddled beside Carlos' mother was everyone on the care team including the BMT attending, nurse, social worker, chaplain, and Spanish interpreter. We explained that his kidneys and liver were failing and that we worried time was short. Carlos' mother had heard it all before, from his clinicians on rounds every day, from the nursing staff tenderly caring for him at his bedside, and from us. “He's going to get better,” she told us. “I don't understand why this is happening to him. He's going to recover. He was cured of his leukemia. I have hope that his kidneys and liver are going to get better.” “I hope they get better,” I told her. I should have stopped there. Instead, in my eagerness to show my attending, and myself, I could navigate the conversation on my own, I mistakenly kept going. “But none of us think they will.” It was after this comment that she looked me right in the eyes and told me I wanted Carlos to die. I knew, even then, that she was right. In that moment, I did want Carlos to die. I could not sit with all the suffering—his, his mother's, and his care team's. I needed her to adopt our narrative—that we had done all we could to help Carlos live, and now, we would do all we could to help him die comfortably. I needed his mother to tell me she understood, to accept what was going on. I failed to recognize what now seems so clear. Of course, his mother understood what was happening. She saw it. But how could we have asked her to accept what is fundamentally unacceptable? To comprehend the incomprehensible? At its best, serious illness communication not only empathetically shares news, be it good or bad, but also allows patients and families adequate time to adjust to it. For some, this adjustment happens quickly, and in a single conversation, they can digest difficult news and move to planning the next steps in care for themselves or their loved ones. For most, they need more time to process, and we are able to advance the discussion over the course of multiple visits. My attending led the conversations from then on. She worked with the BMT attending, and they compassionately kept Carlos out of the intensive care unit. He died a few days later, late in the evening. I never saw his mother again. I could not have prevented Carlos' death. None of us could have. None of us could have spared his mother from the grief that will stay with her for the rest of her life. Over those days, though, I could have made things just a little bit less difficult for her. I could have protected her from the overcommunication that plagues our inpatient units when patients and families make decisions different from those we would make for ourselves and our loved ones. I could have acted as her guide rather than as her cross-examiner. I could have hoped that Carlos stopped suffering and, genuinely, hoped he got better although I knew it was next to impossible. Because hope is a generous collaborator, it can coexist with rising creatinines, failing livers, and fears about intubation. Even in our most difficult moments as clinicians, we can find space to hope with our patients, if we look for it. Now—years later, when I talk to a terrified, grieving family member, I recall Carlos' mother's eyes piercing mine. When they tell me they hope their loved one gets better, I know how to respond. “I hope so too.” And I do. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Hello and welcome to JCO's Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology, which features essays and personal reflections from authors exploring their experience in the oncology field. I'm your host, Mikkael Sekeres. I'm professor of Medicine and Chief of the Division of Hematology at the Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at University of Miami. Today I am thrilled to be joined by Dr. Ricky Leiter from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. In this episode, we will be discussing his Art of Oncology article, “I Hope So, Too.” Our guest's disclosures will be linked in the transcript. Ricky, welcome to our podcast and thank you so much for joining us. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Thanks so much for having me. I'm really excited to be here. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Ricky, I absolutely adored your essay. It really explored, I think, a combination of the vulnerability we have when we're trying to take care of a patient who's dying and the interesting badlands we're placed in when we're also a trainee and aren't quite sure of our own skills and how to approach difficult situations. But before we dive into the meat of this, can you tell us a little bit about yourself? Where are you from and where did you do your training? Dr. Ricky Leiter: Sure, yeah. Thanks so much. So I grew up in Toronto, Canada, and then moved down to the States for college. I was actually a history major, so I never thought I was going to go into medicine. And long story short, here I am. I did a Post-Bac, did a year of research, and ended up at Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine for med school, where I did a joint degree in medical humanities and bioethics. And that really shaped my path towards palliative care because I found this field where I said, “You know, wow, I can use these skills I'm learning in my Master's at the bedside with patients thinking about life and death and serious illness and what does that all mean in the broader context of society.” So, moved from Chicago to New York for residency, where I did residency and chief residency in internal medicine at New York Presbyterian Cornell, and then came up to the Harvard Interprofessional Palliative Care Program, where I did a clinical fellowship, then a research fellowship with Dana-Farber, and have been on faculty here since. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Fantastic. Any thoughts about moving back to Canada? Dr. Ricky Leiter: We talk about it every now and then. I'm really happy here. My family's really happy here. We love life in Boston, so we're certainly here for the time being. Definitely. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: And the weather's so similar. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Yeah, I'm used to the cold. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: I apparently did not move to Miami. I'm curious, this may be an unfair question, as you have a really broad background in humanities and ethics. Are there one or two books that you read where you think, “Gee, I'm still applying these principles,” or, “This really still resonates with me in my day to day care of patients who have cancer diagnosis”? Dr. Ricky Leiter: Oh, wow, that is a great question. There are probably too many to list. I think one is When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi, which I didn't read in my training, I read afterwards. And I think he's such a beautiful writer. The story is so poignant, and I just think Paul Kalanithi's insights into what it means to be living with a serious illness and then ultimately dying from cancer as a young man, as someone in medicine, has really left an imprint on me. Also, Arthur Kleinman. The Illness Narratives, I think, is such a big one, too. And similarly, Arthur Frank's work. I mean, just thinking about narrative and patient stories and how that impacts our clinical care, and also us as clinicians. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: And I suspect us as writers also. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Absolutely. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: We imprint on the books that were influential to us. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Certainly. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: So how about your story as a writer? How long have you been writing narrative pieces? Is this something you came to later in your career, or did you catch the bug early as an undergrad or even younger? Dr. Ricky Leiter: So I caught it early, and then it went dormant for a little while and came back. As a history major, as someone who is humanities minded, I loved writing my papers in college. Like, I was one of those nerds who got, like, really, really excited about the history term paper I was writing. You know, it was difficult, but I was doing it, particularly at the last minute. But I really loved the writing process. Going through my medical training, I didn't have as much time as I wanted, and so writing was sort of on the back burner. And then actually in my research fellowship, we had a writing seminar, our department, and one of the sessions was on writing Op-eds and perspective pieces. And we had a free write session and I wrote something sort of related to my research at the time I was thinking about, and Joanne Wolfe, who was helping to lead the session, pediatric palliative care physician, she said, “You know, this is really great. Like, where are you going to publish this?” And I said, “Joanne, what do you mean? I just wrote this in this session as an exercise.” She said, “No, you should publish this.” And I did. And then the bug came right back and I thought, “Wow, this is something that I really enjoy and I can actually make a difference with it. You know, getting a message out, allowing people to think a little bit differently or more deeply about clinical cases, both in the lay press and in medical publications.: So I've essentially been doing it since and it's become a larger and larger part of my career. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: That's absolutely wonderful, Ricky. Where is it that you publish then, outside of Art of Oncology? Dr. Ricky Leiter: So I've had a couple of pieces in the New York Times, which was really exciting. Some in STAT News on their opinion section called First Opinion, and had a few pieces in the New England Journal as well, and in the Palliative Care Literature, the Journal of Palliative Medicine. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Outstanding. And about palliative care issues and end of life issues, I assume? Dr. Ricky Leiter: Sort of all of the above. Palliative care, serious illness, being in medical training, I wrote a fair bit about what it was like to be on the front lines of the pandemic. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Yeah, that was a traumatic period of time, I think, for a lot of us. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Absolutely. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: I'm curious about your writing process. What triggers a story and how do you face the dreaded blank page? Dr. Ricky Leiter: So it's hard to pin down exactly what triggers a story for me. I think sometimes I'm in a room and for whatever reason, there's a moment in the room and I say, “You know what? There's a story here. There's something about what's going on right now that I want to write.” And oftentimes I don't know what it is until I start writing. Maybe it's a moment or a scene and I start writing like, “What am I trying to say here? What's the message? And sometimes there isn't a deeper message. The story itself is so poignant or beautiful that I want to tell that story. Other times it's using that story. And the way I think about my writing is using small moments to ask bigger questions in medicine. So, like, what does it mean to have a good death? You know, one piece I wrote was I was thinking about that as I struggled to give someone what I hoped would be a good death, that I was thinking more broadly, what does this mean as we're thinking about the concept of a good death? Another piece I wrote was about a patient I cared for doing kidney palliative care. And she was such a character. We adored her so much and she was challenging and she would admit that. This was someone I wanted to write about. And I talked to her about it and she was honored to have her story told. Unfortunately, it came out shortly after her death. But she was such a vibrant personality. I said, “There's something here that I want to write about.” In terms of the blank page, I think it's overcoming that fear of writing and procrastination and all of that. I think I have a specific writing playlist that I put on that helps me, that I've listened to so many times. You know, no words, but I know the music and it really helps me get in the zone. And then I start writing. And I think it's one of those things where sometimes I'm like, “Oh, I really don't like how this is sounding, but I'm going to push through anyways.” as Anne Lamott's blank first draft, just to get something out there and then I can play with it and work with it. