Podcasts about community health workers

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Best podcasts about community health workers

Latest podcast episodes about community health workers

Raise the Line
Dismantling Structural Barriers to Healthcare: Robyn Bussey, “Just Health” Director at the Partnership for Southern Equity

Raise the Line

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 29:46


"Do nothing for us without us." According to today's guest Robyn Bussey, that operating principle is the basis for effective community health work. "You don't go into a community and dictate. You go and listen and trust and be a partner," she adds. As you'll learn in this enlightening conversation, Bussey is following that approach in her current work as Just Health Director at the Partnership for Southern Equity, an Atlanta-based nonprofit advancing racial equity and shared prosperity across the South.  On this episode of Raise the Line from Elsevier, Bussey provides illuminating  examples of community-rooted work in South Fulton County and rural Georgia, and explains why community health workers may be the most underutilized asset in addressing health disparities. This wide-ranging interview with host Michael Carrese also explores: Bussey's candid perspective on what happened to the surge of interest in health equity that occurred during COVID; Why life expectancy gains in many Southern states have lagged behind the rest of the country; Her advice to students and early-career clinicians about where they're needed most.   Mentioned in this episode:  Partnership for Southern Equity If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at www.osmosis.org/podcast

LTC University Podcast
Christopher Laffey, NP: What Happens When Healthcare Follows You Home

LTC University Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 37:48


What if your healthcare team already knew what happened during your hospital stay — before you even explained it? What if someone on your care team noticed you were struggling on a Saturday and simply showed up? In this episode, Jamie sits down with Christopher Laffey, Nurse Practitioner at Your Health, to break down what a truly connected, proactive model of care actually looks like when it's working. Christopher practices in North Charleston, SC, where his team — nurses, therapists, social workers, community health workers, and more — functions less like a traditional office practice and more like a living, breathing safety net woven around each patient's real life. What you'll hear in this episode: Why most patients are failing not because nobody cares, but because the system itself is fragmented — and what doing it differently actually looks like on a Tuesday morning The real difference between "patient-centered" as a marketing phrase and patient-centered as a daily practice (hint: it involves seeing the medication bottles on the kitchen table) A powerful real-life story of a bedbound patient whose caregiver suddenly disappeared — and how the team mobilized over a weekend, on their own time, to prevent a hospitalization The single mindset shift every clinician needs to make the transition from visit-based thinking to longitudinal care Why "value-based care" doesn't mean discounted care — it means the organization is accountable for your outcomes, not just your appointments If you've ever left a doctor's appointment feeling more confused than when you walked in, this episode will show you what healthcare can feel like when it's actually designed around you. www.YourHealth.Org

The Disrupted Podcast
If You Didn't Document It, Medicare Thinks It Never Happened

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 32:39


It was 3 o'clock in the morning when Scott Middleton finally signed the papers. The merger was official. And within days, he was already on the road — visiting facilities, riding along with providers, and spotting the same gap everywhere he went: brilliant clinicians doing real work that was completely invisible to the system. In this episode of The Disrupted Podcast, Jamie sits down with Scott Middleton, calling in from Boston, to unpack what he's discovering on the ground in the newly merged Your Health organization — and why tracking your time isn't about paperwork. It's about protection, proof, and getting paid for every minute of care you're already delivering. What you'll hear in this episode: The Dr. Jeeve story: a high-producing doc who managed a nursing home crisis by phone, saved a patient from an unnecessary ER visit — and never billed for it, leaving Medicare with no record of his intervention Why not documenting a visit before a hospitalization doesn't just cost you revenue — it makes you look like a bad provider, even when you did everything right How insurance companies like United Healthcare boldly take 15% off the top of every healthcare dollar — and why that math means providers can't afford to give their time away for free The TCPA pattern Scott keeps seeing: 15,000–18,000 visits a month, almost entirely in nursing homes, with zero follow-up once patients go home The new post-discharge standard: every patient leaving a nursing home gets a telehealth visit within 48 hours, then weekly follow-up for four weeks — no one gets left in the gap This episode is a masterclass in understanding that documentation isn't bureaucracy — it's how you tell your story, protect your reputation, and keep the care you've already given from disappearing. www.YourHealth.Org

The Disrupted Podcast

What does it actually cost when a doctor writes a verbal order over the phone instead of seeing the patient? Scott Middleton has the receipts — and the answer is going to make you rethink everything about how American healthcare spends its money. In this episode of The Disrupted Podcast, Scott announces a landmark three-way merger bringing Your Health together with Transitional Care Professionals of America (TCPA) out of Georgia and Providence Care, a hospice organization in South Carolina. The combined organization will serve approximately 55,000 active patients — not patients on a list, but people being seen regularly — and Scott lays out exactly how he's going to run it. What you'll hear in this episode: Why Scott's family owning 80% of the merged company changes everything about how decisions get made — and who they get made for The difference between fee-for-service and value-based care, and why the ACO model means every unnecessary hospitalization literally comes out of Your Health's pocket How Your Health's risk-adjustment-based visit model (16 visits per year per risk point) was independently validated by a new government study — and why it works The three things Scott is asking every new employee to do in the first weeks: align with a nurse practitioner, track every minute of care management, and recruit like their livelihood depends on it — because it does Why Scott's new management philosophy is six words: "Keep them out of the hospital and see your damn patients" This isn't a corporate announcement. It's a playbook for how healthcare can actually work when operators run the company, providers see their patients, and every minute of care gets counted. www.YourHealth.Org

Rebelle Openhartig
Aflevering 8: Nieuw in het land, ongelijk in de zorg

Rebelle Openhartig

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2026 74:36


Migreren doet wat met een mens. Een nieuw land, een nieuwe taal, nieuwe mensen om je heen en… een nieuw zorgsysteem. Eentje waar administratieve procedures, lange wachttijden én een witte blik op ziekte en gezondheid de bovenhand nemen. Dat maakt dat het voor nieuwkomers in ons land soms moeilijk is zich te bewegen in de gezondheidszorg. En voor ‘ons' zorgsysteem om mee te veren met wie van elders komt.Want hoe we over zorg denken, is voor een groot stuk cultureel bepaald. Zien we dat als iets individueel, of eerder collectief? Is vooral het fysieke van tel, of krijgt het mentale een evenwaardige plek? Zien we een mens als een samenhangsel van losse lichaamsdelen, of is het beeld holistischer? En welke rol krijgen patiënten én zorgprofessionals toebedeeld?In deze aflevering leggen we de ongelijkheden bloot waar nieuwkomers in de gezondheidszorg mee geconfronteerd worden. Dr. Stéphanie De Maesschalck en Nikhat Kiros Sereke buigen zich over de kwestie. Dr. Stéphanie De Maesschalck is sinds 2001 huisarts. Ze werkte jaren bij Fedasil, en is momenteel aan de slag in een wijkgezondheidscentrum in Gent. Sinds 2002 is ze ook verbonden aan de UGent, Faculteit Geneeskunde & Gezondheidswetenschappen, waar ze als gastprofessor verantwoordelijk is voor het thema diversiteit in de opleidingen geneeskunde en gezondheidszorg. Ze is daarnaast bestuurslid van OPen Netwerk vzw.Nikhat Kiros Sereke is gediplomeerd verpleegkundige en werkt als Community Health Worker of gezondheidsgids in Gent. Begin jaren 2000 kwam Nikhat als jonge twintiger vanuit Eritrea in België terecht. Al snel nam ze via haar vereniging EriGent als vrijwilliger de rol op van brugfiguur voor de Eritrese gemeenschap in Gent. Redactie voor Rebelle: Lien Willaert, Ann Dewalque, Anna PaeshuyseHost: Kelia Kaniki MasengoGeluidstechniek: Jade YorksJingle: Lady BlaxxHeb je genoten van deze podcast, laat dan een recensie na. Zo vinden anderen ook de weg. Benieuwd wat Rebelle nog zoal doet? Surf naar www.rebelle-vzw.be of vind ons op Facebook en Instagram.

