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After an unusual all-night session, the House narrowly passed a budget reconciliation bill, including billions of dollars in tax cuts for the wealthy, along with billions of dollars in spending cuts to Medicaid, the Affordable Care Act, and the food stamp program. But the Senate is expected to make major changes to the measure before it can go to President Trump for his signature.Meanwhile, the Department of Health and Human Services has made some significant changes affecting the availability of covid-19 vaccines.Alice Miranda Ollstein of Politico, Anna Edney of Bloomberg News, and Sarah Karlin-Smith of the Pink Sheet join KFF Health News' Julie Rovner to discuss these stories and more.Also this week, Rovner interviews University of California-Davis School of Law professor and abortion historian Mary Ziegler about her new book on the past and future of the “personhood” movement aimed at granting legal rights to fetuses and embryos.Visit our website for a transcript of this episode.Plus, for “extra credit,” the panelists suggest health policy stories they read this week they think you should read, too:Julie Rovner: The Washington Post's “White House Officials Wanted To Put Federal Workers ‘in Trauma.' It's Working,” by William Wan and Hannah Natanson.Alice Miranda Ollstein: NPR's “Diseases Are Spreading. The CDC Isn't Warning the Public Like It Was Months Ago,” by Chiara Eisner.Anna Edney: Bloomberg News' “The Potential Cancer, Health Risks Lurking in One Popular OTC Drug,” by Anna Edney.Sarah Karlin-Smith: The Farmingdale Observer's “Scientists Have Been Studying Remote Work for Four Years and Have Reached a Very Clear Conclusion: ‘Working From Home Makes Us Happier,'” by Bob Rubila. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Featuring:Prof. Sam Estreicher, Dwight D. Opperman Professor of Public Law, New York University School of LawProf. Chimène Keitner, Martin Luther King Jr. Professor of Law, University of California Davis School of LawModerator: Hon. David Stras, Judge, United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit
In this episode, Christopher L. Bowlus, MD, discusses recent advances in the management of primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), including:Treatment goalsUse of PPAR agonists for the treatment of PBCClinical trial results for elafibranor (ELATIVE), seladelpar (RESPONSE), and bezafibrate (BEZURSO)Presenter:Christopher L. Bowlus, MDLena Valente Professor and ChiefDivision of Gastroenterology and HepatologyUniversity of California Davis School of MedicineSacramento, CaliforniaLink to full program: https://bit.ly/41tvSDuGet access to all of our new podcasts by subscribing to the CCO Infectious Disease Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or Spotify.
In this episode, Christopher L. Bowlus, MD, discusses recent advances in the management of primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), including:Treatment goalsUse of PPAR agonists for the treatment of PBCClinical trial results for elafibranor (ELATIVE), seladelpar (RESPONSE), and bezafibrate (BEZURSO)Presenter:Christopher L. Bowlus, MDLena Valente Professor and ChiefDivision of Gastroenterology and HepatologyUniversity of California Davis School of MedicineSacramento, CaliforniaLink to full program: https://bit.ly/41tvSDuGet access to all of our new podcasts by subscribing to the CCO Infectious Disease Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or Spotify.
Isabella Pulido was raised in Southern California and grew up with a menagerie of pets. She knew from an early age that she wanted to be a Veterinarian. To that end, she earned her Bachelor of Science Degree in Animal Science with a minor in Spanish from California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo. She was accepted into the University of California Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, where she completed her first semester in the Fall of 2023.Please enjoy this first installment of interviews with Student Members of CIVT as Izzy and I discuss her childhood, undergraduate education, veterinary school application process, introduction to CIVT and Integrative Medicine, and future career goals.Be sure and stay current with Izzy's journey by following her blog, Dogtor-in-training.com.