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Great. I love the association you have with music and getting those creative juices flowing and picking ‘le mot juste' in getting things down on a page. It's also fascinating how we sometimes forget the true privilege that we have as healthcare providers in the people we meet, the cross section of humanity and the personalities who can trigger these wonderful stories. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Absolutely. Absolutely. It's such a privilege and I think it often will go in unexpected directions and can really impact, for me certainly, my practice of medicine and how I approach the next patients or even patients years down the road. You remember those patients and those stories. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Right. You write with such obvious love and respect for your patients. You also write about that tenuous phase of our careers when we're not yet attendings but have finished residency and have demonstrated a modicum of competence. You know, I used to say that fellowship is really the worst of all worlds, right? As an attending, you have responsibility, but you don't have to do as much of the grunt work. As a resident, you do the grunt work, but you don't really have the responsibility. And in fellowship, you've got it all. You've got to do the grunt work, and you have the responsibility. Can you tie those two concepts together, though? How does our relationship to our patients change over the course of our careers? Dr. Ricky Leiter: Early on, if you think about the imprinting of patients as you go down the road, so many of the patients who have imprinted on me were the ones earlier in my career, before I was more formed as a clinician because of experiences like the one I wrote about in “I Hope so Too,” where the skills are forming, and sometimes where it's smooth sailing, and sometimes we're muddling through. And those cases where we feel like we're muddling through or things don't go as we hope, those are the ones that really leave an impact. And I think it's those little moments that sort of nudge your career and your skill set in different ways. I think the patients now, they still leave a mark on me, but I think it's in different ways. And I think oftentimes it's less about my skills. Although my skills are still very much developing, even, you know, almost a decade out, they impact me differently than they once did. I feel more confident in what I'm doing, and it's more about my relationship to this situation rather than the situation's impact on my skills. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Got it. Got it. It's interesting. I once wrote a piece with Tim Gilligan, who also spent some time at Dana Farber and is a communications expert, about how there's this kind of dualism in how we're trained. We're trained with communications courses and how to talk to patients, and it almost does the opposite. It kind of raises the flag that, “Wait a second, maybe I've been talking to people the wrong way.” And as you get more mature in your career, I almost feel as if you revert back to the way you were before medical school, when you just talked to people like they were people and didn't have a special voice for patients. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Yeah, I think that's right. And I think in palliative care, we spend so much time thinking about the communication. And this was the most challenging piece about fellowship because then- and our fellowship directors told this to us, and now we teach it to our fellows. You know that you come in, the people who choose to go into palliative care, have a love of communication, have some degree of skill coming in, and then what happens is we break those skills down and teach them a new skill set. So it gets clunkier before it gets better. And the time I was writing about in this piece was August of my fellowship year, exactly when that process was happening, where I'm trying to incorporate the new skills, I had my old way of doing things, and it's just not always aligning. And I think you're right that as the skills become embedded, as you go on throughout your career, where it feels much more natural, and then you do really connect with people as people still using the skills and the techniques that we've learned in our communication courses, but they become part of who you are as a clinician. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Nicely put. Your story is particularly poignant because the patient you described was dying from the very treatment that cured his leukemia. It's this, I'm going to use the term badlands again. It's this terrible badlands we sometimes find ourselves where, yes, the treatment has been successful, but at the cost of a human life. Do you think that as healthcare providers, we react differently when a patient is sick, from side effects to our recommendations, as opposed to sick from their disease? Dr. Ricky Leiter: I think we probably do. It's hard because I think every patient in every case pulls at us in different directions. And this case was Carlos, who I called him, it was such a challenging situation for so many reasons. He was young. He really couldn't communicate with us. We were talking to his mom. Like, there were so many layers to this. But I think you're right. that underlying this, there's a sense of “We did everything we could beautifully, to cure him of his disease, and now he's dying of that, and what does that mean for us as clinicians, physicians. That becomes really hard and hard to sit with and hold as we're going back every day. And I say that as the palliative care consultant. So I can only imagine for the oncology team caring for him, who had taken him through this, what that felt like. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Well, you describe, again, beautifully in the piece, how the nursing staff would approach you and were so relieved that you were there. And it was, you know, you got the sense- I mean, obviously, it's tragic because it's a young person who died, but you almost got the sense there was this guilt among the providers, right? Not only is it a young person dying, but dying from graft versus host disease, not from leukemia. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Absolutely. There was guilt because of what he was dying of, because of how he was dying that he was so uncomfortable and it took us so long to get his pain under control and we really couldn't get him that balance of pain control and alertness that we always strive for was pretty much impossible from the beginning. And so it was layer upon layer of distress and guilt and sadness and grief that we could just feel every day as we stepped onto the floor. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Yeah. I don't know if you've ever read- there's a biography of Henry Kaplan, who was considered the father of radiation therapy, where there was this incredible moment during his career when he presented at the AACR Annual Meeting the first cures for cancers, right? No one believed it. It was amazing, actually curing cancer. And then a couple years later, people started dribbling into his clinic with cancers because of the radiation therapy he gave, and he actually went into a clinical depression as a result of it. So it can affect providers at such a deep level. And I think there's this undiscussed guilt that permeates the staff when that happens. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Absolutely, absolutely. It's right there under the surface. And we rarely give ourselves the space to talk about it, right? To really sit down and say, how are we approaching this situation? How do we feel about it? And to sit with each other and acknowledge that this is horrible. It's a horrible situation. And we feel guilty and we feel sad and we feel grief about this. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: It's been just terrific getting to know you and to read your piece, Ricky Leiternd, a we really appreciate your writing. Keep doing what you do. Dr. Ricky Leiter: Oh, thank you so much. It's a privilege to get the piece out there and particularly in JCO and to be here with you. So I really appreciate it. Dr. Mikkael Sekeres: Until next time, thank you for listening to JCO's Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology. Don't forget to give us a rating or review and be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. You can find all of ASCO's shows at asco.org/podcasts. The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions. Guest statements on the podcast do not express the opinions of ASCO. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. Like, share and subscribe so you never miss an episode and leave a rating or review. Guest Bio: Dr. Ricky Leiter is from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
Send us a textBone Marrow Transplant (BMT) and CAR T-cell therapy are evolving fast—are you keeping up? In this episode of TheOncoPT Podcast, Dr. Adam Matichak returns to share the latest updates on these groundbreaking treatments and what they mean for your OncoPT practice.You'll learn how CAR T-cell therapy is expanding, why mobility strategies matter more than ever, and how to use vital signs to guide your treatment decisions. Plus, we'll explore how you can advocate for rehab's role in oncology, prepare patients for complex treatments like BMT and CAR T, and find the resources you need to stay ahead in this rapidly changing field.Whether you're new to cancer rehab or a seasoned pro, this conversation will give you practical tools to treat your patients undergoing BMT and/or CAR T-cell therapy. Listen now!Listen to Adam's previous episodes:Ep. 204 - How to not feel lost with BMTsEp. 221 - Here's How to Treat Patients Undergoing CAR T-Cell TherapyGrab your free Ultimate Oncology Specialist Study Guide!Preparing for the ABPTS Oncology Specialist Certification Exam is one of the best ways to become an expert OncoPT.My new Ultimate Oncology Specialist Study Guide will help you start your exam prep on the right foot, so you can prepare for success & treat your patients like an expert.Grab your FREE study guide now! Follow TheOncoPT on Instagram.Follow TheOncoPT on LinkedIn.
Send us a textWelcome to the Ones Ready Podcast—where professionalism is DEAD. If you're here for balanced discourse and hand-holding, GTFO. This episode is a masterclass in pettiness, Pentagon chaos, and why your internet hot takes are garbage.
Subscriber-only episodeSend us a textWelcome to the Ones Ready Podcast—where professionalism is DEAD. If you're here for balanced discourse and hand-holding, GTFO. This episode is a masterclass in pettiness, Pentagon chaos, and why your internet hot takes are garbage.