LTC University Podcast
A Nurse Practitioner's Field Guide to Whole-Person Care — with Jaclyn Taylor, PART 2

LTC University Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2026 37:10


Heads up — this is Part 2 of Jamie's conversation with Jaclyn Taylor If you haven't heard Part 1 yet, go back and start there. It sets up everything we unpack today. Most healthcare teams are working hard. They're just not working together. And the patient is the one absorbing the cost. In this second half of the conversation, Jamie and Jaclyn move from the why into the how. What does it actually look like when a provider stops responding to today's schedule and starts managing an entire patient panel? How do you turn a community health worker, a pharmacist, a PT, and a social worker into one coordinated team instead of four parallel ones? And what's the difference between data that produces reports and data that produces decisions? You'll hear: Why "frequent touches" only work when they're connected — and how fragmented touches still land patients back in the hospital The quarterback model — what it actually means for a provider to own a patient's trajectory, not just their visit The shift from seeing patients to managing a population — and why most providers were never taught how Why we don't have a resource problem in healthcare — we have an orchestration opportunity How to use technology and data without drowning in either What "showing up" really means inside a system that isn't perfect yet This is the episode for anyone trying to lead change from inside a system that's still catching up. Press play. www.YourHealth.Org

Outcomes Rocket
Empowering Community Health Workers with Technology with Colby Takeda, Co-Founder and CEO of Pear Suite

Outcomes Rocket

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2026 16:44


What happens when some of healthcare's most trusted workers are still operating outside the systems that document, reimburse, and scale care? In this episode, Colby Takeda, Co-Founder & CEO of Pear Suite, joins Saul Marquez live at ViVE to explore why community health workers are becoming a more essential part of the healthcare ecosystem. Drawing from his background in senior living and public health, Colby explains how Pear Suite helps community-based providers move beyond paper and spreadsheets with tools to document care, navigate credentialing and contracting, submit claims, and get paid for the value they deliver. The conversation also looks at Pear Suite's broader vision for connecting community-based organizations, health plans, and providers in a more coordinated system of care. Colby shares why AI should reduce administrative burden instead of replacing trusted relationships, how co-design with frontline workers has shaped the platform, and where he sees the biggest opportunity to make community-based care more sustainable and accessible at scale. Tune in to hear how community health workers are becoming more essential to the healthcare ecosystem, and how better infrastructure and smarter technology can make community-based care more sustainable and scalable. Resources: Connect with Colby Takeda on LinkedIn Learn more about Pear Suite Explore Pear Suite for Providers Follow Pear Suite on LinkedIn

LTC University Podcast
A Nurse Practitioner's Field Guide to Whole-Person Care — with Jaclyn Taylor, PART 1

LTC University Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2026 26:42


What if every "non-compliant" patient was actually a signal that the system isn't working for them? In this episode, Jamie sits down with Jaclyn Taylor, Clinical Strategy Director at Your Health and a nurse practitioner who started her career as a home-based provider in 2020 — thrown straight into the fire of COVID, isolated patients, and a healthcare world rewriting itself in real time. What she saw inside patients' homes — medications scattered on tables, food insecurity, missing transportation — changed how she thinks about every chart she's ever read. You'll hear: Why a nurse-first pathway gives nurse practitioners a fundamentally different lens than a medical school pathway — and why patients feel it What working across home care, telehealth, trauma, and wellness teaches you about treating the whole human, not just the diagnosis Why trauma surgery turned Jacqueline into a believer in proactive, longitudinal care — and what gets missed when we only meet patients after something has already gone wrong The two words she uses to describe what's most broken in traditional healthcare: fragmentation and misalignment How empathy stops being a poster and starts being operational — built into the design of care itself If you've ever felt invisible inside the healthcare system, or if you're the one trying to fix it, this conversation reframes the whole game. Press play. www.YourHealth.Org