Mary Ziegler, a professor at University of California Davis School of Law, joins Lisa Dent to discuss the Alabama Supreme Court’s ruling on in vitro fertilization (IVF) and whether the ruling for the state to recognize frozen embryos as legal persons is a violation of church-state separation. Follow The Lisa Dent Show on Twitter:Follow @LisaDentSpeaksFollow […]
Using the Tably app, a photo of your cat says a thousand words - or maybe just a few - helping your cat tell you whether they're having a good day or a bad one. Tably's highly accurate AI model assesses a photo against validated veterinary pain scales. The model has assessed hundreds of thousands of photos with over 90% precision. It utilizes proprietary machine learning algorithms to empower cat parents to make informed decisions about their cat's health. Tably employs a number of artificial intelligence processes: object detection, image suitability detection, object extraction, image categorization, and result analysis. To minimize errors, we have configured our algorithm to validate the presence of a feline face in the image before sending it to the AI model for further analysis. Tably is the first product created by Sylvester.ai, a company that creates predictive healthcare products powered by artificial intelligence to improve animal health outcomes across species. Sylvester.ai believes animals can live healthier, longer lives when humans can be more proactive in their care. Meet Dr. Liz Bales Liz Bales, VMD is a 2000 graduate of The University of Pennsylvania School Of Veterinary Medicine who has gained a special interest in the unique behavioral and wellness needs of pets. During her nearly two-decade veterinary career, Dr. Bales has practiced equine, small animal, and feline only. Dr. Bales is a writer, speaker and a featured expert in all things pet around the globe including appearances on Fox and Friends, ABC News, and Cheddar. She is the founder of Doc and Phoebe's Cat Company and the inventor of The Indoor Hunting Feeder for cats. Dr. Bales is a writer and has been a guest speaker at The University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine and The University of California Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. She sits on the Dean's Alumni Council at The University of Pennsylvania, the Advisory Board for AAFP Cat-Friendly Practice, and the Advisory Board of Fear-Free. Meet Tably Founder Susan Groeneveld: A co-creator of multiple, globally recognized, award-winning companies; Susan is an expert in marketing consultancy, business model development, and marketing outcome approaches for national and multinational corporations. Susan has worked with Bayer, Novartis, Roche, Elanco, Canadian Lentils, UPL, Purina, General Mills, Federated Co-operatives, and Royal Canin to name a few. Susan wonders about the problems we can solve and is inspired by the power of humanity to do good. Learn more about the research used to validate the use of facial AI to help predict pain in cats here --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tazz-thepetropolist/message
This is episode 85, “The American Healthcare Mess.” My guest, Gilbert Simon, MD, wrote “Ripped Off!: Overtested, Overtreated and Overcharged, the American Healthcare Mess.” In 1989, Dr. Simon founded the Sacramento Family Medical Clinics to care for people who had trouble affording and getting quality healthcare. Before he founded his medical clinics, Dr. Simon was a pediatrician, and taught at Columbia University, University of California Davis School of Medicine, and California Northstate University School of Medicine. Do not miss this episode as Dr. Simon discusses the waste, inefficiency and profiteering that currently exists in the American healthcare system. Correction: Dr. Simon said that we are “spending about 12 and a half dollars per capita” on health care. The correct figure is 12 and a half thousand dollars per capita.
Much like 2000s fashion – we're back! The long wait is over. Digging a Hole's new season is here! After a summer of landmark Supreme Court cases, we are excited to start the season with Mary Ziegler, one of the nation's leading experts and historians of U.S. abortion politics. Professor Ziegler is the Martin Luther King, Jr. Professor of Law at the University of California Davis School of Law. She has written four books on the social movements around reproductive rights, including, most recently, Dollars for Life: The Anti-Abortion Movement and the Fall of the Republican Establishment. We begin our conversation by asking Professor Ziegler of how we got to Dobbs – how the Republican Party, campaign finance laws, and the anti-abortion movement created the conditions for overturning Roe. Professor Ziegler then builds upon her op-ed in The Atlantic, discussing what implications Dobbs may have for the future of substantive due process, including for precedents related to contraception and gay marriage. We also discuss the implications of reproductive rights politics for future elections and if the elections in the past several weeks offer insights for how November might go. Lastly, we talk more broadly about what the future might look like -- what cases the Court will take on, what legislation will pass in states or in Congress, and what political conflicts will emerge. Referenced Readings Dollars for Life: The Anti-Abortion Movement and the Fall of the Republican Establishment, Mary Ziegler. “How to move forward after the destruction of Roe v. Wade,” Mary Ziegler. “If the Supreme Court Can Reverse Roe, It Can Reverse Anything,” Mary Ziegler. “Why Exceptions for the Life of the Mother Have Disappeared,” Mary Ziegler.
Filomena Trindade, MD, MPH, ABFM, ABOIM, FAARM, IFMCP is a physician, teacher, author, and internationally sought after lecturer in functional medicine. She is faculty at the Institute for Functional Medicine (IFM) and in the fellowship program in Metabolic Medicine at Metabolic Medical Institute (MMI). After obtaining her BA degree in Biology she went on to finish a master's in Public Health in the area of environmental health and epidemiology before starting medical school. She graduated first in her class in family practice from the University of California Davis School of Medicine and did her residency training in family practice at the U.C. San Francisco/Santa Rosa Program. She has been in clinical practice for over 24 years. Before starting her own private practice in 2004 in functional medicine she was the medical director of a non-profit organization that catered to the underserved. She recently authored a chapter on Nutritional Influences on Hormonal Health in the Integrative and Functional Medicine Nutrition Therapy Textbook and another chapter on Diabetes in the Integrative Cardiovascular Medicine textbook. Other publications include Townsend Letter, Guide to Anti- Aging & Regenerative Medicine, Saúde Actual, and the Border Health Journal. She is currently very active in her Saudade Certification Program, in mentoring other health providers and in her health retreats in Azores, her homeland. Keep up with her activities at www.drtrindade.com.