From international cricket to chess, boxing and hockey, Paddy Upton has helped the best sportspeople in the world achieve through his role as a performance coach. The team dig into how Upton has helped create the right performance mindset and explains how the best in the world handle mental pressure. Along the way Upton shares some remarkable success stories, explains how he went from a fitness instructor to a mind coach and whether BMT is really a thing. Upton's approach focuses on four core human aspects of high performance - leadership, culture, teamwork and individual performance - and combines his 30+ years of experience with degrees from four different universities along with an appointment as Professor of Practice at Deakin University (Melbourne, Australia). Upton has worked with over 350 professional and international level athletes from 21 different sporting codes, including six world champions from six different sports and 25 World Player Of The Year recipients. He has coached in five cricket World Cups and one Olympics (won bronze with the Indian men's hockey team). He has also helped coach the Indian cricket team to become world test champions for the first time (2009) and win the 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup for the first time in 28 years. As Performance Director he has also helped coach the South African cricket team to become the first team ever to simultaneously hold the World Number 1 ranking in all three formats of the international game. He is also the author of the best-selling book, The Barefoot Coach (Life-changing insights from coaching the world's best cricketers) Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode, we meet up with Josh Conklin, a seasoned bone marrow transplant (BMT) nurse at the University of Michigan Hospital, to explore his experiences, insights, and tips for managing chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). With 11 years of inpatient experience, Josh offers a comprehensive view of the challenges and triumphs in caring for patients undergoing BMT.Josh explains that his primary role involves guiding patients through the most critical stages of their transplant journey, from chemotherapy conditioning to the stem cell infusion and the vulnerable recovery period afterward. He emphasizes the delicate balance required in managing GVHD, a condition that plays a dual role: while some GvHD is beneficial in suppressing cancer recurrence (graft-versus-leukemia effect), too much can lead to severe complications.Long-term immunosuppression is a cornerstone of GVHD management. Josh highlights the reliance on drugs like tacrolimus and, when necessary, steroids. However, we note the adverse effects of prolonged steroid use, such as muscle wasting, infections, and physical deconditioning. Emerging monoclonal antibody therapies are offering new hope, aiming to reduce these side effects.The discussion also sheds light on the psychological toll of repeated hospitalizations and the role caregivers play in patient success. Josh describes caregivers as essential for monitoring symptoms, administering medications, and providing emotional support. However, he acknowledges the significant strain caregiving can impose, especially during the critical first 100 days post-transplant when patients are highly vulnerable.Josh shares stories of resilience and purpose among his patients, underscoring the importance of a positive outlook and having something meaningful to strive for. He reflects on the impact of a strong support system, whether it's family, friends, or peer mentorship programs, in helping patients navigate their “new normal.” Despite the challenges, Josh finds inspiration in his patients' ability to find joy and purpose, even in difficult circumstances. He shares his experience with one woman in particular.This heartfelt conversation highlights the physical, emotional, and relational dynamics of BMT care, offering a glimpse into the profound impact of dedicated healthcare professionals like Josh.More:GVHD Alliance: https://www.gvhdalliance.orgLink to LLS free Nutrition Consultations: https://www.lls.org/managing-your-cancer/food-and-nutritionThank you to our sponsors. This season is supported by a healthcare contribution from Sanofi https://www.sanofi.com/ National Bone Marrow Transplant Link - (800) LINK-BMT, or (800) 546-5268.nbmtLINK Website: https://www.nbmtlink.org/nbmtLINK Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/nbmtLINKFollow the nbmtLINK on Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/nbmtlink/The nbmtLINK YouTube Page can be found by clicking here.To participate in the GVHD Mosaic, click here: https://amp.livemosaics.com/gvhd
In this episode, we sit down with Lisa Stewart, a nurse practitioner with more than 25 years of transplant nursing experience, currently working at the post-transplant BMT clinic at the Dana-Farber Brigham Cancer Center in Boston. Lisa provides invaluable insights into managing chronic and acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and shares her expertise, stories, and advice for patients and caregivers navigating post-transplant life.Lisa describes her role in outpatient care, where the majority of her work focuses on managing chronic GVHD, a condition that is both a sign of a functioning immune system and a complex challenge. While mild GVHD can indicate that the transplant is effectively fighting diseases like leukemia or lymphoma, severe cases can lead to complications involving multiple organs. Lisa outlines the two major categories of GVHD: steroid-reactive and steroid-refractory, with the latter being particularly difficult to treat. Acute GVHD typically occurs within the first 100 days post-transplant and often impacts the skin, liver, or gut, whereas chronic GVHD can develop months or years later and affect a broader range of organs, including the eyes, mouth, lungs, and reproductive systems.Clinical trials have led to significant advancements in treatment, including drugs like Ruxolitinib and Rezurock, offering hope to patients who fail first-line steroid therapy. Lisa also highlights Axatilimab, a newer medication discussed at the 2023 ASH meeting, although its availability remains limited due to manufacturing challenges. Despite these breakthroughs, steroids remain the frontline treatment, though they often cause challenging side effects like hyperglycemia, insomnia, and weight gain.Lisa also emphasizes the critical role caregivers play in a patient's recovery, managing complex medication regimens and providing vital emotional and physical support. She notes that without strong support at home, a transplant may not be feasible, particularly in the crucial first six months post-transplant.The episode also touches on common post-transplant issues like oral GVHD, fatigue, and the importance of staying active. Lisa shares practical tips, such as using Dexamethasone rinses for oral GVHD and encouraging light activity to combat fatigue. She underscores the importance of early symptom reporting, especially for chronic GVHD, as prompt intervention can significantly improve outcomes.Lisa concludes with a heartfelt story of a young patient who faced severe complications, including acute respiratory failure and paralysis, but ultimately made a remarkable recovery, even regaining mobility and starting a family. Stories like his, Lisa says, are what keep healthcare providers inspired despite the challenges.We wrap up with a reminder about the resources available to patients and caregivers, encouraging early reporting of symptoms and proactive management. Lisa's wisdom and dedication shine through, offering hope and practical guidance for those navigating the complex world of post-transplant care.More:GVHD Alliance: https://www.gvhdalliance.orgLink to LLS free Nutrition Consultations: https://www.lls.org/managing-your-cancer/food-and-nutritionThank you to our sponsors. This season is supported by a healthcare contribution from Sanofi https://www.sanofi.com/ National Bone Marrow Transplant Link - (800) LINK-BMT, or (800) 546-5268.nbmtLINK Website: https://www.nbmtlink.org/nbmtLINK Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/nbmtLINKFollow the nbmtLINK on Instagram! https://www.instagram.com/nbmtlink/The nbmtLINK YouTube Page can be found by clicking here.To participate in the GVHD Mosaic, click here: https://amp.livemosaics.com/gvhd
Send us a textThink you're ready for the pipeline? Think again. Peaches dives deep into the harsh realities, misconceptions, and straight-up falsehoods about Special Warfare training. From the soul-crushing Uncrustable diet to why your ego is the first thing that'll drown in the pool, this episode is a no-nonsense look at why most people fail. We'll even tackle why BMT won't save you, and how your idea of teamwork might just be trash. Like, subscribe, smash the bell, and join our membership—because if you're not laughing, you're probably crying into your weighted fins.Brand Page:https://marketplace.trainheroic.com/brand/modern-athlete-strength-systems?attrib=260991-aff-onesreadyWarfighter:https://marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/team/modern-athlete-strength-solutions?attrib=260991-aff-onesreadyWarfighter Elite (NOT LIVE YET):https://marketplace.trainheroic.com/workout-plan/team/warfighter-elite?attrib=260991-aff-onesreadySupport the showJoin this channel to get access to perks: HEREBuzzsprout Subscription page: HERECollabs:Ones Ready - OnesReady.com 18A Fitness - Promo Code: 1ReadyATACLete - Follow the URL (no promo code): ATACLeteCardoMax - Promo Code: ONESREADYDanger Close Apparel - Promo Code: ONESREADYDFND Apparel - Promo Code: ONESREADYHoist - Promo Code: ONESREADYKill Cliff - Promo Code: PODCASTKC20...
The Mack Attack is back!! If you enjoyed Mack Baylines jaunt through The Gauntlet, then you're going to love this Boilermaker Tape. If the name of this story doesn't catch your attention, then take our word for it - this tale of adventure and debauchery winds down the rabbit hole. Jumping from the NYC music scene to the cobblestoned streets of Annapolis, this acid soaked BMT will keep you guessing what comes next.Follow:@maybeitsmackbaylineFOLLOWwww.brpdrinkalong.comInstagram, Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat, Twitch & Tiktok @brpdrinkalongSUPPORTPatreon: www.patreon.com/brpdrinkalongCall The Suggestion Box: (423) POD-RANT (423) 763-7268LEAVE A TIPPaypal: TheBartenderRantPodcast@gmail.comMUSICBRP Spotify Playlists: https://open.spotify.com/user/vxrhwthznghu758w9x6qoy4mk?si=a23ef91df4b34f5bTrauma Parlor: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1PDlUPjR2lk7vPX5NCX8Hi?si=mtrOsDqTTJuGe-Dy5fZHLQ
Send us a textThink you're ready for BMT? Think again. Peaches and TSgt Kaleb Schmidt dive into the chaos, the rules, and why teamwork matters more than your pull-up record. From the trauma of perfect hospital corners to the art of surviving on 10 minutes of chow time, this episode is packed with brutal truths and a lot of sarcasm. Want to know how to thrive in BMT without being that guy? Tune in, like, subscribe, hit that bell, and join our membership—because if you're not taking notes, you'll be the one folding socks wrong.Support the showJoin this channel to get access to perks: HEREBuzzsprout Subscription page: HERECollabs:Ones Ready - OnesReady.com 18A Fitness - Promo Code: 1ReadyATACLete - Follow the URL (no promo code): ATACLeteCardoMax - Promo Code: ONESREADYDanger Close Apparel - Promo Code: ONESREADYDFND Apparel - Promo Code: ONESREADYHoist - Promo Code: ONESREADYKill Cliff - Promo Code: PODCASTKC20...