Rio Bravo qWeek
Episode 224: Community Health Workers

Rio Bravo qWeek

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2026 24:18


Episode 224: Community Health Workers Dr. Arreaza: Today we will discuss a topic that, frankly, every single person listening, whether you're a medical student, a resident, a nurse, a family doctor, or any primary care provider, needs to really understand. We're talking about community health workers (CHWs). We are joined by our stellar medical student; you may be familiar with her voice from previous episodes about insomnia. Moira, welcome, please introduce yourself.  Moira: I want to be upfront about why Community Health Workers matter to you specifically. If you've ever felt frustrated that your patient with uncontrolled diabetes keeps missing appointments because they can't get a ride, or that your heart failure patient was readmitted because nobody checked whether they could afford their medications, then you already understand the problem that CHWs are designed to solve. Dr. Arreaza: We're going to give you the definition of a CHW, the evidence behind their effectiveness, how they fit into your care team, the return on investment, and practical steps for integrating them into your practice. We have pulled information from a lot of peer-reviewed sources, and we want to share them with you. So, Moira, let's start with the basics. What exactly is a community health worker? Moira: Great question, and it's one that even literature struggles with, because there are so many titles for this role. Community Health Worker is an umbrella term that encompasses more than 20 different titles including outreach workers, promotores or promotoras de salud, community health representatives, lay health workers, peer educators, patient navigators, and many more. The American Public Health Association defines CHWs as frontline public health workers who are trusted members of or have an unusually close understanding of the communities they serve. Arreaza: And that trust is so important in health care. CHWs are not physicians. They are not nurses. They do not diagnose or prescribe. But they are like a bridge connecting the medical environment, social services, and the community to reduce gaps in healthcare delivery.  Moira: Exactly. In the United States, the role was formally recognized in the 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which includes several sections highlighting the key roles CHWs play in achieving important goals of healthcare. ________________ References:  Aguerrebere, M., Rodríguez-Cuevas, F. G., Flores, H., Arrieta, J., & Raviola, G. (2019). Providing Mental Health Care in Primary Care Centers in LMICs. Innovations in Global Mental Health, 1–22. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-70134-9_95-1 Allen, L. N., Rasanathan, K., Mash, R., Uribe, M. V., Martinez-Bianchi, V., & Kidd, M. (2025). Models of Global Primary Care Post-2030. The Lancet Primary Care, 1(3), 100027. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lanprc.2025.100027 Babagoli, M. A., Nieto-Martínez, R., González-Rivas, J. P., Sivaramakrishnan, K., & Mechanick, J. I. (2021). Roles for Community Health Workers in Diabetes Prevention and Management in Low- And Middle-Income Countries. Cadernos De Saúde Pública, 37(10). https://doi.org/10.1590/0102-311x00287120 Balasubramanya, B., Isaac, R., Philip, S., Prashanth, H. R., Abraham, P., Poobalan, A., Thomas, N., Jeyaseelan, L., Mammen, J., Devarasetty, P., & John, O. (2020). Task Shifting to Frontline Community Health Workers for Improved Diabetes Care in Low-Resource Settings in India: A Phase II Non-Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial. Journal of Global Health Reports, 4. https://doi.org/10.29392/001c.17609 Battaglia, T. A., Zhang, X., Dwyer, A. J., Rush, C. H., & Paskett, E. D. (2022). Change Agents in the Oncology Workforce: Let's Be Clear About Community Health Workers and Patient Navigators. Cancer, 128(S13), 2664–2668. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.34194 Das, S., Grant, L., & Fernandes, G. (2023). Task Shifting Healthcare Services in the Post-Covid World: A Scoping Review. PLOS Global Public Health, 3(12), e0001712. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001712 Dodd, R., Palagyi, A., Jan, S., Abdel-All, M., Nambiar, D., Madhira, P., Balane, C., Tian, M., Joshi, R., Abimbola, S., & Peiris, D. (2019). Organisation of Primary Health Care Systems in Low- And Middle-Income Countries: Review of Evidence on What Works and Why in the Asia-Pacific Region. BMJ Global Health, 4(Suppl 8), e001487. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2019-001487 Huang, W., Long, H., Li, J., Tao, S., Zheng, P., Tang, S., & Abdullah, A. S. (2018). Delivery of Public Health Services by Community Health Workers (CHWs) in Primary Health Care Settings in China: A Systematic Review (1996–2016). Global Health Research and Policy, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s41256-018-0072-0 McCray, G. G., Haynes, B., Proeller, A., Ervin, C., & Williams-Livingston, A. (2020). Making the Case for Community Health Workers in Georgia. Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.20429/jgpha.2020.080116 Mor, N., Ananth, B., Ambalam, V., Edassery, A., Meher, A., Tiwari, P., Sonawane, V., Mahajani, A., Mathur, K., Parekh, A., & Dharmaraju, R. (2023). Evolution of Community Health Workers: The Fourth Stage. Frontiers in Public Health, 11. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1209673 Noel, L., Chen, Q., Petruzzi, L. J., Phillips, F., Garay, R., Valdez, C., Aranda, M. P., & Jones, B. (2022). Interprofessional Collaboration Between Social Workers and Community Health Workers to Address Health and Mental Health in the United States: A Systematised Review. Health &Amp; Social Care in the Community, 30(6). https://doi.org/10.1111/hsc.14061 None, N. (2022). Walking the Talk: Reimagining Primary Health Care After COVID-19. https://doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1768-7 Orkin, A. M., McArthur, A., Venugopal, J., Kithulegoda, N., Martiniuk, A., Buchman, D. Z., Kouyoumdjian, F., Rachlis, B., Strike, C., & Upshur, R. (2019). Defining and Measuring Health Equity in Research on Task Shifting in High-Income Countries: A Systematic Review. SSM - Population Health, 7, 100366. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ssmph.2019.100366 Pingel, E. S. (2022). Seeing Inside: How Stigma and Recognition Shape Community Health Worker Home Visits in São Paulo, Brazil. Community Health Equity Research &Amp; Policy, 44(3), 303–313. https://doi.org/10.1177/2752535x221137384 Rifkin, S. B., Fort, M., Patcharanarumol, W., & Tangcharoensathien, V. (2021). Primary Healthcare in the Time of COVID-19: Breaking the Silos of Healthcare Provision. BMJ Global Health, 6(11), e007721. https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgh-2021-007721 Rohan, E. A., Townsend, J. S., Bermudez, A. T., Thompson, H. L., Holman, D. M., Reza, A., Tharpe, F. S., & Wennerstrom, A. (2024). Engaging Community Health Workers in Primary Care Practices. Journal of Ambulatory Care Management, 47(3), 154–167. https://doi.org/10.1097/jac.0000000000000501 Shommu, N. S., Ahmed, S., Rumana, N., Barron, G. R. S., McBrien, K. A., & Turin, T. C. (2016). What Is the Scope of Improving Immigrant and Ethnic Minority Healthcare Using Community Navigators: A Systematic Scoping Review. International Journal for Equity in Health, 15(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-016-0298-8 Sisson, N., & Starke, J. (2022). Promotores De Salud in Montana: An Analysis of a Rural Health Care Intervention Rooted in Catholic Social Teaching and Its Place in Medical Curricula. The Linacre Quarterly, 89(1), 21–35. https://doi.org/10.1177/00243639211059346 The Role and Impact of Female Health Workers on the Well-Being of Global South Communities: A Call for Gender-Transformative Action. (2022). Archives of Women Health and Care, 5(2). https://doi.org/10.31038/awhc.2022521 Williams-Livingston, A., Henry Akintobi, T., & Banerjee, A. (2020). Community-Based Participatory Research in Action: The Patient-Centered Medical Home and Neighborhood. Journal of Primary Care &Amp; Community Health, 11. https://doi.org/10.1177/2150132720968456 Theme song, Works All The Time by Dominik Schwarzer, YouTube ID: CUBDNERZU8HXUHBS, purchased from https://www.premiumbeat.com/.   Even without trying, every night you go to bed a little wiser. Thanks for listening to Rio Bravo qWeek Podcast. We want to hear from you, send us an email at RioBravoqWeek@clinicasierravista.org, or visit our website riobravofmrp.org/qweek. See you next week!

LTC University Podcast
Our Values Series: Service

LTC University Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2026 34:47


What if the most important thing you did today wasn't on your task list? In the final episode of Your Health University's Values Series, host Jamie Preston brings back the full Patient Experience Team — Jennifer Kistler, Kim Metz, Whitney Myers, Carlos Heyward, and Rebecca Dillard — to explore the value that brings every other one to life: Service. Not the idea of it. The real, daily, roll-up-your-sleeves version that shows up in 60 extra seconds, one extra phone call, and the moments when you decide not to leave someone when they need you most. What you'll hear in this episode: Whitney's story of refusing to leave a patient on his worst day — and what true service looks like when the moments count most Carlos's creative solution for a patient in Charleston who keeps falling — and the phone call she made just to say thank you Rebecca's respiratory therapists who change cat litter boxes and wheel trash cans to the curb — because they noticed, and they could Kim's ICU story: braiding the hair of ventilated patients who couldn't do it themselves, because I would want someone to do that for me Jamie's deeply personal account of his wife's breast cancer diagnosis — and the profound difference between a healthcare team that says "this is what you need to do" and one that asks "what do you think?" Carlos's challenge to every listener: don't just adopt these values at work — make them yours Service is the reason you got into this. It's the thing that makes the hard days worth it and wakes you up the next morning ready to go again. Press play — and let this episode remind you exactly why what you do matters. www.YourHealth.Org

Kerry Today
Sinn Féin Councillor Wants Increase for Community Health Workers to Reflect Rising Fuel Prices – May 7th, 2026

Kerry Today

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2026


Sinn Féin councillor Robert Brosnan wants mileage rates and travel allowances for community health workers to be increased, given the recent surge in energy costs. He spoke to Treasa.

Bright Spots in Healthcare Podcast
The Care Model Hospitals Can't Ignore: Sinai Chicago's Community Health Worker Playbook

Bright Spots in Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2026 49:07


What if the most effective care model isn't built inside the hospital at all? This episode features the opening presentation from the recent Home Care Innovation Summit, a half-day virtual summit produced by Bright Spots Ventures in partnership with TytoCare, focused on how leading organizations are redesigning care to reach patients where they are. Kelly McCabe, Director of Community Health Innovations, Sinai Chicago and the Sinai Urban Health Institute (SUHI) shares a practical, equity-driven model: clinically integrating community health workers (CHWs) into care delivery to bridge the gap between hospital, home, and community. She's joined briefly by Jeanette Avila, Manager of Community Health Innovations at SUHI offering a frontline perspective on what this model looks like in practice and how it builds trust with patients day-to-day. Serving one of the most complex patient populations in the country, with roughly 90% uninsured or covered by Medicare/Medicaid, Sinai Chicago has built a model that doesn't just acknowledge social needs, but operationalizes them.  You'll hear how Sinai Chicago: Integrates community health workers directly into clinical teams, not as an add-on, but as core infrastructure Extends care beyond hospital walls through home visits and community-based engagement Tracks social determinants and community interactions to shape real-time interventions Builds trust with patients in underserved neighborhoods through culturally aligned care Uses a hybrid model of in-person outreach and centralized coordination to improve outcomes while reducing burnout  Key topics covered: Why community health workers are essential, not optional, for high-need populations Turning social determinants from "insight" into actionable care interventions How to operationalize a community-based care model inside a hospital system The role of trust, proximity, and lived experience in improving engagement Blending home-based care with clinical oversight to scale impact If you're a health system leader, population health executive, or payer/provider partner working to close equity gaps and deliver care beyond traditional settings, this is a real-world blueprint for making it work. Presentation Link: https://www.brightspotsinhealthcare.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Kelly-McCabe_Sinai-Chicago_2.19.26.pdf  About Our Presenters: https://www.sinaichicago.org/en/suhi/suhi-staff/ Thank You to Our Episode Partner, TytoCare: TytoCare enables health systems and plans to deliver high-quality remote exams anytime, anywhere. Their FDA-cleared devices and AI-powered diagnostic platform support virtual specialty care, school-based programs, and home health models—reducing unnecessary ED visits and improving patient experience. To learn more, visit tytocare.com. Schedule a Meeting with a Senior Leader at TytoCare: To explore how TytoCare can help your organization expand virtual specialty access and improve care coordination, reach out to jtenzer@brightspotsventures.com  to schedule a meeting. About Bright Spots Ventures: Bright Spots Ventures is a healthcare strategy and engagement company that creates content, communities, and connections to accelerate innovation. We help healthcare leaders discover what's working, and how to scale it. By bringing together health plan, hospital, and solution leaders, we facilitate the exchange of ideas that lead to measurable impact. Through our podcast, executive councils, private events, and go-to-market strategy work, we surface and amplify the "bright spots" in healthcare, proven innovations others can learn from and replicate. At our core, we exist to create trusted relationships that make real progress possible. Visit our website at www.brightspotsinhealthcare.com.  