We finally have the decision in Roe v. Wade. and as we expected from the leaked opinion in May, the Court has overturned Roe and Casey v. Planned Parenthood, striking down a woman's right to abortion. This case, known as Dobbs versus Jackson Women's Health, will functionally remove a right for more than half of the population … something unheard of in American history. Mary Ziegler, a professor at the University of California - Davis School of law and the author of several books about reproductive rights and politics, including her most recent book Dollars for Life.
In this unique Fight Back podcast, we hosted our first LIVE telephone “Town Hall.” Hundreds of Fight Back podcast listeners called in to hear the latest news about the COVID-19 endemic, ask questions and interact with our two moderators: Dr. Brad Pollock and Steve Poizner.Dr. Brad Pollock hosts a monthly “COVIDCast” on the Fight Back podcast, where he discusses the latest news and information about COVID-19, its variants, treatments, how to stay healthy, and other topics. Dr. Pollock is Chairman of the Department of Public Health Sciences at the University of California Davis School of Medicine.Steve Poizner, Director of the Healthcare Consumer Rights Foundation, is the host of Fight Back.
In This Episode:Dr. Stacee and Dr. Caitlin chat with Cindy Trice, DVM Founder and CEO of Relief Rover, about utilizing relief services for your clinic as well as working relief.....and thinking of it like a dating site.Listen in to hear all of the tips and download the PDF to get the links mentioned in the episode! More About Cindy Trice, DVM Founder and CEO of Relief Rover:As a multi-state licensed relief veterinarian with over 17 years of experience working in at least 50 unique general practice, emergency, and shelter clinics, Dr. Cindy Trice finds great satisfaction helping other vets take those hard earned breaks. In 2018, Cindy founded Relief Rover, (reliefrover.com), a community connecting relief vets to jobs, each other, resources, and service providers who can help them grow their businesses. In addition to relief practice, Cindy is a consultant, speaker, serial entrepreneur, and author. She's co-founder of a clothing company called KickIt Pajamas (kickitpajamas.com) that designs pajamas and other accessories for women battling cancer. Following graduation in 2004 from University of California Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, Cindy interned at Florida Veterinary Specialists, (now Blue Pearl Veterinary Partners), in Tampa, FL. In her spare time she loves to volunteer, cook, scheme travel plans, and write rap lyrics for hamsters. Relief Rover - https://reliefrover.com/ Sign up for #IVETSOHARD Resources Email List (below) to get the 5 takeaways from this episode in PDF form.Episode Website Subscribe & Review On Apple Podcasts:Thanks for being an IVSH listener! We hope this podcast has been inspiring and has helped you learn a few new tricks when it comes to technology and workflows that really work.To help get this podcast in front of more veterinary professionals and teams, please consider subscribing to the podcast on Apple and leaving a review.Click Here to subscribe and review #IVETSOHARD on Apple Podcasts!About our sponsorVet2Pet is veterinary medicine's only customizable, all-in-one client connection platform. Built for veterinary teams by veterinary pros, the Vet2Pet custom-branded hospital app and practice dashboard have been proven to decrease phone time by an average of 3 hours per day, increase pharmacy engagement by up to 68%, and increase client spending by up to 41%. Visit the Vet2Pet website to learn more. Subscribe to Bits & Bytes, Vet2Pet's newsletter that was recently called “the best newsletter in vet med” by an industry leader.Sign up for a demo to find out how Vet2Pet can help your practice.
Filomena Trindade, MD, MPH, ABFM, ABOIM, FAARM, IFMCP is a physician, teacher, author, and internationally sought after lecturer in functional medicine. After obtaining her BA degree in Biology she went on to finish a master's in Public Health in the area of environmental health and epidemiology before starting medical school. She graduated first in her class in family practice from the University of California Davis School of Medicine and did her residency training in family practice at the U.C. San Francisco/Santa Rosa Program. She has been in clinical practice for over 24 years. Before starting her own private practice in 2004 in functional medicine she was the medical director of a non-profit organization that catered to the underserved. She recently authored a chapter on Nutritional Influences on Hormonal Health in the Integrative and Functional Medicine Nutrition Therapy Textbook and another chapter on Diabetes in the Integrative Cardiovascular Medicine textbook. Other publications include Townsend Letter, Guide to Anti- Aging & Regenerative Medicine, Saúde Actual, and the Border Health Journal. She is currently very active in her Saudade Certification Program, in mentoring other health providers and in her health retreats in Azores, her homeland. Keep up with her activities at www.drtrindade.com.