Send us a textRobert Stone is the CEO of City of Hope ( https://www.cityofhope.org/robert-stone ), a premier cancer research and treatment center dedicated to innovation in biomedical science and the delivery of compassionate, world-class patient care. A seasoned health care executive, he has served in a number of strategic decision-making roles since he joined City of Hope in 1996, culminating with his appointment as president in 2012, CEO in 2014, and as the Helen and Morgan Chu Chief Executive Officer Distinguished Chair in 2021.Mr. Stone has J.D., University of Chicago Law School, Chicago, IL.Mr. Stone's strategic acumen, empathy and visionary leadership have driven City of Hope's rapid evolution. As an independent institution dedicated to advancing the fight against cancer and diabetes, City of Hope is accelerating opportunities for high-impact discovery and ensuring that patients around the world have access to the most advanced therapies. Recent examples include a groundbreaking alliance in precision medicine with the Translational Genomics Research Institute (TGen), a leader in genomic analysis and bioinformatics; leadership in CAR T cell therapy research and therapy; and an innovative program to offer cancer support services to the employees of some of American's largest employers, regardless of geography.Dr. Marcel van den Brink, M.D., Ph.D.( https://www.cityofhope.org/marcel-van-den-brink ), is President of City of Hope Cancer Center, main campus in Los Angeles, and National Medical Center, chief physician executive and the Deana and Steve Campbell Chief Physician Executive Distinguished Chair, and is a globally recognized leader in the basic and translational science of bone marrow transplantation (BMT), the microbiome and cancer immunotherapy. His specialties include immune reconstitution and graft-versus-host disease — side effects many BMT patients experience — as well as the impact of the microbiome on immunotherapy for cancer. A researcher who has opened new fields of investigation and improved patient outcomes, Dr. Van den Brink has pursued innovative ways to improve and optimize BMT, developing strategies to make the process less toxic and lower the rate of recurrence. Throughout his career, he has maintained an intense focus on converting scientific discoveries in his laboratory into better therapies for patients around the world.Dr. Van den Brink joined City of Hope in part because of their shared commitment to advancing the frontiers of cancer care and research. He is known for his inclusive approach to leadership and his devotion to providing junior faculty colleagues with mentorship and career development opportunities.A recipient of numerous national and international awards, Dr. Van den Brink is a member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Among many leadership roles, he serves as vice chair of the board for Deutsche Knochenmark Stiftung, a global donor registration that facilitates 40% of all unrelated allogenic blood stem cell donations worldwide.Dr. Van den Brink has a Ph.D., Medicine (Immunology), and M.D., Cum Laude, University of Leiden, The Netherlands, completed a postdoctoral fellowship at the Pittsburgh Cancer Institute in Pittsburgh, PA and residency at Duke University Medical Center in Durham, NC. #Cancer #Oncology #CityOfHope #RobertStone #MarcelVanDenBrink #Microbiome #Immunotherapy #CarT #Thymus #ThymicInvolution #Regeneration #BoneMarrowTransplantation #TranslationalGenomicsResearchInstitute #PrecisionMedicine #GraftVersusHostDisease #ProgressPotentialAndPossibilities #IraPastor #Podcast #Podcaster #ViralPodcast #STEM #Innovation #Technology #Science #ResearchSupport the show
This episode features a conversation between Dr. Timothy Cripe and Dr. Joseph Glorioso, who discuss an article published in Molecular Therapy Oncology by Dr. Glorioso and colleagues titled Oncolytic Herpes Simplex Viruses Designed for Targeted Treatment of EGFR-bearing Tumors. Join the editor-in-chief of Molecular Therapy, Dr. Roland Herzog, and ASGCT this January for the next installment of Molecular Therapy Presents: Clinical Gene and Cell Therapy. This transformative field has grown from promising experimental treatments to approved medicines for a wide range of genetic and/or acquired diseases. This virtual event is free for ASGCT members to attend and will highlight several in-depth invited reviews appearing in Molecular Therapy's Clinical Gene and Cell Therapy special issue. Attend the webinar and learn more about cutting-edge developments in the clinical space before the special issue is published in early 2025. Find Molecular Therapy Presents: Clinical Gene and Cell Therapy, and all upcoming ASGCT events at ASGCT.org/events. In This Episode Timothy Cripe, MD, PhDEditor-in-Chief, Molecular Therapy Oncology and Professor and Chief of Hematology, Oncology, BMT at Nationwide Children's Hospital Dr. Joseph GloriosoProfessor, Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics and Department of Human Genetics at the University of Pittsburgh 'Electric Dreams' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0.www.scottbuckley.com.auShow your support for ASGCT!: https://asgct.org/membership/donateSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Managing behaviors typically associated with ADHD can be challenging for parents and caregivers, but behavior management training (BMT) offers an evidence-based approach to help. In this episode of Therapy Cafe, Marjorie Morrison, LMFT, LPCC, co-founder of Psych Hub, speaks to Dr. Dylann Gold, a clinical psychologist and expert in child and adolescent attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and parent and caregiver training. Dr. Gold dives into the clinical presentation of ADHD and the critical role BMT plays in supporting children and their caregivers. She explores the key principles of behavior therapy, the effective application of BMT techniques, and the importance of consistency. Dr. Gold also touches on the value of psychoeducation for caregivers and the potential role of medication alongside BMT. Learning objectives: 1. Explain the clinical presentation of ADHD, such that they can provide psychoeducation to clients in an accessible way. 2. Contextualize common manifestations of ADHD and weave psychoeducation through parent-based interventions. 3. Describe the evidence-based principles for behavior management training for ADHD If you'd like to obtain continuing education as a psychologist, counselor, social worker, or therapist you can purchase a one-year subscription to Psych Hub's training center. Once signed up, you'll have access to earn CEs for this and every Therapy Cafe episode, plus access to our existing library of over 120 evidence-based practice continuing education courses created by expert clinicians. Go to psychhub.com/signup for more information. To learn more about Dr. Dylann Gold visit: https://www.goodthinkingebt.com/
Is Self-Care Just Women Being Selfish? Christina Marlett, BKin, BMT, believes you have the power to change the world, but first, you must address the fact that you need to take charge of your own life, starting with self-care that goes beyond bubble baths, chocolate, and wine. Christina is an International Speaker who has shared the stage with Michael Beckwith, Marci Shimoff, Lynne Twist, Ocean Robbins, and Jean Houston. She is also a #1 International Best-Selling Author, a Master Facilitator, a Certified Embodiment Coach, and the Founder of Courageous Self-Care. Christina teaches high-achieving leaders that self-care is not simply about luxurious acts of pampering but that it's a real necessity if you truly want to step into your greatness. Through her coaching, workshops, and online programs, Christina helps you revitalize your energy from the inside out so that you can be productive and peaceful at the same time. We talked to Christina about the importance of self-care and her new book, Not Your Mama's Self-Care Guide (cause she probably had none, so you should read this). In it, you'll learn the top mistakes intelligent women make with self-care. You'll also discover why courage is a useful barometer for self-care. As the book title suggests, Christina makes self-care fun and accessible so that you can be productive and peaceful at the same time.
As the rate of climate events increases, how do businesses respond, adapt and keep their staff safe?In this episode of Responsible Business: Leading the Way, Professor Veronica Hope Hailey, Dean of the University of Bristol Business School is joined by Sarah Kenny, CEO of BMT to discuss how businesses rise to modern challenges.Find out more - https://www.bristol.ac.uk/campaigns/responsible-business
In this episode of ASTCT Talks, host Dr. Andrés Gómez De León is joined by Dr. Nandita Khera and Dr. Alexandra Gomez Arteaga to explore the critical issue of disparities and barriers to care in graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The discussion delves into the factors contributing to unequal access to hematopoietic cell transplantation, such as socioeconomic status, race, and ethnicity, both in the U.S. and globally. The guests highlight initiatives like the ACCESS Initiative by ASTCT and the National Marrow Donor Program, aimed at addressing these disparities through advocacy, awareness, and training for junior faculty. They also discuss the importance of caregiver support, clinical trial accessibility, and the broader impacts of GVHD on patients' lives. Tune in to gain valuable insights into ongoing efforts to promote equitable access to life-saving treatments. About Dr. Nandita Khera Nandita Khera is a Professor of Medicine in the Mayo Clinic College of Medicine and a Consultant in the Division of Hematology/ Oncology at Mayo Clinic Arizona. She treats patients with hematological malignancies and some solid tumors, especially those needing blood and marrow transplant/cell therapy (BMT/CT). Her research focuses on improving the delivery of care to patients with cancer including those undergoing BMT/CT to help them be better prepared for the psychosocial and financial consequences of the treatment. She has published several papers in outcomes, late effects, and quality of care in cancer patients and provides mentorship to trainees interested in projects in these areas. She has been a member and has held leadership positions at Mayo Clinic and in the various committees in organizations/ societies in hematology and BMT/CT.. She was the working committee co-chair for the Health Services and International Issues Working committee of CIBMTR from 2015 to 2020 and a member of BMT-CTN SOSS Late Effects committee in 2020. As the co-chair of Dissemination and Implementation committee at BMT CTN currently, she leads efforts in improving translation of evidence into practice in the field of BMT. She is the Director of Community or Clinical Practice at ASTCT. About Dr. Alexandra Gomez Arteaga Dr. Alexandra Gomez Arteaga is an Assistant Professor at Weill Cornell Medicine/NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital and directs the Allogeneic Bone Marrow Transplant Service and the Advanced Fellowship in Bone Marrow Transplantation. She earned her MD from Los Andes University, completed her residency at the University of Miami, her Hematology/Oncology fellowship at Weill Cornell, and her BMT advanced fellowship at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Dr. Gomez's research focuses on improving outcomes in allogeneic stem cell transplantation for leukemia and myeloid malignancies, with an emphasis on young adults and alternative donors. Her work also addresses the critical need to decrease disparities in access to transplantation for minority populations, a cause she champions across her clinical practice, research, and advocacy. She currently serves as the Co-Chair for the Junior Faculty Initiative within the ASTCT ACCESS Initiative. About Dr. Andrés Gómez De León Dr. Andrés Gómez De León (@GomezDLeonMD) is an Associate Professor at Universidad Autonoma de Nuevo Leon in Monterrey Mexico and an ASTCT Content Committee member with an interest in acute leukemias and transplant and cell therapies in low and middle income countries.