The Disrupted Podcast
The Administrator Role Part 1

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2026 28:52


Most healthcare organizations wait until they're drowning to add administrative support. Your Health is doing the opposite — and it's changing the math on what a primary care practice can actually deliver. In Part 1 of this two-part conversation, Scott Middleton — owner of Your Health, founder, and Chief Disruption Officer — sits down with Jamie Preston to unpack why a dedicated administrator is now sitting beside the executive director of clinical services at every care group. With hospice added to the model, a single care group can now be responsible for more than 80 staff members across four care teams — bigger than most medical organizations in the country. Asking a nurse to run that alone was breaking people and burying clinical judgment under scheduling concerns. In this episode: Why the care group exploded overnight — and what hospice changed about staffing ratios What the administrator does on Monday morning before the clinical team even looks at the dashboard The Bridget story: how a "we're not allowed to do one-on-ones" response nearly cost a dementia patient her home Why "what could we have done today" is the wrong question — and what to ask instead How fee-for-service quietly incentivizes the wrong decisions at the hospital level The team structure every administrator now sits inside: nurse, HR, marketing, engagement If you've ever wondered what's actually supposed to stand between a great clinician and burnout, this is it. www.YourHealth.Org

Public Health On Call
1043 - How Community Health Workers Improve Research

Public Health On Call

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2026 14:30


About this episode: Many people know community health workers for their work supporting clinical care and connecting people to resources. In this episode: the role of community health workers in crafting research questions, recruiting study participants, sharing results, and making a broader impact. Guest: Donald Young Jr. is a community outreach engagement specialist for the D.C., Maryland, Virginia Community Engagement Alliance. Host: Dr. Josh Sharfstein is distinguished professor of the practice in Health Policy and Management, a pediatrician, and former secretary of Maryland's Health Department. Show links and related content: Community Health Workers—Johns Hopkins Center for Health Equity Donald Young—Baltimore Connect Baltimore man shares story of his struggle with substance use disorder—WMAR 2 News Transcript information: Looking for episode transcripts? Open our podcast on the Apple Podcasts app (desktop or mobile) or the Spotify mobile app to access an auto-generated transcript of any episode. Closed captioning is also available for every episode on our YouTube channel. Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Looking for a transcript? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or visit our website. Follow us: @‌PublicHealthPod on Bluesky @‌PublicHealthPod on Instagram @‌JohnsHopkinsSPH on Facebook @‌PublicHealthOnCall on YouTube Here's our RSS feed Note: These podcasts are a conversation between the participants, and do not represent the position of Johns Hopkins University.

The Disrupted Podcast
The Care Group Model

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2026 41:12


What if the reason healthcare teams burn out isn't the workload — it's the org chart? On this episode of The Disrupted Podcast, Jamie and Scott, break down the evolution of The Care Group Model — and why the instinct to build a "separate hospice team" is exactly the wrong move. Scott walks through what a true care team looks like when nurse practitioners, nurses, community health workers, social workers, chaplains, and triage nurses are orchestrated around the patient — not siloed around a diagnosis. Inside the episode: Why adding hospice to existing care groups beats building a parallel hospice division The new non-clinical "administrator" role Your Health is rolling out — and why every nurse needs one at their side Using DISC assessments to build teams that actually function (and why nurses aren't the same personality type) How mutual accountability and group-based bonuses fix the "don't bill too much CCM" problem Why matching a chaplain to a patient's faith tradition matters more than checking the box The $110 million Medicare savings story the industry still doesn't understand If you lead a clinical team, run an operation, or care about what healthcare could look like when it's built around people instead of paperwork — press play. www.YourHealth.Org

LTC University Podcast
Our Values Series "Empathy"

LTC University Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2026 27:38


Most providers interrupt their patients within 18 seconds. What if the next few minutes of silence could tell you more than the next hour of testing? In Part 2 of the Your Health Values Series, Jamie  sits down again with members of the Your Health Experience Team — Rebecca, Jennifer, Whitney,  and Carlos — to go beneath the surface of "patient-centered care" and look at what empathy really demands in the pressured, everyday moments of healthcare. This isn't a conversation about being nice. It's a conversation about seeing people — patients, families, and colleagues — for everything they're carrying, even when they're hiding it behind a smile. In this episode: Why empathy is officially non-negotiable at Your Health — and what that looks like in practice The difference between emotional empathy and "empathetic sternness" (and why both save lives) How to recognize when a patient or colleague is carrying something deeper than their symptoms The real threat of empathy fatigue — and how to keep giving without burning out The two "holy times" in healthcare where empathy matters most What patients actually say when they feel truly seen If you've ever wondered whether the extra 60 seconds is worth it, this episode will show you why it's everything. Press play — and then try it on your very next interaction. www.YourHealth.Org

Let's Talk About Your Breasts
CPRIT, The Texas Cancer Plan, and You

Let's Talk About Your Breasts

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2026 31:59


How does one man's dedication to community health reshape cancer prevention efforts in Texas? Carlton Allen's passion for public health and population health, sparked during his academic years, led him to an influential role in the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT). Through his guidance, CPRIT addresses significant cancer burdens and health disparities statewide. Meanwhile, Allen champions the Texas Cancer Plan as a comprehensive roadmap for continued progress in cancer prevention and care. Key Questions Answered 1. How did Carlton Allen get into public health? 2. What differentiates public health from direct patient care according to Carlton? 3. Where did Carlton Allen complete his education? 4. How did Carlton Allen integrate community health workers (CHWs) into clinical operations? 5. What are the challenges in obtaining funding for community health workers? 6. What is the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) and what roles does it play? 7. How does CPRIT impact cancer prevention and research in Texas? 8. What frustrations does Carlton Allen face in his role at CPRIT? 9. What was Carlton Allen’s role in the Texas Cancer Plan? 10. What values does Carlton hope to instill in his children based on his community work? Timestamped Overview 00:00 Community Health Workers' Impact 03:42 Healthcare Worker Reimbursement Challenge 07:46 Expanding Healthcare Outreach with Grants 10:07 Visiting Texas Prevention Grantees 13:27 Advancements in Cancer Prevention 16:51 Cancer Secrecy in Males 21:14 Inclusive Cancer Care Guidelines 25:57 Community Engagement and Volunteerism 27:56 Raising Hardworking, Community-Minded Children Learn more about CPRIT here. Support The Rose HERE. Subscribe to Let’s Talk About Your Breasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeart, and wherever you get your podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Disrupted Podcast
Social Services