According to the latest IPCC Assessment Report, we're currently on course for at least 3°C (5.4°F) of warming by 2100 even if all of the voluntary Paris Agreement emissions pledges are fulfilled. Clearly the world needs to do more to reduce emissions. But what if that's still not enough? Solar geoengineering – such as putting sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere to reduce the amount of the sun's heat from reaching the earth – could be one tool to slow warming temporarily. But it has become so politically fraught that even research into the subject is contentious. Who decides who should control our atmosphere? And what global governance structures should be put in place before any experimentation begins? This program is generously underwritten in part by the Laney and Pasha Thornton Foundation. For transcripts and other information, visit: https://www.climateone.org/watch-and-listen/podcasts Guests: Janos Pasztor, Executive Director, Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative, former Assistant Secretary General, United Nations Sheila Jasanoff, Professor of science and technology studies, Harvard Kennedy School Albert Lin, Professor, University of California Davis School of Law David Keith, Professor of applied physics and public policy, Harvard Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
According to the latest IPCC Assessment Report, we're currently on course for at least 3°C (5.4°F) of warming by 2100 even if all of the voluntary Paris Agreement emissions pledges are fulfilled. Clearly the world needs to do more to reduce emissions. But what if that's still not enough? Solar geoengineering – such as putting sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere to reduce the amount of the sun's heat from reaching the earth – could be one tool to slow warming temporarily. But it has become so politically fraught that even research into the subject is contentious. Who decides who should control our atmosphere? And what global governance structures should be put in place before any experimentation begins? This program is generously underwritten in part by the Laney and Pasha Thornton Foundation. For transcripts and other information, visit: https://www.climateone.org/watch-and-listen/podcasts Guests: Janos Pasztor, Executive Director, Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative, former Assistant Secretary General, United Nations Sheila Jasanoff, Professor of science and technology studies, Harvard Kennedy School Albert Lin, Professor, University of California Davis School of Law David Keith, Professor of applied physics and public policy, Harvard Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
According to the latest IPCC Assessment Report, we're currently on course for at least 3°C (5.4°F) of warming by 2100 even if all of the voluntary Paris Agreement emissions pledges are fulfilled. Clearly the world needs to do more to reduce emissions. But what if that's still not enough? Solar geoengineering – such as putting sulfate aerosols into the stratosphere to reduce the amount of the sun's heat from reaching the earth – could be one tool to slow warming temporarily. But it has become so politically fraught that even research into the subject is contentious. Who decides who should control our atmosphere? And what global governance structures should be put in place before any experimentation begins? This program is generously underwritten in part by the Laney and Pasha Thornton Foundation. For transcripts and other information, visit: https://www.climateone.org/watch-and-listen/podcasts Guests: Janos Pasztor, Executive Director, Carnegie Climate Governance Initiative, former Assistant Secretary General, United Nations Sheila Jasanoff, Professor of science and technology studies, Harvard Kennedy School Albert Lin, Professor, University of California Davis School of Law David Keith, Professor of applied physics and public policy, Harvard Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
FILOMENA TRINDADE, MD, MPH obtained her BA degree in biology and went on to finish a Master's in Public Health in the area of environmental health and epidemiology before starting medical school. She graduated first in her class in family practice from the University of California Davis School of Medicine and did her residency training in family practice at the U.C. San Francisco/Santa Rosa Program. Filomena has been in clinical practice for over 23 years. She is faculty at the Institute for Functional Medicine (IFM) and in the fellowship program in Metabolic Medicine at Metabolic Medical Institute (MMI).
Toxicologists are constantly solving mysteries. Tune in this week as Dr. Robert Poppenga, a professor in the California Animal Health and Food Safety Lab at the University of California Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, highlights some of his recent cases involving common toxins affecting aquatic animals in the wild and in managed care settings.
Transportation Law Symposium Special - Transportation Planning & Land Use II Today's is the fourth in a mini series of episodes we are running from a first-of-its-kind academic event on law and transportation policy, The Future of Law & Transportation Symposium, featuring scholars from multiple disciplines. After a brief intro from Greg Shill, each scholar speaks and takes Q&A. The panelists are: Janice Griffith (Suffolk University Professor of Law): “Metropolitan Planning Organizations: Evolving Roles as Transportation Planning Incorporates Environmental and Sustainability Goals” Noah Kazis (Legal Fellow at the NYU Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy, New York University School of Law and the Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service): “Transportation, Land Use, and the Sources of Hyper-Localism” Kenneth Stahl (Professor and Director, Environmental Land Use and Real Estate Law Program, Chapman University, Dale E. Fowler School of Law): “Integrating Transportation Policy into the Land Use Curriculum” Darien Shanske (Professor of Law, University of California-Davis School of Law) co-author Deb Niemeier (Clark Distinguished Chair, Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Maryland A. James Clark School of Engineering): “Subsidizing Sprawl, Segregation and Regressivity: A Deep Dive into Sublocal Tax Districts” Symposium Program Follow us on the web or on Twitter: @denselyspeaking, @jeffrlin, @gregshill, @n_kazis, and Ken Stahl (@kookie13). Producer: Schuyler Pals. The views expressed on the show are those of the participants, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, the Federal Reserve System, or any of the other institutions with which the hosts or guests are affiliated.