The OSUCCC-James has one of the largest and most comprehensive blood and bone marrow transplant (BMT) and cellular therapy programs in the country, led by Marco de Lima, MD. “You want to cure everyone, period and we work toward that,” de Lima said, as he explained what drives him to find better treatment options for patients. “That's the motivation and the only currency that matters, and that's helping people.” Dr. de Lima described three new programs designed to help patients in Ohio and beyond: providing bone and blood marrow transplants (BMTs) and chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T-cell therapy on an outpatient basis; engineering the genetic modifications of the cells used in CAR T-cell therapy inhouse; and a partnership to expand cellular therapy programs in Brazil. In the CAR T-cell process, T cells (the cells that fight cancer) are removed from a patient and reengineered in a lab to make them more efficient in recognizing and killing cancer cells. They are then put back into the patient to do their job. In the past, patients were admitted to the James during BMT and CAR T-cell treatments “and their stay was three to five weeks, in relative isolation,” de Lima explained, adding that “our ability to prevent infections, safer chemotherapies have set the stage where we don't have to admit some patients … We will continue to offer inpatient options but will expand the option of coming here daily instead of being admitted to the hospital.” About 20 patients have undergone CAR T-cell treatment on an outpatient basis already. “Of these, 40 percent never needed admission to the hospital and the other 60 percent had their admission times dramatically reduced,” de Lima said. “We want to increase the percentage who will never see the inside of a hospital.” In the past, it took up to two months to send and receive back a patient's re-engineered T cells from labs located throughout the country. “That's too long,” de Lima said and then explained that the OSUCCC – James can now re-engineer the T cells inhouse. “We've currently treated 14 patients in a clinical trial and it's taken us seven days from collecting the cells to giving them back to the patient,” he said. Dr. de Lima also described a partnership with Caring Cross (an organization devoted to providing medical services to underserved populations around the world) and Brazilian health officials. Members of de Lima's team at the James will provide the technical expertise and training to create mobile clean rooms in Brazil that will re-engineer cells for CAR T-cell treatment. “This is a very ambitious program to provide CAR T-cell for free within the Brazilian healthcare system,” de Lima said.
Welcome back, everyone! In this week's episode, we've got a special treat for you: joining the team is none other than FernRod, a resilient Airman who's been through the highs and lows of AFSPECWAR training.FernRod's journey is a testament to perseverance. Despite setbacks at TACP schoolhouse, he's rekindled his determination to chase his dreams within AFSPECWAR. His story is packed with lessons that every aspiring military member can learn from.We delve into the nitty-gritty of military life and training:- The importance of meticulous attention to detail in everything from gear preparation to teamwork.- The critical role of swimming proficiency in specialized career paths like Combat Control.- How physical fitness and rigorous PT sessions are foundational to success.- Insights from BMT instructors on situational awareness and camaraderie.- The invaluable support of teammates in overcoming obstacles.- Endurance-testing extended training days and their impact on mental resilience.- The emotional toll of limited family contact during training and staying disciplined.- Strategies for bouncing back from setbacks and the power of a supportive peer network.- Essential traits like organization, discipline, and positivity for achieving goals.Which takeaway resonates most with you? Join us as we unpack these lessons with FernRod and gain insights into what it takes to thrive in AFSPECWAR. Don't miss out – hit that subscribe button and let's dive into this inspiring journey together!Chapters00:00 Introduction and Welcoming Carlos Rodriguez01:21 Carlos' Background and Decision to Join the Air Force03:16 Discovering TACP as the Right Career Path06:53 Experiences in Basic Military Training (BMT)09:22 Importance of Attention to Detail in Gear Marking13:18 Physical Fitness and PT in Special Warfare Training15:05 Challenges with Swimming and Choosing TACP18:09 Instructors and the Emphasis on Situational Awareness20:57 Struggles with Counting Off and Attention to Detail21:44 Cartoons in the Pipeline25:14 Challenges and Motivation During SWCC37:43 Lessons Learned from the Extended Training Day41:20 Teammate Support and Motivation45:57 Limited Opportunities to See Family47:11 Discipline and Attention to Detail in Tech P Schoolhouse51:49 Overcoming Setbacks in the Pipeline56:45 The Importance of BeingJoin this channel to get access to perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9aFBBZoBcQk8UUN_pO7nDA/joinCollabs:Ones Ready - OnesReady.com 18A Fitness - Promo Code: 1ReadyAlpha Brew Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYATACLete - Follow the URL (no promo code): ATACLeteCardoMax - Promo Code: ONESREADYDread River - Promo Code: ONESREADY Eberlestock - Promo Code: OR10Hoist - Promo Code: ONESREADYTrench Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYThe content provided is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The host, guests, and affiliated entities do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided. The use of this podcast does not create an attorney-client relationship, and the...
Instead of something to dread, tax season should be an exciting time for property investors. In this episode of Property Showcase, host Grace Ormsby chats with BMT tax Depreciation CEO Bradley Beer to explain how tax depreciation schedules can provide investors with good reasons to be proactive when it comes to their taxes, with the average first-year depreciation claim up around the $9,000 mark. Brad acknowledges that while it's never usually too late to get a tax depreciation report completed, there are plenty of advantages that come with ordering a report sooner rather than later. In this episode, you will hear: Just how valuable a depreciation schedule can be. How tax depreciation schedules can be applied retroactively. What the process involves (hint: you don't have to do the heavy lifting). Learn more about BMT Tax Depreciation here.
The James Cancer and Aging Resiliency (CARE) clinic is a leader in treating older cancer patients. Patients have been treated with blood and bone marrow transplants (BMTs) for more than 40 years, but, initially, only younger patients were eligible. “There was a bar set as low as 40-years-old when this was a brand-new technology,” said Sarah Wall, MD, MPH, a James hematologist who specializes in treating patients with blood cancers. “Then it was 55 and 60 and 65 and now there is no official upper-age cutoff … it comes down to the individual patient.” In this episode, Wall explains the basics of BMTs. “There are two types, autologous, where a patient gets their own stem cells back, and allogeneic, in which we use donor cells,” she said. Improvements in the drugs used to treat graft-versus-host-disease (GVHD), which can occur in allogenic BMTs, have “really expanded the pool of donors for older adults who may only have siblings who are deceased or have had cancer themselves previously or some other disease that would make them ineligible,” Wall explained. “We have better drugs to prevent graft-versus-host-disease and to treat it when it does happen.” Several patients 70 and older have been treated with BMTs at the James. Wall said her oldest BMT patient is 80. “I have a [group] of the first three gentlemen 70 and older who I treated with a transplant all coming up to their five-year anniversary,” Wall said. “It's a testament to them and to their families and caregiver support that they got through this. We're the scaffolding they build this support on … and it's very rewarding to be part of this and especially to open doors for people who thought they were closed.”