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2026 35:28


A man is dying — literally in his last hour, the death rattle audible — and the hospital team arrives to take him for a radiation treatment. His family had no idea. No one had told them. No one had started the conversation. This is not a rare exception. This is what happens when social services is treated as an afterthought. In this episode of The Disrupted Podcast, host Jamie Preston and Scott Middleton, Owner and Chief Disruption Officer of Your Health, go deep on one of the most overlooked levers in healthcare — social services. From the social determinants that drive healthcare costs more than healthcare itself, to the care team structures Your Health is building to close the gap, this is a candid, unfiltered look at what's broken, what's possible, and what it actually costs when we don't act. What you'll hear in this episode: Why social determinants of health — food access, medication literacy, housing instability, social isolation — are the real drivers of healthcare spending, and why most systems still ignore them The truth about advanced care planning: why it's quietly dropping, why every patient within two to three years of death needs that conversation, and the story of Janet Denino's cousin that makes the cost of silence impossible to ignore How the mental health stigma is shifting generationally — and how telehealth, AI-assisted tools, and a smarter therapy cadence are changing who actually gets support The billing math behind 280,000 possible care management hours that were built down to 110 — and why that gap isn't just a business problem, it's a human one What it actually takes to build a social services program that works: the right roles, the right ratios, and why getting out to see patients is non-negotiable The system won't fix itself. But the people in it can. This episode shows you how. www.YourHealth.Org

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast
Quarter 1 at Your Health

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2026 42:18


What if the healthcare system your loved one relies on doesn't even know they need help until it's too late — and what would it look like if it did? In this Q1 2026 episode, Jamie Preston sits down with Matt Staub, CEO of Your Health, for a candid and wide-ranging look at how one of the country's largest home-based care providers is navigating the evolving landscape of value-based care, population health, and the human experience at the center of it all. Matt brings his characteristic clarity and heart to a conversation that is equal parts strategy, story, and honest reckoning with what the system still gets wrong. Key topics covered: Why 11% of patients account for 67% of all healthcare spending — and why most of them don't know they're in an ACO The evolution of value-based care: from quality-over-cost to outcomes + patient experience over total costs How Your Health is becoming proactive — not reactive — about falls, readmissions, and high-needs patients The quiet crisis of patient trust: down from 71% in 2020 to just 33% today, and what the correlation means for hospitalizations Real stories: a 79-year-old patient who went from barely existing to living fully — and Matt's own mom, who hasn't fallen since leaving the hospital after her stroke If you work in healthcare, advocate for someone in the system, or simply believe that better is possible — this episode will change the way you see what care can be.

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast
People Serving People

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 40:34


What if the greatest threat to healthcare isn't a broken system — it's a dehumanized one? In this episode of Experiencing Healthcare, Jamie Preston and Your Health CEO Matt Staub wrestle with a deceptively simple idea from Harvard Business School Professor Ryan Buell: service is the business of people helping people. Sparked by Matt's experience at an Athena Health executive leadership forum, this is a conversation about what it truly means to serve — in a world where technology promises to do it faster, cheaper, and at scale. Key topics covered: Why you can never fully take people out of a service industry — and what happens to care quality when you try How ambient listening technology like Mobius is using AI to restore human connection in the exam room, not replace it The ICU nurses who used tough love to get a post-heart-surgery patient walking — and what that story reveals about what genuine service really looks like The "can vs. should" question every healthcare leader must ask before deploying new technology How to show up and serve others with excellence, even on your hardest personal days Healthcare will always evolve — but Matt and Jamie make a compelling case that the human at the center of care is the one thing worth protecting above all else. This one's worth the listen.

HLTH Matters
Empowering Community Health Workers with Technology with Colby Takeda, Co-Founder and CEO of Pear Suite

HLTH Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2026 16:13


What happens when some of healthcare's most trusted workers are still operating outside the systems that document, reimburse, and scale care? In this episode, Colby Takeda, Co-Founder & CEO of Pear Suite, joins Saul Marquez live at ViVE to explore why community health workers are becoming a more essential part of the healthcare ecosystem. Drawing from his background in senior living and public health, Colby explains how Pear Suite helps community-based providers move beyond paper and spreadsheets with tools to document care, navigate credentialing and contracting, submit claims, and get paid for the value they deliver. The conversation also looks at Pear Suite's broader vision for connecting community-based organizations, health plans, and providers in a more coordinated system of care. Colby shares why AI should reduce administrative burden instead of replacing trusted relationships, how co-design with frontline workers has shaped the platform, and where he sees the biggest opportunity to make community-based care more sustainable and accessible at scale. Tune in to hear how community health workers are becoming more essential to the healthcare ecosystem, and how better infrastructure and smarter technology can make community-based care more sustainable and scalable. About the Guest: Colby Takeda is Co-Founder & CEO of Pear Suite. With a background in public health, senior living, and community-based care, he founded the company to help community health workers and community-based organizations better navigate the operational side of delivering meaningful support. Under his leadership, Pear Suite has built a tech-enabled model that combines workflow tools, reimbursement support, credentialing, contracting, and claims infrastructure to help community-based providers work more effectively with health plans and the broader healthcare system. Things You'll Learn: Why community health workers are becoming more central to modern, whole-person care models. How Pear Suite helps community-based providers document care, manage compliance, and get reimbursed for their work. Why policy shifts and Medicaid reimbursement are creating new momentum for community-based care. How AI can support community health workers by reducing administrative burden without replacing trust-based relationships. Why connecting health plans, providers, and community organizations is key to making community-based care sustainable at scale. Resources: Connect with Colby Takeda on LinkedIn Learn more about Pear Suite Explore Pear Suite for Providers Follow Pear Suite on LinkedIn

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast
Is American Healthcare a Commodity?

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2026 50:59


America spends nearly double what the fourth-ranked country spends on healthcare per capita — and still ranks among the worst in outcomes. So what exactly are we paying for? In this episode of the Experiencing Healthcare Podcast, Jamie Preston and Your Health CEO Matt Staub examine what happens when healthcare gets treated like gasoline: something people expect to be available, can't easily compare on quality, and ultimately choose based on price or convenience. When brand and price stop mattering, the only differentiator left is how patients are made to feel — and whether they trust the person across from them enough to actually change. What you'll hear in this episode: Why Matt ranks service above outcomes and access — and the patient story that changed how he thinks about both The "Chick-fil-A problem": how your healthcare experience is now being compared to your best service experience anywhere, not just the clinic down the street What provider burnout really looks like when a clinician closes their notes at 11pm wondering if their patient listened How insurance billing creates distrust that bleeds directly into the patient-provider relationship — and what healthcare organizations can do about it Why the most caring thing a doctor can do sometimes feels like the worst customer service in the room If you've ever felt like a number in a waiting room — or if you've ever been the one trying to help someone who wouldn't listen — this conversation will stay with you. Press play.

The Disrupted Podcast
The Role That Could Eliminate Most Hospitalizations: The Care Manager

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2026 53:56


In this episode of The Disrupted Podcast, Jamie and Scott have a  raw, specific, and deeply personal conversation about Care Managers: who they are, what they're actually supposed to do, and why getting this role wrong is costing patients their health and organizations millions of dollars. Scott opens with a story that hits hard: his 91-year-old father's recent hospitalization, the mistakes that nearly happened, and what it cost him — financially and emotionally — to navigate a system that wasn't built for the patient. What you'll hear in this episode: Why care managers are controllers, not schedulers — and what happens when organizations get that wrong The medication reconciliation crisis: how discharge errors are sending patients straight back to the ER How Your Health's new geographic mapping tool is transforming how care teams schedule 30 days of visits in advance The shared bonus model designed to stop care team members from fighting over visits — and start winning together What care managers should never be doing — and the analytical skill set that separates great ones from average ones If you're building care teams, leading a healthcare organization, or just trying to keep a loved one safe in a broken system, this episode will change how you think about the people standing between your patients and the hospital. www.YourHealth.Org

The Disrupted Podcast
The Visit That Saves a Life Has No Diagnosis Code: The Community Health Worker