This episode is an audio version of a video interview conducted by the journal’s editor in chief, Dr Audiey Kao, with Professor Holly Cooper. Professor Cooper is Co-Director of the Immigration Law Clinic at the University of California Davis School of Law. She joined us to talk about the dangerous living conditions for children and adults in U.S. immigration detention facilities. To watch the full video interview, head to our site, JournalOfEthics.org, or visit our YouTube channel.
Aaron Freiwald, Managing Partner of Freiwald Law and host of the weekly podcast, Good Law | Bad Law, is joined by Professor Carlton F.W. Larson, of the University of California Davis School of Law, to discuss the events of January 6th and the siege on the U.S. Capitol. Aaron and Carlton have an incredibly important and timely conversation on the legalities of treason, insurrection, sedition and seditious conspiracy, as well as Trump’s responsibility, involvement and failure to protect. Today’s conversation is of the utmost importance after the tragedy of Wednesday’s attack on Capitol Hill. The world watched in horror as a violent mob stormed the steps of Capitol Hill and seized possession of the Nation’s Capitol on one of America’s darkest days, Aaron and Carlton talk about what happened and the aftermath that we are now forced to sort through. Carlton and Aaron have a conversation about accountability, the history of treason and treason law, the incoming Biden Administration and the new Justice Department, and levying war. Aaron and Carlton touch on the Founders, case law, Article III, and more. What happens next? Is this treason? Is Trump responsible? Carlton F.W. Larson is the Martin Luther King Jr. Professor of Law at UC Davis, as well as a scholar of American constitutional law and Anglo-American legal history. Professor Larson’s scholarship addresses a wide range of issues, including enemy combatant detentions, legacy preferences in public universities, the historical basis of Second Amendment rights, and parents’ rights to name their children. A graduate of both Harvard University and Yale Law School, Professor Larson is one of the nation’s leading authorities on the law of treason and is the author of the books On Treason: A Citizen’s Guide to the Law (Ecco/HarperCollins) and The Trials of Allegiance: Treason, Juries, and the American Revolution (Oxford University Press). Professor Larson’s scholarship has been cited by numerous federal and state courts and has been profiled in The New York Times, The Economist, TIME, and others. He is a frequent commentator for the national media on constitutional law issues and recently published a piece in The Washington Post, “The framers would have seen the mob at the Capitol as traitors.” Prior to joining the UC Davis law faculty, Professor Larson served as a law clerk to Judge Michael Daly Hawkins of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and spent three years as a commercial litigator at Covington & Burling in Washington, D.C. Listen now! To read Professor Larson’s recent Washington Post article, “The framers would have seen the mob at the Capitol as traitors,” please click here. To check out Professor Larson’s book, On Treason: A Citizen’s Guide to the Law, please click here. To check out Professor Larson’s book, The Trials of Allegiance: Treason, Juries, and the American Revolution, please click here. Host: Aaron Freiwald Guest: Carlton F.W. Larson Follow Good Law | Bad Law: YouTube: Good Law | Bad Law Facebook: @GOODLAWBADLAW Instagram: @GoodLawBadLaw Website: https://www.law-podcast.com
Dr. Allison Brashear, Dean of the University of California-Davis School of Medicine, joins Innovators to talk about her program’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and how the pandemic has helped her West Coast medical school expand translational research, topple organizational silos, and embrace a curricular shift to lifelong learning. Dr. Brashear has been the Dean of the UC Davis School of Medicine since early 2019. She completed the Harvard School of Public Health Leadership program for Physicians in 2004 and earned her M.B.A. from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University in 2012. She was named an Association of American Medical Colleges Council of Deans Fellow in 2014. Innovators is a podcast production of Harris Search Associates. *The views and opinions shared by the guests on Innovators do not necessarily reflect the views of the interviewee's institution or organization.*
Dr. Allison Brashear, Dean of the University of California-Davis School of Medicine, joins Innovators to talk about her program’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic and how the pandemic has helped her West Coast medical school expand translational research, topple organizational silos, and embrace a curricular shift to lifelong learning. Dr. Brashear has been the Dean of the UC Davis School of Medicine since early 2019. She completed the Harvard School of Public Health Leadership program for Physicians in 2004 and earned her M.B.A. from the Fuqua School of Business at Duke University in 2012. She was named an Association of American Medical Colleges Council of Deans Fellow in 2014. Innovators is a podcast production of Harris Search Associates. *The views and opinions shared by the guests on Innovators do not necessarily reflect the views of the interviewee's institution or organization.*
Carmen Mendez, MD, is an Associate Professor of Medicine at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, and the Internal Medicine Program Director at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center. Dr Mendez completed her medical school from the University of California Davis School of Medicine and her residency from Harbor - UCLA Medical Center, where she stayed on as chief resident before joining general internal medicine faculty. Dr. Mendez is committed to resident education and serving underserved communities. Find the thing you love—really love—and go do it. Dr. Carmen Mendez's advice is simple: We have to love what we do at work just as much as what we love outside of medicine, in our personal lives. It's a long career, as she says, and doing the thing that really ignites us is what makes it all worth it. She advises us to get off the “hamster wheel of success,” and think about what is truly motivating us to show up at work each day. She shares stories of an upbringing filled with love, compassion, and humor, and how she developed her purpose. Dr. Mendez urges us to move toward the thing we want to do the most. Because nothing is really stopping us. Pearls of Wisdom: 1. We have to love what we do just as much as we love what we have at home in our personal lives. Find what you really love—and go after it. There's nothing you can't achieve. 2. Develop the perspective that our privilege as physicians gives us a greater opportunity to be an advocate for those who need it most. 3. All of us are running on a hamster wheel of success in some way. But when we put too much pressure on ourselves, it takes away from the reason we entered medicine in the first place. Think critically about what's driving you, and know how to get off the wheel. 4. The most important thing we can do for patients is to sit down with them, and show them we're not in a rush. And when it comes to staring at the computer—there's nothing on a computer screen that is going to shed light on the conversation at hand.