Welclome back to Part 2 of Active Duty Military Ghost Stories, Haunted Bases & More Real Paranormal Experiences shared from servicemen and women throughout the military. In the conclusion of this military 2-parter, we're taking a look into some really interesting accounts of satanic rituals, a chilling account from the South Pole, a creepy slender man / stick man spotted during BMT that led to a strange series of events, and we even grab a very very very short local story of a haunted hangar from JBER in Anchorage, Alaska. Bonus is you ALSO get to hear Christian sniffle into the microphone no fewer than 1,000,000 times. Isn't that great? As mentioned in the episode, we've got a pretty fascinating episode on Haunted Okinawa, and other military experiences from Japan in the chamber, but we're currently unsure of when to release it. Keep an eye out! Do you have any first hand paranormal experiences from your time in the military? We'd love to hear them! Comment below, or submit your story via the website to be included in our Freaky Listener Story episodes! Join The Official TFD Facebook Group: https://tinyurl.com/tfdfb ----- TIME STAMPS: 0:00 - We Open into a Disagreement 0:40 - Spooky Ghost Podcast Theme Music 1:59 - Haunted Bases & Active Duty Paranormal Military Stories Pt 2! 2:38 - Shout Out to Belief Hole Podcast! 4:43 - A Wholesome Message & A Satanic Ceremony 5:54 - Christian is the Devil's Favorite Little Soldier 8:11 - Christian Sniffles Into the Microphone for the 40th Time 8:49 - 41st 9:25 - There's Always Work to be Done 17:02 - Be Safe.. 22:52 - Christian Tries to Give True Detective Season 4 Spoilers (Classic) 25:02 - 3 Identical Contractors (Mirrored Men?) 29:28 - BMT & The Slender Man 34:48 - The Coveted "Birds Aren't Real" Tangent 35:22 - A Haunting Winter at the South Pole 39:46 - Admiral Byrd, NASA & The Antarctic Treaty 42:22 - Is JBER in Anchorage Alaska Haunted? (Local Story!) 46:12 - Brought to you by AnointedAK.com 47:06 - Recap & Wind Down 50:23 - Haunted Okinawa & Bases in Japan Coming Soon! 53:42 - Join the TFD Facebook Group --- Armed with nothing more than a non-sensical soundboard, a fascination for all things unexplained, and a heaping dose of dry humor; TFD is a weekly paranormal comedy podcast featuring real ghost stories, Cryptid lore discussions, and true paranormal experiences catering to the week's theme. Fresh episodes drop every Thursday across all podcast platforms, and feature perspectives from both believer and skeptic sides of the aisle. So if you're a fan of haunted places, terrifying paranormal activity, and true ghost stories from real people, you're in the right place, friend. Recorded in an undisclosed location somewhere in the beautiful woods of Wasilla, Alaska. ++SUBMIT YOUR STORY FOR OUR LISTENER STORY EPISODES++ Email: thegang@thefreakydeaky.com Voicemail: 801-997-0051 ++WEBSITE & MERCH++ Website: www.thefreakydeaky.com Merch: www.thefreakydeaky.com/store ++FOLLOW OUR SOCIALS FOR EXCLUSIVES++ YouTube: https://bit.ly/3goj7SP Instagram: https://bit.ly/2HOdleo Facebook: https://bit.ly/3ebSde6 TFD Facebook Group: https://tinyurl.com/tfdfb TikTok: https://bit.ly/35lNOlu
Join Michael and mom as they talk to Samira Daswani, savvy business woman, cancer survivor, host of the podcast Patient from Hell, and the founder of the incredible resource for ALL cancer survivors and caregivers: Mantacares.com https://mantacares.com/ .Samira is funny, wise, generous, beautiful. When she was faced with Breast Cancer at age 30, she realized she did not fit into the standard box, the normal cancer protocol. She questioned everything , asking all the how, what, why questions, and coming up with her own alternative solutions. The first solution was her all encompassing medical planner, which led to her podcast, and soon the support network, Manta Cares. Michael and ashlee were previously on Samira's podcast, Patient from Hell, but this conversation enlightened them even further into Samira's journey and inspiring mission to help other cancer survivors. Giving them a map. Resources. Community. Find Samira on her website and podcast! https://mantacares.com/ The journal is sold on her website and also on Amazon. #Cancer #breastcancer #GVHD #podcast #BMT #michaelandmom
Bull Holland (https://www.linkedin.com/in/bullholland/). He is a Defense Acquisition professional with a passion for mentoring students, scientists, and technology innovators. He is a proven leader with experience working with foreign, federal, and state government agencies, academia, and industry.He works for BMNT - BMNT is a global innovation company for governments & their partners. We use startup methods inside large organizations to create new capabilities.Bull leads the H4Xtraining Program (https://www.h4xtraining.bmnt.com/)The views and opinions expressed in this podcast are those of the host and guests and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer, or company. Assumptions made in the analysis do not reflect the position of any entity other than the author(s) – and since we are critically-thinking human beings, these views are always subject to change, revision, and rethinking at any time. Please remember that the information presented in this podcast is for general informational purposes only and should not be taken as professional advice.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/philosophy-from-the-front-line--4319845/support.
In this Dailycast episode of Wrestling Coast to Coast, Chris Maitland and Justin McClelland lead listeners on an epic review of Fight Life's Lead the Charge featuring a main event of the indy wrestler who never stops, Mustafa Ali, facing J.T. Dunn, the Battle of Miracle Generation when Kylon King clashes with tag partner Dustin Flash Waller, Masha Slamovich defends the Fight Life title against Brandon Michael Thomas (a/k/a BMT), and much more. Plus, they go over new entrants in the Indy Wrestling Hall of Fame and discuss a major strategic alliance between three promotions and what they think that means, as well as preview their own weekends on the biggest wrestling week of the year. For VIP listeners, it's a trip out west for Prestige Wrestling's Alive II and a check-in on the world title fight between Alex Shelley and Alan Angels and the last man standing match between Prestige's resident superhero Jaiden and Jordan Cruz.
Join Michael and mom, ashlee, as they chat about a recent Instagram comment from someone looking for purpose. Purpose is sometimes obvious, sometimes not. Sometimes BIG, sometimes simple. It changes and evolves.... Both Michael and ashlee share how purpose gets them out of bed, passion gives them meaning, helping others gives them even more love. #cancer #BMT #love #GVHD #purpose
Join Michael and ashlee (AKA mom) as they sit on the couch and reflect about a recent tough day, reminding them that life is not linear, healing is not linear. As usual, the two laugh together, but always find the deeper meaning behind the laughter. Listen as they bring honesty and humor to the seemingly never-ending lessons they learn from cancer, BMT, GVHD and so many complications.
Indiana-headquartered owner-operator, and father of five, Dan Koors invokes a big number at the top of the podcast this week -- 27%, the approximate percentage of drivers running without health insurance. That's inclusive of company drivers, many with ready access to carrier benefits packages. Among owner-operators, the percentage is certainly higher than 27%. Overdrive's most recent estimate with polling of the owner-operator audience this past month put the number at 40%. While that's not the absolute highest percentage we've ever seen, it's a good measure above the rough third that was once a reliable poll result for the question of whether an owner was running with health insurance a decade ago: https://www.overdriveonline.com/business/article/14885028/tough-health-care-choices This week on Overdrive Radio, we dive into a new resource for health insurance that is something of a new variation on an old theme. Like groups such as the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association and the National Association of Independent Truckers, both of whom have health-insurance resources for members of varying types, the young CDL Drivers Unlimited group has dipped its toe, or sunk a whole foot into, the area with a new partnership with the Benefits Management Team, or BMT. They're a health insurance consultant and broker who can work with a potential insured in any state and with knowledge of what's available in the health insurance exchanges under the Affordable Care Act, how available premium subsidies work for individuals, and much more. The company does quite a lot to really vet health-care bills, too, to be an advocate for patients through its MediShield service, examining itemized invoices for unnecessary charges in further efforts to save on costs. And it's the long rising cost of health care, of course, that is a primary reason for the increasing numbers of those opting out of the health insurance system entirely, and a critical reason among small-business owner-operators. Yet owner-operator Dan Koors is not one of them. He views the necessity of insurance as a business decision, ultimately, and crucial to protect the business from catastrophe. So with a family of seven, including himself, to insure, how's he done it? In this edition of Overdrive Radio we'll hear that story, and another one. How the BMT company's knowledge of the insurance markets and the Affordable Care Act exchanges, and how they work in tandem with available subsidies, led Koors to a strange realization. He's now paying a little more in taxes than he might otherwise as a result, but he's netting nearly $7,000 with a dramatic reduction in insurance premiums. CDL Drivers Unlimited is making other strides, too, with what they're calling the Driver Advocacy Network, aimed to, as Koors sees it, boost the efforts of men and women behind the wheel to make headway influencing local, state and national policy and law to the benefit of truckers. We'll also hear from CDL Drivers Unlimited founding members Lee and Lisa Schmitt, headquartered in Wisconsin, on that score, and the group's plans for MATS. Other health-related resources from past coverage: **Biz risk of failing health: https://www.overdriveonline.com/overdrive-extra/article/15302424/owneroperators-who-recognize-the-risk-of-failing-health **Medicare: https://www.overdriveonline.com/overdrive-extra/article/15302142/nows-the-time-to-understand-medicare-if-getting-close-to-65 **Owner-op health-insurance gain in COVID-relief law: https://www.overdriveonline.com/life/article/15064881/health-insurance-savings-via-aca-exchanges-expanded **Health-share plans: https://www.overdriveonline.com/life/article/14972980/healthshare-plans-offer-insurance-alternative-for-ownerops As mentioned in the podcast, Rudy Yakym Jr.'s reckoning with time pressures post-ELD mandate: https://www.overdriveonline.com/electronic-logging-devices/article/14895603/operational-challenges-to-ownerops-after-the-eld-mandate
Season 5 of the Be More Today Show begins with our first guest for 2024 Libie Motchan founder of Fulton. Fulton is a modern brand of arch support that is supportive, sustainable, and a comfortable insole made from innovative materials like vegan cactus leather and cork. They seek to empower consumers to live healthier lives because wellness starts from the ground up. Visit www.walkfulton.com/BMT where you will get 15% off automatically applied with no code needed. Click here to donate to Dr. Sean's London Marathon journey: https://www.justgiving.com/page/drsean?utm_source=IG. For all other information visit www.bemoretoday.com --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bemoretoday/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bemoretoday/support
Join us as we dive deep into the emotional path of survivorship. Dr. Liu sat down with Samantha Siegel, MD, a relapsed/refractory Hodgkin lymphoma patient, to discuss her walk as a physician, caregiver, cancer patient, mom, and wife. This powerful podcast episode explores the highs, lows, and everything in between. Dr. Sam shares her inspiring story of resilience, hope, and healing. This episode is a must-listen for anyone seeking strength and support on their own survivorship path. Our Guest: Samantha Siegel, MD, Physician. Cancer/BMT Crusher. Survivorship Advocate and Integrative Medicine Enthusiast. Addressing resilience and burnout in healthcare through storytelling. Primary care doctor, 2X cancer survivor including BMT, survivorship physician, cancer advocate/activist, speaker, connector, student of integrative medicine. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/aimatmelanoma/support
Featuring Christina Augustine and Dr. Alexander I. Ngwube, MD, this episode provides an comprehensive exploration on bone marrow transplant (BMT) for sickle cell disease, blending personal experiences with professional expertise. A huge thank you to Be the Match for Sponsoring this episode. For more information about Be the Match, visit: https://sicklecellconnect.com --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thesicklecellpodcast/support --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/thesicklecellpodcast/support
Join Michael and Mom as they talk to THE Dr. Erica Harris! Survivor, BMT recipient, double lung transplant recipient. She is a motivational speaker, a mindset health expert (Rise, Survive and Thrive Alive), Tex x speaker, podcast host, retired chiropractor and MOM of two boys! She is smart, funny, down to earth, wise beyond her years, and is open and willing to share all she has learned with US. somehow, surviving FAR beyond all odds.... We were so grateful to connect with her on so many levels.... PLEASE check out her website: https://www.risetoday.com It was an honor and JOY to speak with this human who is a true light in this world....