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2026 51:20


What if the most powerful person on your care team isn't a nurse, a doctor, or a specialist — but someone showing up at 8:00 AM to check blood pressure, eat lunch with residents, and play vital signs bingo? In this episode, we go deep on the Community Health Worker role: what it is, what it isn't, and why most organizations are dramatically underusing it. Scott pulls no punches on the disconnect between what CHWs are doing and what they should be doing — and why the difference is costing patients their health and workers their bonuses. What you'll hear in this episode: Why the #1 complaint about CHW visits ("you're seeing our patients too much") is actually a communication failure, not a frequency problem — and how to fix it The specific visit types every community health worker should be scheduling: vital signs, medication reconciliation, lab draws, wound care, advanced care plans, and more How Mary White, a CHW in Gainesville, Georgia, goes in with 5 patients on her list and leaves having seen 15 — and what her approach reveals about what this role is really for Why buildings that aren't growing have either the wrong person or not enough people — and how to think through both The full compensation breakdown: base salary, guaranteed bonus, and how the right CHW can earn close to $80,000 a year If you hire, manage, or are a community health worker, this episode will reshape how you think about the role. Hit play. www.YourHealth.Org

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast
Catch Them Doing It Right: The Case for Intentional Positive Reinforcement in Healthcare"

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2026 40:42


What if the most powerful clinical tool in healthcare wasn't a drug, a device, or a data platform — but a word? In this episode of Experiencing Healthcare, Jamie and Matt have a conversation that starts with Disney World germs and ends with something that will change the way you lead your team tomorrow. They unpack the idea of Intentional Positive Reinforcement — not the hollow "great job" you throw over your shoulder in the hallway, but the kind of deliberate, meaningful recognition that creates a ripple effect all the way to the patient's bedside. Matt shares what a dental hygienist taught him about doing things right, why a pair of clicking heels in a nursing home hallway was actually a leadership strategy, and what happens to a healthcare team that only ever hears what they're doing wrong. This is a conversation for the bedside nurse and the C-suite executive. For the credentialing specialist who never sees a patient and the clinical coordinator who sees dozens. Because in healthcare, everyone plays a role in the patient experience — and the way we lead people determines the care those people deliver. If you've ever wondered whether your words are adding to your team or subtracting from them, this episode is your answer.

healthcare intentional disney world leadership development simon sinek leadership lessons servant leadership telehealth healthcare system myers briggs primary care workplace culture long term care patient care health equity community health workforce development team culture organizational development emergency departments key performance indicators employee retention leadership coaching leadership training your health transformational leadership culture change patient experience organizational behavior population health organizational culture healthcare innovation leadership mindset patient outcomes positive reinforcement leadership books courageous leadership value based care healthcare management leadership communication rural health credentialing patient engagement leadership culture electronic health records healthcare technology healthcare leadership healthcare executives positive feedback intentional leadership constructive feedback team communication holistic care community health centers care coordination empathetic leadership community health workers patient journey patient satisfaction healthcare quality employee recognition leadership presence employee motivation healthcare podcast healthcare organizations purposeful leadership health care advocacy staff retention employee loyalty fqhc skilled nursing whole person care healthcare strategy clinical coordinator negative reinforcement population health management healthcare equity federally qualified health center healthcare operations employee journey disc personality clinical leadership
The Disrupted Podcast
The Yeses Have Butts: How to Find the Yes in Every Healthcare Conversation

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2026 40:12


What does it actually take to say yes in healthcare when the system is wired to say no? In this episode of The Disrupted Podcast, Scott takes you straight into the field — from a brand-new administrator in Marietta, Georgia who's already revolutionizing her building eight days in, to a 190-patient facility in Charleston where the real conversation isn't about hospice referrals, it's about whether you have the staff to back it up. Scott gets honest about the moments where healthcare organizations talk a big game but fold when it matters — refusing acute visits to non-panel patients, locking providers into rigid workflows, and hiring bodies instead of talent. He challenges all of it. And he does it with the kind of clarity that only comes from someone who's actually in the buildings, at the dinner tables, and on the phone doing the hard work every day. From a nurse who deserves a Tesla to a wristband that could change emergency response forever, this episode is packed with real stories, bold ideas, and a simple but radical belief: that getting to the yes isn't just good business — it's the whole point of healthcare. If you're a provider, administrator, nurse, or healthcare leader who's tired of the way things have always been done, this one's for you. www.YourHealth.Org

The Disrupted Podcast
Stop the Fragmentation: Integrating Hospice Into Primary Care

The Disrupted Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2026 41:14


Healthcare didn't get expensive because patients got worse — it got expensive because the system got fragmented. In this episode of The Disruptive Podcast, Scott Middleton breaks down why hospice can't live “over there,” separate from primary care, nursing, therapy, and care management.Scott explains the Your Health Hospice rollout, the staffing reality that determines whether integration is real, and the math behind a new model: caseload reductions for nurses when hospice patients are added, plus incentives that acknowledge the complexity of end-of-life care.This conversation is about building a care system where the patient doesn't have to juggle providers, phone numbers, and handoffs — because they shouldn't have to. One team. One plan. One umbrella. www.YourHealth.Org

AgriSafe Talking Total Farmer Health
How Community Health Workers Benefit Ag Communities

AgriSafe Talking Total Farmer Health

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 23:40


Check out AgriSafe's continuing education opportunities for CHW's: https://www.agrisafe.org/courses/chw/ -If you are interested in QPR training, visit: https://www.agrisafe.org/QPR/Check out the AgriStress Provider Directory: https://directory.agrisafe.org/Sign up for the AgriSafe newsletter: https://www.agrisafe.org/newsletter/View upcoming webinars: https://www.agrisafe.org/events/-Directed by Laura SiegelHosted by Linda EmanuelEdited by Joel Sharpton for ProPodcastingServices.comSpecial Guest: Dr. Maria Cantu Hines

Public Health Review Morning Edition
1052: Strengthening Access to Care: Community Health Workers, Medicaid, and Rural Health

Public Health Review Morning Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 8:03


Community health workers (CHWs) play a critical role in bridging the gap between health systems and the communities they serve, especially in rural and underserved areas. In this episode, ASTHO Senior Director of Population Health, Alex Kearly, explains who CHWs are, how they build trust and address both health and social needs, and why Medicaid reimbursement can help make these roles sustainable. The conversation also explores the unique access challenges facing rural communities, from provider shortages to hospital closures, and the policy tools states can use to respond, including telehealth, workforce initiatives, and systems-of-care models. Looking ahead to 2026, the episode highlights what states should watch as new federal rural health programs begin to take shape.Policy Trends Shaping Access to Care in 2026 | ASTHOBraiding and Layering Funding to Address the Social Determinants of Health | ASTHOWebinar Registration - ZoomCMS Announces $50 Billion in Awards to Strengthen Rural Health in All 50 States | CMS

LTC University Podcast
You Can't Treat the Body Without the Mind Part 2

LTC University Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2025 22:34


Key TakeawaysEveryone can be an investigator: Observing subtle changes in behavior, sleep, decision-making, or life management can reveal early signs of behavioral health needs.Integration matters: Combining behavioral and physical health care improves outcomes, prevents avoidable hospital visits, and reduces overall healthcare costs.Impact beyond the patient: Supporting behavioral health has ripple effects on families, caregivers, and communities, improving overall system well-being.Life transitions are critical points: Changes in living situations, cognitive decline, or significant life events are opportunities for early intervention.Collaboration is key: Cognitive behavioral specialists, nurses, primary care providers, and facility staff must work together to ensure timely and effective care.Innovation brings hope: Emerging research, new care models, and broader conversations about mental health as part of overall wellness are reshaping healthcare for the better. www.YourHealth.Org