Guest: Cristie Kamiya is the Chief of Shelter Medicine at Humane Society Silicon Valley. She has worked as a shelter veterinarian in humane societies, municipal shelters, and rescues in the Denver–Boulder areas of Colorado, the greater Phoenix metro area of Arizona, and Northern California. She also completed a 3-year intensive residency-training program in shelter medicine from the University of California-Davis’ School of Veterinary Medicine. In addition to having a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree, she also earned a Master of Business Administration degree from Colorado State University. Main question: How has your organization addressed foster care challenges during COVID-19? Takeaways: * The pandemic (any new challenge) comes with a silver lining. It provides an opportunity to improve programs and services. * Veterinary care for foster animals can become more efficient through the use of electronic questionnaires and video consultations – these cut down on in-person visits, save time and enable you to serve more animals and foster caregivers. * BEFORE seeking a solution, making a plan or asking for more volunteers, be sure to get clear on exactly what you are trying to accomplish. Links: * Humane Society Silicon Valley https://www.hssv.org * Webinar on "Scaling High Quality, High Volume Foster Care in Times of Crisis" with Cristie Kamiya https://learning.theaawa.org/p/sheltermed-9-16-20 * Recommendation: "Inside the mind of a master procrastinator" - TED Talk by Tim Urban https://www.ted.com/talks/tim_urban_inside_the_mind_of_a_master_procrastinator Recorded Sept. 15, 2020
FILOMENA TRINDADE, MD, MPH obtained her BA degree in biology and went on to finish a Master's in Public Health in the area of environmental health and epidemiology before starting medical school. She graduated first in her class in family practice from the University of California Davis School of Medicine and did her residency training in family practice at the U.C. San Francisco/Santa Rosa Program. Filomena has been in clinical practice for over 23 years. She is faculty at the Institute for Functional Medicine (IFM) and in the fellowship program in Metabolic Medicine at Metabolic Medical Institute (MMI).
A conversation with University of California Davis School of Law Professor Karrigan Börk about the CA Water Rights, the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act, drinking water, and federal vs. CA controls over water. Find the episode transcript here: https://www.watertalkpodcast.com/episodes/episode-06
Carlton F. W. Larson is the author of The Trials of Allegiance: Treason, Juries, and the American Revolution (Oxford University Press, 2019). The Trials of Allegiance looks at the law of treason during the American Revolution, showing just how central treason is to understanding the course of the Revolution. Looking at Pennsylvania, Professor Larson provides readers with a comprehensive study of treason prosecutions brought by Americans against non-Patriots or non-Rebels, depending on who you asked of course. Larson uses these trials and their aftermaths to show how treason helped shape America's national identity during the Revolution. Carlton F. W. Larson is a Professor of Law at the University of California – Davis School of Law. Larson studies American constitutional law and Anglo-American legal history. Derek Litvak is a Ph.D. student in the department of history at the University of Maryland.