A great week on The Nikki & Brie Show continues as USWNT soccer legend Mia Hamm joins them for an exceptional conversation that covers her career on the field, her perspective on being a mother, her work to raise awareness for bone marrow transplants and the special connection she has to the bone marrow transplant community. For years Nikki & Brie have been putting it out in the universe that they wanted to get Mia Hamm on the podcast. Growing up in Arizona and playing soccer, they both looked up to the USWNT that won multiple World Cups and Olympic Gold medals, and created a path of empowerment and achievement in life. Mia talks about the responsibility and opportunity that the team embraced, knowing that young eyes across the country were watching their every move, raising twin girls, filming a legendary Gatorade commercial with Michael Jordan and what his support meant, exhausting practices that tested her mental fortitude, and how she was introduced to the game of soccer, and the WWE superstar that used to throw her into a pool as a kid that went on to also have a Hall of Fame career. Mia also highlights the importance of her big brother Garrett, whom she admired greatly, who passed away in 1997 from complications following a bone marrow transplant (BMT) his family hoped could help cure aplastic anemia, a rare bone marrow disease he was battling at the time, which is why bone marrow transplant support and gave her a new mission in life to help other families, teaming up with Incyte to make sure they get the tools and information they need with a procedure that can have serious complications like Graft Versus Host Disease (GVHD). Mia closes out the episode with a special Inspiration & Affirmation that focuses on being present in a world that's full of distractions. For more on Mia's work with BMT and GVHD check out this link Find out more about bone marrow transplants at The Mia Hamm Foundation Follow Mia on Instagram Call Nikki & Brie at 833-GARCIA2 and leave a voicemail!Follow Nikki & Brie on Instagram and send Nikki & Brie a message on Threads!To watch exclusive videos of this week's episode, follow The Nikki & Brie Show on YouTube, Facebook, and TikTok!
“Earn your trident every day!” Get your notes ready and join SOCOM Athlete for this educational and exciting episode, featuring LIVE Q&A from listeners across the United States. We're joined by active duty Navy SEAL SO1 Sanchez. The episode features questions such as how to be successful at MEPS, the Delayed Entry Program (DEP), BMT (basic military training), tips for success to become a Navy SEAL Officer, and more. The process to earn a Special Operations contract and simply get your foot in the door can be extremely challenging. Over 90% of those who start the journey will fail. SOCOM Athlete is here to equip you with the tools for success to accomplish your dreams. Enjoy this incredibly valuable episode loaded with helpful information covering this complicated process. "Send Me!"• Website: https://www.socomathlete.com/• Become a Patreon Donor to support us & keep the podcast going: https://www.patreon.com/socomathlete• Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/socomathlete/• Subscribe to our YouTube Channel:(With One Click!): http://www.youtube.com/c/SOCOMAthlete?sub_confirmation=1
Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape- or SERE- is not just a training you'll go through in the Air Force Special Warfare pipelines. As you all know (we have the most informed and well-read teammates here on the podcast, in Discord, and on the IG page), SERE is a robust and interesting career field in the Air Force. We wanted to do a deep dive into all things SERE, so we brought on our friend Kortney James, a SERE Specialist, to get down into the nitty-gritty of everything it takes to make it through the SERE pipeline. Thanks to Kortney for being willing to sit down with us and get you the answers you need to pursue your dream of becoming a SERE Specialist in the Air Force! If you have any questions we didn't cover, head over to www.gosere.af.mil and check everything out! 00:00 Aaron stole the intro for once (Peaches wasn't ready) 00:50 Kortney's Background03:00 How much info did you have before starting05:45 SERE Development 10:00 Being a Teacher vs Being an Instructor 23:00 San Antonio to Spokane and pre-team stories33:00 Phases in the apprentice course 47:00 Attributes of a successful candidate 58:00 first assignments and future1:03:00 Advice and wrap10:30 We're all teachers12:30 Public speaking16:30 BMT to Selection19:15 Depending on your team23:00 Transition between Selection and Fairchild30:30 gosere.af.mil // How long is Team?33:30 Phases you struggled with the most46:45 SERE Attributes54:00 First-year post-graduation59:00 SERE at other units1:02:45 What's next for you?1:05:00 AdviceCollabs:18A Fitness - Promo Code: 1ReadyAlpha Brew Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYATACLete - Follow the URL (no promo code): ATACLeteCardoMax - Promo Code: ONESREADYEberlestock - Promo Code: OR10Hoist - Promo Code: ONESREADYStrike Force Energy - Promo Code: ONESREADYTrench Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYGrey Man Gear - Promo Code: ONESREADY The content provided is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The host, guests, and affiliated entities do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided. The use of this podcast does not create an attorney-client relationship, and the podcast is not liable for any damages resulting from its use. Any mention of products or individua...
Today's Story: Ask an MTI
How do you become a Navy SEAL? What is the pathway and how does it all start? Get your notes ready and join SOCOM Athlete for this educational and exciting episode featuring host Jason Sweet and active duty Navy SEAL SO1 Sanchez. The episode describes in great detail the pathway from talking to a recruiter, to earning an SO contract, the Delayed Entry Program (DEP), BMT (basic military training), the BUD/s prep course, tips for success at BUD/S, and more. The process to earn a Navy SEAL contract and simply get your foot in the door can be extremely challenging. Over 90% of those who start the journey will fail. SOCOM Athlete is here to equip you with the tools for success to accomplish your dreams. Enjoy this incredibly valuable episode loaded with helpful information covering this complicated process. "Send Me!"• Website: https://www.socomathlete.com/• Become a Patreon Donor to support us & keep the podcast going: https://www.patreon.com/socomathlete• Follow us on Instagram: https://instagram.com/socomathlete/• Subscribe to our YouTube Channel:(With One Click!): http://www.youtube.com/c/SOCOMAthlete?sub_confirmation=1
Today we talk about the Meuse-Argonne Offensive in 1918, the Space Force looks to accelerate launches, America's new approach to air warfare, the insane plan to turn C-130s into ‘glass cannons', the Air Force Revamps ‘Zero Week' at BMT, and the Buckley SFB idling policy for Government vehicles. Rapid Dragon: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZLDDpIzGvg&t=55s
Tara Dower and Liz Derstine are both power houses in the multi-day and ultra distance scene. Between the two of them, they hold FKTs on the Colorado Trail, Appalachian Trail, Long Trail, BMT, Pinhoti, Via Alpina, and much more. (Tara also just came in 1st place for women at Run Rabbit Run 100 miler, btw). In late July, Tara and Liz set off together to try to set a new self-supported record on the Colorado Trail. Things didn't go as planned, but the story and effort that unfolded is one for the ages. Find Tara and Liz on Instagram, @tara.dower and @pinkfeathers, respectively.Check out the Craft Pure Trail running shoe: https://www.craftsports.us/products/mens-pure-trail-running-shoeUse code fromthebackcountry at infinitnutrition.us and hyperlitemountaingear.com for 15% off your entire orderpodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fromthebackcountry/
In this episode, we delve into the diagnosis and management of Paroxysmal Nocturnal Hemoglobinuria (PNH) with Dr. Robert Brodsky. Here are the shownotes for key papers we discussed in the episode: How I treat PNH: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33512400/ Alternative donor BMT with posttransplant cyclophosphamide as initial therapy for acquired severe aplastic anemia: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37084383/ Pegcetacoplan versus eculizumab in PNH: a) https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33730455/ b) https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35349667/ Phase 2 study of danicopan (factor d inhibitor) in patients with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria with an inadequate response to eculizumab: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34314483/ Complement and prothrombotic state: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34415298/
Thought it might be fun to put together some "Highlight Clips" from a few of my favorite podcast episodes so far this year! Rolf Asphaug joined me on Episode #152 of the show and we had a great conversation about his upcoming hike on the Benton MacKaye Trail and I answered a few of Rolf's questions throughout our conversation. Update on Rolf: Huge Congrats to Rolf for recently completing the Benton MacKaye Trail. So happy for your Rolf! You can follow Rolf's journey on the BMT by visiting his Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/rolfdenver Full Episode With Rolf: https://www.hikingradionetwork.com/show/jester-section-hiker/152-section-hiker-q-a-with-rolf-asphaug/ Upcoming Woods Hole Weekend: September 28 - October 1 https://woodsholehostel.com/things-to-do/the-woods-hole-weekend/ Woods Hole Weekend Video Series: https://www.hikingradionetwork.com/p/woods-hole-weekend/ HRN Trading Post: https://hrntradingpost.com/ Connect with Rolf Asphaug: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rolfdenvers/ Blog: https://thetrek.co/backpacker-radio-134-rolf-gunnar-asphaug/ Learn HOW TO Successfully Hike The Appalachian Trail: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLpmZshhnan2SCN-8gqQOXaADlaU_tEaYj Connect with Julie "Jester" Gayheart: Email: jester@jestersectionhiker.com Website: http://juliegayheart.com Music By: Victor Lundberg "Top of The Morning"