Tradeoffs
A New Kind of Primary Care Comes to America

Tradeoffs

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2025 26:08


A group of nurses in Baltimore wants to bring basic care to every person in a neighborhood regardless of age, health, income or insurance.Can this idea from abroad take root in the United States?Guests:Dawn Alley, PhD, Head of Scale, IMPaCT CareAsaf Bitton, MD, MPH, Executive Director, Ariadne LabsRegina Hammond, Founder, Rebuild Johnston Square Neighborhood OrganizationChris Koller, President, Milbank Memorial FundTerry Lindsay, Community Health Worker, Sisters Together and Reaching, Inc. (STAR)Sarah Szanton, PhD, RN, FAAN, Dean, Johns Hopkins School of Nursing; Founder, Neighborhood NursingLearn more and read a full transcript on our website.Help us unlock a $5,000 match by becoming one of 200 new donors at tradeoffs.org/donate.Want more Tradeoffs? Sign up for our free weekly newsletter featuring the latest health policy research and news. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

HealthcareNOW Radio - Insights and Discussion on Healthcare, Healthcare Information Technology and More

Meet Soledad Bolden CHW Program Consultant, and Kimberly Rawlinson, Community Impact Manager, from the Center for Community Health Alignment at the University of South Carolina Arnold School of Public Health. They discuss Community Health Workers, the benefits they provide and the Southeast Center for Community Health Workers Network (SE CHW). The SE CHW Network's primary goal is to enable areas throughout the region to support one another in order to collaboratively reach new heights in the community health worker field. To stream our Station live 24/7 visit www.HealthcareNOWRadio.com or ask your Smart Device to “….Play Healthcare NOW Radio”. Find all of our network podcasts on your favorite podcast platforms and be sure to subscribe and like us. Learn more at www.healthcarenowradio.com/listen

Impact & Innovation
KB 2.0 : From Data to Insights, Policy, and Impact

Impact & Innovation

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2025 39:53


They're back again! After visiting my podcast in its first year in 2018, Khushi Baby is back to share how they've not only survived the past seven years but completely leaned into their mission and expanded the depth and magnitude of their impact. Founded just over ten years ago, KB started out as a wearable designed to digitize data on childhood immunization in rural India. After conducting field research with Community Health Workers, they created an app integrating the maternal child health challenge into the larger problem set of primary care. Scaling rapidly in response to government crisis during the Covid-19 pandemic, they became part of a growing ecosystem of apps serving the public health system. KB2.0 emerged from this digital boom and the wealth of data generated, to play a new and critical role in helping the government generate insights from this data, and translate those insights into policy. 

WHRO Reports
In Portsmouth, doulas and community health workers join forces to improve maternal health

WHRO Reports

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2025 1:03


As maternal health disparities persist, Virginia's doulas and community health workers are stepping up.

Public Health Review Morning Edition
1004: CHWs + Dementia, Government Shutdown Effects

Public Health Review Morning Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 6:56


Mickal Lewis, Associate Director of the Center of Excellence on Dementia Risk Reduction with the Alzheimer's Association, shares how Community Health Workers play an essential role supporting a continuum of care for community members with dementia, and how public health leaders can help advance progress; Jeffrey Ekoma, Senior Director of Government Affairs at ASTHO, provides an update on the current government shutdown and explains how federal health agencies are impacted in this week's View from Washington, D.C. report; a new ASTHO report provides key resources that can help state and territorial health departments break down silos and collaborate with their partners in Medicaid agencies to improve health outcomes in their communities; and Dr. Susan Kansagra, Chief Medical Officer at ASTHO, was recently quoted in a story for STAT Health about low-income children's lack of access to the Covid-19 vaccine.  Frontiers in Public Health Research Article: Community health workers: developing roles in public health dementia efforts in the United States ASTHO Legislative Alert: Federal Government Shutdown Update: Contingency Plans Released ASTHO Report: Leveraging Public Health Assets in Medicaid Managed Care STAT Health: Low-income children lack access to Covid vaccines because of approval delay  

Impact & Innovation
Food As Medicine

Impact & Innovation

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2025 50:17


Josh Trautwein, founder of About Fresh, shares his start-up journey in the food as medicine space. Josh started out as a Community Health Worker, helping patients access the things they need to be healthy. He realized the importance of accessing healthy food, in a culturally relevant way, especially for urban areas without fresh food at accessible prices. The concept of "food as medicine" entails utilizing health care dollars to reimburse for fresh produce in a similar way to reimbursing for medication. Many chronic diseases are related to the food we eat, and health care payers like Medicaid can achieve better health outcomes and lower costs if they support patients in accessing healthy food, rather than long term medication. Learn about Josh's roller coaster ride as he navigated this space, starting with a school bus selling fresh produce, and evolving to a scalable fintech solution.

PT MEAL Podcast
BTR 7: Health Literacy on Physical Therapy Among Senior Citizens and Community Health Workers

PT MEAL Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2025 49:56


In this episode of Behind the Research, host Johan dela Paz welcomes Ms. Kriza Ganotisi and Prof. Ryan Dean Sucgang, faculty members from Mariano Marcos State University, to discuss their research titled "Health Literacy on Physical Therapy Among Senior Citizens with Physical Disability and Barangay Health Workers." The conversation delves into the significance of health literacy in physical therapy, particularly for senior citizens with physical disabilities, and the role of barangay (community) health workers in promoting this knowledge. The episode aims to bridge the gap between evidence and clinical practice, exploring how the findings from their research can impact the physical therapy profession in the Philippines. Tune in to gain insights into the study's methodology, data, and real-world implications for enhancing health literacy in the community.Download the full research here: Health Literacy on Physical Therapy among Senior Citizens with Physical Disability and Barangay Health Workers. https://soar.usa.edu/phjpt/vol3/iss3/2/ Subscribe to PT MEAL Podcast: https://ptmealpodcast.com

MedicalMissions.com Podcast
Creating Healthy Communities: a Church-based, Community Health Worker-led Initiative

MedicalMissions.com Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2025


We aimed to assist church members in Hispanic churches to become certified and trained CHWs and mentor them to lead a six-month diabetes self-management program. We found that raising up individuals from the church to become health leaders (CHWs) in their community is a promising model to increase the reach of the church while reducing health disparities. Speaker(s): Betty Nava Session webpage: https://www.medicalmissions.com/events/gmhc-2024/sessions/creating-healthy-communities-a-church-based-community-health-worker-led-initiative

Public Health Review Morning Edition
979: Technical Assistance Infrastructure, Community Health Worker Awareness Week

Public Health Review Morning Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2025 4:38


Christy Roby, Local Public Health Performance Section Supervisor with Iowa Health and Human Services, explains how her agency developed a new technical assistance infrastructure referral system; Chelsea Cipriano, Managing Director of the Common Health Coalition, celebrates National Community Health Worker Awareness Week by sharing how her organization is working to build partnerships between public health and healthcare programs; ASTHO has a web page dedicated to CHW's; and ASTHO's evidence-based technical packages can provide health agencies with accessible strategies to enhance community health interventions.  ASTHO Blog: Iowa Promotes Public Health Infrastructure by Supporting Local Health Departments ASTHO Resource: Tools That Support Community Health Worker Programs in Island Jurisdictions ASTHO Web Page: Community Health Workers ASTHO Web Page: Evidence-Based Public Health  

ASHPOfficial
Technician Insights: Two Roles, One Mission: The Dual Impact of Pharmacy Technicians and Community Health Workers

ASHPOfficial

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2025 19:23


This podcast highlights how pharmacy technicians incorporate community health worker roles into their practice - breaking barriers, expanding access, and improving patient outcomes. Join us as we dive into real-world stories, innovative models, and the future potential of this dynamic, dual-impact workforce.  The information presented during the podcast reflects solely the opinions of the presenter. The information and materials are not, and are not intended as, a comprehensive source of drug information on this topic. The contents of the podcast have not been reviewed by ASHP, and should neither be interpreted as the official policies of ASHP, nor an endorsement of any product(s), nor should they be considered as a substitute for the professional judgment of the pharmacist or physician.

The Loh Down on Science
Community Health Workers

The Loh Down on Science

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2025 1:00


Not all medical heroes wear… stethoscopes.