Carlton F. W. Larson is the author of The Trials of Allegiance: Treason, Juries, and the American Revolution (Oxford University Press, 2019). The Trials of Allegiance looks at the law of treason during the American Revolution, showing just how central treason is to understanding the course of the Revolution. Looking at Pennsylvania, Professor Larson provides readers with a comprehensive study of treason prosecutions brought by Americans against non-Patriots or non-Rebels, depending on who you asked of course. Larson uses these trials and their aftermaths to show how treason helped shape America’s national identity during the Revolution. Carlton F. W. Larson is a Professor of Law at the University of California – Davis School of Law. Larson studies American constitutional law and Anglo-American legal history. Derek Litvak is a Ph.D. student in the department of history at the University of Maryland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Carlton F. W. Larson is the author of The Trials of Allegiance: Treason, Juries, and the American Revolution (Oxford University Press, 2019). The Trials of Allegiance looks at the law of treason during the American Revolution, showing just how central treason is to understanding the course of the Revolution. Looking at Pennsylvania, Professor Larson provides readers with a comprehensive study of treason prosecutions brought by Americans against non-Patriots or non-Rebels, depending on who you asked of course. Larson uses these trials and their aftermaths to show how treason helped shape America’s national identity during the Revolution. Carlton F. W. Larson is a Professor of Law at the University of California – Davis School of Law. Larson studies American constitutional law and Anglo-American legal history. Derek Litvak is a Ph.D. student in the department of history at the University of Maryland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Carlton F. W. Larson is the author of The Trials of Allegiance: Treason, Juries, and the American Revolution (Oxford University Press, 2019). The Trials of Allegiance looks at the law of treason during the American Revolution, showing just how central treason is to understanding the course of the Revolution. Looking at Pennsylvania, Professor Larson provides readers with a comprehensive study of treason prosecutions brought by Americans against non-Patriots or non-Rebels, depending on who you asked of course. Larson uses these trials and their aftermaths to show how treason helped shape America’s national identity during the Revolution. Carlton F. W. Larson is a Professor of Law at the University of California – Davis School of Law. Larson studies American constitutional law and Anglo-American legal history. Derek Litvak is a Ph.D. student in the department of history at the University of Maryland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Carlton F. W. Larson is the author of The Trials of Allegiance: Treason, Juries, and the American Revolution (Oxford University Press, 2019). The Trials of Allegiance looks at the law of treason during the American Revolution, showing just how central treason is to understanding the course of the Revolution. Looking at Pennsylvania, Professor Larson provides readers with a comprehensive study of treason prosecutions brought by Americans against non-Patriots or non-Rebels, depending on who you asked of course. Larson uses these trials and their aftermaths to show how treason helped shape America’s national identity during the Revolution. Carlton F. W. Larson is a Professor of Law at the University of California – Davis School of Law. Larson studies American constitutional law and Anglo-American legal history. Derek Litvak is a Ph.D. student in the department of history at the University of Maryland. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Prior to founding Zoom, Eric was Corporate Vice President of Engineering at Cisco, where he was responsible for Cisco's collaboration software development. As one of the founding engineers and Vice President of Engineering at WebEx, Eric was the heart and soul of the WebEx product from 1997 to 2011. Eric proudly grew the WebEx team from 10 engineers to more than 800 worldwide, and contributed to revenue growth from $0 to more than $800M. Eric is a named inventor on 11 issued and 20 pending patents in real time collaboration.Eric is a graduate of the Stanford University Executive Program.Jim has achieved 5 ‘unicorn’-level successes over the past 20 years as a founder, executive, and investor. His top performers include Zoom ($1B valuation), Cruise ($1B sale to GM), Bebo ($850M sale to AOL), Tango ($1B+ valuation), and NBCi ($6B IPO), plus several other exits including the recent acquisition of Check by Intuit for $360M. Jim is one of the leading growth experts in Silicon Valley, a TED speaker, and a frequent presenter and judge at many startup conferences and events. Jim has a BS in Neuropsychology from Duke University and earned a JD at the University of California Davis School of Law. Jim has startup in his blood. He’s been a serial entrepreneur dating back to his high school and college days.