Pararescue Chief Master Sergeant (ret) Caleb Ethridge had a robust and exciting career as a PJ. He was kind enough to sit down with Peaches, Trent and Aaron and talk through a lifetime of chasing adventure and saving lives. From the very beginning of his journey, Chief Ethridge had to deal with adversity like no other. From almost dying on a three-wheeler to his struggles in the pipeline to becoming one of the most influential Chief Master Sergeants in the community, Chief Ethridge learned a lot of lessons. Continue the words when you listen to the episode. 00:00 - Greymangear.com code ONESREADY// 18A Fitness code 1Ready02:50 - Chief Caleb Ethridge intro and background, including almost dying on a 3 wheeler16:30 - Finally making it through the DEP program and getting to BMT after surgery18:00 - Peaches threatens Trent with murder on the group chat23:30 - First assignment, 9/11 and deployments in the early days, and instructor time39:30 - AFSW Idols at Selection, Superhuman Newman, and returning as an instructor56:00 - Trail Life and giving back59:00 - AdviceDon't forget to subscribe to the Podcast on your favorite player! http://bit.ly/2OG2OlfHave a question? Email us at info@onesready.comFollow us on Instagram http://bit.ly/2OeNoFIAs always, THANK YOU for your support, we truly appreciate it.#podcast #military #specialforcesThe views and opinions expressed by the OnesReady team and any guests are those of the team and themselves and do not reflect the official policy or position of the DoD. Any content our Podcast guests, bloggers, sponsors, or authors provide is their opinion. It is not intended to malign the DoD, any religion, ethnic group, club, organization, company, individual, or anyone.Collabs:18A Fitness - Promo Code: 1ReadyAlpha Brew Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYATAC Fitness - Promo Code: ONESREADYCardoMax - Promo Code: ONESREADYEberlestock - Promo Code: OR10Hoist - Promo Code: ONESREADYStrike Force Energy - Promo Code: ONESREADYTrench Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYGrey Man Gear - Promo Code: ONESREADY The content provided is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The host, guests, and affiliated entities do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided. The use of this podcast does not create an attorney-client relationship, and the podcast is not liable for any damages resulting from its use. Any mention of products or individuals does not constitute an endorsement. All content is protected by intellectual property laws. By accessing or using this you agree to these terms and conditions.
We have prepared a step-by-step guide to help you successfully pass the Air Force's Special Warfare Assessment and Selection Course. The key to success is to be a good individual and dedicated to your goals. Our team has created an entire episode to provide you with detailed information and ensure that you understand what it takes to achieve success.We want to clarify that the term "dude" is completely gender-neutral and can be used to refer to anyone, just like the term "cone."It doesn't matter whether you aspire to be a Combat Controller, Special Reconnaissance Airman, Pararescueman, TACP Airman, firefighter, police officer, or park ranger. The qualities required for success in all these fields are quite similar.Our Ones Ready team is always available to provide you with guidance, mentorship, and the necessary experience to help you become a great individual and achieve your goals.So there you have it- just be a good dude, put out, and you'll succeed! 00:00 - Intro, Trent doesn't care and the 82nd Jump Capability isn't needed02:51- Be a good dude, and don't be like kids these days12:50 - Who's in your circle? You can't fly with the eagles if you hang with the turkeys21:00 - Be a good dude in DEP, and a sweet Discord Shoutout33:20 - Be a good dude at BMT, do this, don't do this42:40 - ATACLete Use code ONESREADY44:40 - Bears can PID weapons- get the Bando bag- Eberlestock Use code OR1045:00 - Hoist Use code ONESREADY47:00 - Be a good dude in the pipeline, even though it's statistically unlikely, mind yourself TDY51:45 - Stuff that never gets old about the job, and the best of times54:00 - Trent rants about interstellar travel and conspiracy theories, and a dumb Aaron fact56:41 - The funniest Peaches moment in the history of the podcastAs always, THANK YOU for your support, we truly appreciate it.DISCLAIMER:The content provided is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The host, guests, and affiliated entities do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided. The use of this podcast does not create an attorney-client relationship, and the podcast is not liable for any damages resulting from its use. Any mention of products or individuals does not constitute an endorsement. All content is protected by intellectual property laws. By accessing or using this you agree to these terms and conditions.Collabs:18A Fitness - Promo Code: 1ReadyAlpha Brew Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYATAC Fitness - Promo Code: ONESREADYCardoMax - Promo Code: ONESREADYEberlestock - Promo Code: OR10Hoist - Promo Code: ONESREADYStrike Force Energy - Promo Code: ONESREADYTrench Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYGrey Man Gear - Promo Code: ONESREADY The content provided is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. The host, guests, and affiliated entities do not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided. The use of this podcast does not create an attorney-client relationship, and the podcast is not liable for any damages resulting from its use. Any mention of products or individuals does not constitute an endorsement. All content is protected by intellectual property laws. By accessing or using this you agree to these terms and conditions.
In this episode Nurse Mo teaches the key things to know about bone marrow transplant (BMT), including: * Conditions treated with BMT * The function of bone marrow * The types of bone marrow transplants * Options for obtaining stem cells * The complications of BMT * Key assessments and assessment findings in a patient undergoing BMT * Tests utilized in bone marrow transplant * Treatments for a patient undergoing BMT * Important patient/family education For an excellent summary of the neutropenic diet, check out this resource from Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center. Interested in saving a life? Register with Be The Match. Download the FREE Straight A Nursing LATTE Method Template here. Are you struggling in your Med Surg class? What if I told you that it's not you at all…it's likely the way it's being taught! Enroll in Med Surg Solution to get simplified explanations and study guides for 57 key disease conditions. Read the article "Bone Marrow Transplant Basics" and view references here. __________ The information, including but not limited to, audio, video, text, and graphics contained on this podcast are for educational purposes only. No content on this podcast is intended to guide nursing practice and does not supersede any individual healthcare provider's scope of practice or any nursing school curriculum. Additionally, no content on this podcast is intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Straight a Nursing is a proud member of the Airwave Media Network. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The Air Force Special Warfare Candidate Course is the premier DoD preparation program. Special Warfare Training Wing is the gate all Air Force Special Operators must pass. Located in San Antonio, Texas, SWCC (pronounced "swick") has an experienced and professional human performance staff, from dieticians to athletic trainers to strength and conditioning coaches to psychologists- everything designed to make you able to perform your absolute best at assessment and selection. We will always get you the best and most relevant information available. This week we welcome Emily, Nick and Zach from SWCC to talk all things Human Performance- and there are some big updates on pre-BMT and BMT training programs for candidates. That's huge.What other questions do you have for the team? Drop them in the comments below and make sure to follow the IG. Like, subscribe, and share this video, it really does help. Thanks so much for following along with this crazy thing. We appreciate all of you! 00:00 Peaches crushes the 18A Fitness read (PROMO- 1Ready)01:32 Trent makes it super awkward on behalf of Eberlestock (PROMO- OR10)04:10 The SWCC Team's intro06:15 Pre-Accession Training Program 08:45 Nick drops knowledge bombs about the first day at SWCC12:05 Lower leg injuries and more time on your legs14:18 Pre-Accession Program deep dive20:15 What about injuries? How can I prepare?23:15 What is the 5m target? How can I prepare? 26:31 Swim Coaches are L-7 WEENIES29:00 Soreness and Training33:40 CrossFit is the best and I won't hear otherwise- when to add intensity38:40 What are candidates lacking right now? THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT SECTION48:30 Grip Strength is important 49:31 Aaron makes a BADASS Neverending Story Referenence you are all welcome 50:00 Prolonged Resiliency Training 52:00 What Happens if you get injured?58:00 Ohio, Resilience, and Trent Hates Ohio1:05:40 Advice and the Big CloseDon't forget to subscribe to the Podcast on your favorite player! http://bit.ly/2OG2OlfHave a question? Email us at info@onesready.comFollow us on Instagram http://bit.ly/2OeNoFIAs always, THANK YOU for your support, we truly appreciate it.#Onesready #podcast #faq Collabs:18A Fitness - Promo Code: 1ReadyAlpha Brew Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADYATAC Fitness - Promo Code: ONESREADYCardoMax - Promo Code: ONESREADYEberlestock - Promo Code: OR10Hoist - Promo Code: ONESREADYOut of Regs Pomade - Promo Code: ONESREADYStrike Force Energy - Promo Code: ONESREADYTrench Coffee Company - Promo Code: ONESREADY