#TeamPXY On Demand
This Week We Are Joined By... Melanie Planck, MS WIC Program Coordinator Livingston-Wyoming Co. WIC

#TeamPXY On Demand

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2025 13:38


This Week We Are Joined By... Melanie Planck, MS WIC Program Coordinator Livingston-Wyoming Co. WIC to chat a about Lead World Breastfeeding Week which occurs August 1st-7th https://www.who.int/campaigns/world-breastfeeding-week/2025 and a very exciting event they have coming up surrounding it as well! Celebrating on August 2nd from 11-1 at Highland Park in Geneseo. https://www.livingstoncountyny.gov/829/Community-Health-Worker

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast
Healthcare's Secret Weapon? It's Not AI. It's Teamwork.

Experiencing Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 10, 2025 35:54


Episode NotesWhy Matt refuses to buy fireworks (and how that's weirdly related to healthcare spending) Proactive medicine: Why it saves lives and moneyThe evolving role of Community Health WorkersThe “Russian Doll” structure of care teams at Your Health Primary Care A real-world story of proactive, connected careTrust & empathy: What we can learn from Navy SEALs & surgery teamsSelf-care in high-stakes healthcare environmentsHow AI isn't a threat—it's your newest team member Why peptides and prevention are shaping the futureLeadership insight: Building resilient, compassionate healthcare teams

Public Health Review Morning Edition
930: State Policy Work, CHW Funding

Public Health Review Morning Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2025 5:19


Lillian Colasurdo, ASTHO's Director of Public Health Law and Data Sharing, is featured in ASTHO's Get To Know You Segment; Lesley Wolf, Director of Programming with Envision, discusses how their new CHW Financial Sustainability Toolkit can help public health programs fund the work of Community Health Workers; and ASTHO is hosting an INSPIRE Readiness Webinar on Thursday, July 10th, about communicating with data during infectious disease emergencies. ASTHO Web Page: State Health Policy ASTHO Web Page: 2025 Legislative Prospectus Series Envision CHW Financial Sustainability Toolkit ASTHO Webinar: INSPIRE Readiness: Communicating About Data and Surveillance During Infectious Disease Emergencies  ASTHO LinkedIn Profile ASTHO X Profile ASTHO Facebook Profile  

Tradeoffs
Helping Some of America's Costliest Patients Could Get A Lot Harder

Tradeoffs

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2025 29:36


Some patients' lives are so complicated by trauma, poverty and other social problems that routine conditions like diabetes and asthma regularly turn into $10,000 hospital visits. America's health care leaders have spent years trying to help this small but costly group of patients. What have they learned?Guests:Jeff Brenner, MD, CEO, The Jewish BoardArthur Brown, Client, Camden CoalitionAmy Finkelstein, PhD, Professor of Economics, MIT; Co-Scientific Director, J-PAL North AmericaAllison Hamblin, MSPH, President and CEO, Center for Health Care StrategiesPaula Lantz, PhD, Professor of Health Policy, University of MichiganLarry Moore, Client, Camden CoalitionKathleen Noonan, JD, President and CEO, Camden CoalitionDottie Scott, Community Health Worker, Camden CoalitionBrian Thompson, Housing Coordinator, Camden CoalitionLeslie Walker, Senior Producer/Reporter, TradeoffsLearn more and read a full transcript on our website.Join us for a virtual discussion with Penn LDI on June 6 at 12 pm ET, where Penn experts will help us understand the programs targeted by federal cuts to violence prevention programs, the lessons we've learned about how to prevent gun violence, and what the administration's actions could mean for communities impacted by this uniquely American epidemic. Learn more and register here. Want more Tradeoffs? Sign up for our free weekly newsletter featuring the latest health policy research and news.Support this type of journalism today, with a gift. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Public Health Review Morning Edition
910: Data-Ready Ecosystems, Island CHW Support

Public Health Review Morning Edition

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 5:18


Kimberly Shoaf, Professor of Public Health and the Director of the Rocky Mountains and High Plains Center for Emergency Public Health, discusses how a data-ready ecosystem for public health response can be beneficial; Ashley Cram, ASTHO Senior Analyst for Population Health, tells us about ASTHO's new web page dedicated to the support of Community Health Workers in island jurisdictions; and the Be Ready for Measles toolkit from CDC is online now. ASTHO Webinar: INSPIRE – Readiness - Building a Data-Ready Ecosystem for Public Health Response ASTHO Web Page: Tools That Support Community Health Worker Programs in Island Jurisdictions CDC Web Page: Be Ready for Measles Toolkit ASTHO Public Health Review Podcast Episode: Why We Serve – An Inside Look at Public Health AmeriCorps  

Let's Talk About Your Breasts
CPRIT, The Texas Cancer Plan, and You

Let's Talk About Your Breasts

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 31:59


How does one man's dedication to community health reshape cancer prevention efforts in Texas? Carlton Allen's passion for public health and population health, sparked during his academic years, led him to an influential role in the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT). Through his guidance, CPRIT addresses significant cancer burdens and health disparities statewide. Meanwhile, Allen champions the Texas Cancer Plan as a comprehensive roadmap for continued progress in cancer prevention and care. Key Questions Answered 1. How did Carlton Allen get into public health? 2. What differentiates public health from direct patient care according to Carlton? 3. Where did Carlton Allen complete his education? 4. How did Carlton Allen integrate community health workers (CHWs) into clinical operations? 5. What are the challenges in obtaining funding for community health workers? 6. What is the Cancer Prevention Research Institute of Texas (CPRIT) and what roles does it play? 7. How does CPRIT impact cancer prevention and research in Texas? 8. What frustrations does Carlton Allen face in his role at CPRIT? 9. What was Carlton Allen’s role in the Texas Cancer Plan? 10. What values does Carlton hope to instill in his children based on his community work? Timestamped Overview 00:00 Community Health Workers' Impact 03:42 Healthcare Worker Reimbursement Challenge 07:46 Expanding Healthcare Outreach with Grants 10:07 Visiting Texas Prevention Grantees 13:27 Advancements in Cancer Prevention 16:51 Cancer Secrecy in Males 21:14 Inclusive Cancer Care Guidelines 25:57 Community Engagement and Volunteerism 27:56 Raising Hardworking, Community-Minded Children Learn more about CPRIT here. Support The Rose HERE. Subscribe to Let’s Talk About Your Breasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeart, and wherever you get your podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Public Health Review Morning Edition
893: Youth Behavioral Health, CHWs in Island Areas

Public Health Review Morning Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2025 4:37


Dr. Sameer Vohra, Director of the Illinois Department of Public Health and an ASTHO Member, explains how his state is taking action for youth behavioral health; Aurora GrantWingate, Member and Partner Engagement Manager at the National Association of Community Health Workers, tells us why CHWs are especially important in the island areas; and Dr. Dr. Ayanna Bennett, Director of the District of Columbia Department of Health and an ASTHO Member has been appointed to the Big Cities Health Coalition Board of Directors. ASTHO Report: Supporting Community Health Workers in Territories and Freely Associated States Big Cities Health Coalition News Release: BCHC announces 2025-26 board directors and executive officers ASTHO Web Page: PH-HERO  

The Healthy Project Podcast
The Power of Community Health Workers in Diabetes Care and Health Equity

The Healthy Project Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 21:57


In this episode of The Healthy Project, host Corey Dion Lewis sits down with Brian Foster to explore how community health workers are transforming diabetes care—especially in underserved communities. Brian shares his personal journey with type 1 diabetes and his work with the American Diabetes Association. They discuss the connection between diabetes and heart disease, health equity, patient trust, and why community-based care is critical for improving outcomes.Topics: type 1 diabetes, diabetes education, community health workers, healthcare access, health equity, social determinants of health, American Diabetes Association, chronic disease management, public health policy, Black health equity, Healthy Project Podcast ★ Support this podcast ★

LTC University Podcast
Breaking Barriers: The Power of Community Health Initiative

LTC University Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2025 25:08