Find out if your dog has "Golden Poo", it's very very rare! Holly Ganz explains all.And don't forget to use your coupon code for 15% off!! PAWDCAST15animalbiome.comHolly Ganz, PhD, CEO, and cofounder of AnimalBiome is a microbial ecologist who studies howmicrobes and mammals interact. After creating KittyBiome in 2015, Holly realized that digestivedisorders are common in cats and dogs and that the gut microbiome plays an important role insome of these conditions. And so she founded AnimalBiome in 2016 in order to create betterdiagnostics and therapeutics for cats and dogs. Holly received her PhD from University ofCalifornia, Davis and conducted research at University California of Berkeley, University ofCalifornia San Diego, the University of California Davis School of Veterinary Medicine, and theUniversity of California, Davis Genome Center. You can follow Holly on Twitter @hollyhganz.AnimalBiome Social Media:Facebook :https://www.facebook.com/animalbiome/Instagram: @animal.biomeWebsite: https://www.animalbiome.com/Also mentioned in the podcastsungenomics.comget $25 off Flore' when you use coupon code HGG25http://iddy.no/aasdAnd don't forget to visit healthygutgirl.com for more discounts on healthy stuff! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode, Jasmine E. Harris, Acting Professor of Law at the University of California Davis School of Law, discusses her article "The Aesthetics of Disability," which was published in the Columbia Law Review. Harris begins by explaining the source of disability law and how it is intended to both prevent discrimination against people with disabilities and rely on "contact theory" to reduce the stigma of disability. But she observes that the benefits predicted by contact theory have not always materialized, and argues that it is because aesthetic aversion to disabilities encourages individual and institutional discrimination. She argues that we should strive to eliminate the ability of those aesthetic preferences to affect our choices, in order to effectively prevent discrimination against people with disabilities. Harris is on Twitter at @Jeharrislaw.This episode was hosted by Brian L. Frye, Spears-Gilbert Associate Professor of Law at the University of Kentucky College of Law. Frye is on Twitter at @brianlfrye. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Claudia Cragg (@KGNUClaudia) speaks here with JJ Mulligan Sepulveda. He is the son of proud mother @emmanvch. Sepulveda is an immigration lawyer working at the Immigration Law Clinic at the University of California Davis School of Law. He is a former Immigrant Justice Corps fellow and Fulbright Scholar. This is his first book. For the second anniversary of President Trump’s Muslim Ban, which banned individuals from seven Muslim countries from entering the US—regardless of legal status. Immigration attorney J.J. Mulligan Sepúlveda was among the many fearless lawyers who rallied together and offered services to those being detained, and their families eagerly awaiting their entry. His new book, NO HUMAN IS ILLEGAL: An Attorney on the Frontlines of the Immigration War (Melville House Publishing) pulls back the curtain on the inhumane legal world of immigration reform that is currently coming to fruition in the US. He offers an inside look at how the United States controls and handles immigration in our country. Alternating between memoirist accounts of his own beginnings as an immigration lawyer, and enlightening commentary on the backchannels and bureaucracy of immigration reform, NO HUMAN IS ILLEGAL offers new insight and fascinating history to one of our country’s most important issues.
Dr. Haines Ely, MD is a board-certified dermatologist, researcher, clinician and Clinical Professor UC Davis University of California Davis School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology. In this remarkable interview, Dr. Ely takes us on a journey that connects dots between nutrition, gastroenterology, microbiology, cardiology, hepatology, immunology and dermatology. His extensive experience and novel discoveries in these diverse fields help us understand what’s causing psoriasis and translate to effective treatments. Further reading: Ely PH. Is psoriasis a bowel disease? Successful treatment with bile acids and bioflavonoids suggests it is. Clin Dermatol. 2018 May - Jun;36(3):376-389.
Dr. Haines Ely, MD is a board-certified dermatologist, researcher, clinician and Clinical Professor UC Davis University of California Davis School of Medicine, Department of Dermatology. In this remarkable interview, Dr. Ely takes us on a journey that connects dots between nutrition, gastroenterology, microbiology, cardiology, hepatology, immunology and dermatology. His extensive experience and novel discoveries in these diverse fields help us understand what’s causing psoriasis and translate to effective treatments. Further reading: Ely PH. Is psoriasis a bowel disease? Successful treatment with bile acids and bioflavonoids suggests it is. Clin Dermatol. 2018 May - Jun;36(3):376-389.
Kevin Johnson, a professor at the University of California Davis School of Law, discusses Wednesday's Supreme Court arguments in the case Trump v. Hawaii, where justices heard from both sides about the constitutionality of President Trump's travel ban. In arguments, key justices John Roberts and Anthony Kennedy indicated they were skeptical of arguments against the travel ban, including implications that the policy was motivated by bias. Plus, William Banks, a professor at Syracuse University Law School, discusses Attorney General Jeff Sessions's decision not to recuse himself in the investigation into Michael Cohen, President Trump's personal lawyer. Sessions has recused himself from matters relating to the Mueller investigation because of his role in the Trump Campaign during the 2016 election. They speak with Bloomberg's June Grasso. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Kevin Johnson, a professor at the University of California Davis School of Law, discusses Wednesday’s Supreme Court arguments in the case Trump v. Hawaii, where justices heard from both sides about the constitutionality of President Trump’s travel ban. In arguments, key justices John Roberts and Anthony Kennedy indicated they were skeptical of arguments against the travel ban, including implications that the policy was motivated by bias. Plus, William Banks, a professor at Syracuse University Law School, discusses Attorney General Jeff Sessions's decision not to recuse himself in the investigation into Michael Cohen, President Trump's personal lawyer. Sessions has recused himself from matters relating to the Mueller investigation because of his role in the Trump Campaign during the 2016 election. They speak with Bloomberg’s June Grasso.
In this edition of Genome Barks we bring you and interview with Dr. Danika Bannasch, a veterinary geneticist with the University of California Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. An expert in genetic research and testing, Dr. Bannasch recently hosted a round table discussion on interpreting genetic test results and how to incorporate those results into a breeding program. In this podcast Dr. Bannasch discusses genetic test basics and how breeders should use genetic tests.