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Best podcasts about cpam

Latest podcast episodes about cpam

Les journaux de France Bleu Béarn
La CPAM des Pyrénées-Atlantiques fait le bilan des fraudes

Les journaux de France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2026 3:44


durée : 00:03:44 - La CPAM des Pyrénées-Atlantiques fait le bilan des fraudes Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Choses à Savoir ÉCONOMIE
Peut-on travailler tout en étant en arrêt maladie et percevoir des indemnités ?

Choses à Savoir ÉCONOMIE

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2026 1:41


Le cadre juridique entourant l'arrêt maladie et l'exercice d'une activité professionnelle fait l'objet d'une vigilance accrue de la part de la justice. Un arrêt récent de la Cour de cassation, daté du 19 mars 2026, vient illustrer la complexité et la rigueur de ces règles à travers le cas d'un assuré ayant perçu des indemnités journalières (IJ) pendant plus d'un an.Le contexte du litigeDans cette affaire, un gérant d'entreprise, bien qu'en arrêt de travail, avait maintenu une activité de gestion pour laquelle il s'était versé un salaire de 1 500 €. Face à cette situation, sa Caisse primaire d'assurance maladie (CPAM) lui a réclamé une pénalité financière du même montant.Initialement, un tribunal avait donné raison à l'assuré. Les juges estimaient que la "bonne foi" devait être présumée : selon eux, le simple fait de compléter ses indemnités (qui ne représentent que 50 % du salaire de base dans la limite de 1,4 SMIC) par une petite rémunération ne prouvait pas une intention de frauder l'État.Le raisonnement de la Cour de cassationC'est sur ce point précis que la plus haute juridiction française a cassé le jugement. Pour la Cour, la question de l'intention frauduleuse est secondaire. Elle rappelle que les indemnités journalières sont versées uniquement pour compenser une perte de revenus liée à une incapacité de travail après un délai de carence de trois jours.Le raisonnement juridique s'appuie sur deux piliers :L'automatisme de la faute : Dès lors qu'une activité rémunérée est exercée sans l'accord préalable du corps médical, l'infraction est constituée.L'exigence d'une autorisation médicale : Il n'appartient pas à l'assuré de juger s'il est capable ou non de gérer ses affaires durant son repos.La réponse juridique finalePeut-on alors travailler et percevoir des indemnités ? La réponse est non. La Cour de cassation a annulé le jugement favorable à l'assuré et confirmé que la poursuite d'une activité de gérant sans autorisation médicale rend la "bonne foi" irrecevable.En conclusion, toute activité, même de formation ou de gestion administrative, est strictement interdite pendant un arrêt de travail, sauf si elle a été explicitement autorisée par le médecin. Sans ce précieux sésame, l'assuré s'expose non seulement au remboursement des sommes perçues, mais aussi à des pénalités financières lourdes. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Thriving on Overload
Henrik von Scheel on making people smarter, wealthier and healthier, biophysical data, resilient learning, and human evolution (AC Ep37)

Thriving on Overload

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2026 47:06


“The center of any change that we’re doing in the fourth industrial revolution is always the human being, because humans have an ability to adopt, adapt to skills, and adjust to an environment.” –Henrik von Scheel About Henrik von Scheel Henrik von Scheel is Co-Founder of advisory firm Strategic Intelligence, Chairman of the Climate Asset Trust, Vice Chairman of Regulatory Intelligence Committee, and Professor of Strategy, Arthur Lok Jack School of Business, among other roles. He is best known as originator of Industry 4.0, with many awards and extensive global recognition of his work. Webiste: von-scheel.com LinkedIn Profile: Henrik von Scheel What you will learn Why human-centered AI is crucial for widespread societal prosperity The impact of AI hype cycles, media narratives, and the realities of technology adoption How equitable wealth distribution and capital allocation in AI can shape economic outcomes Risks around data ownership, privacy, and the importance of controlling your own data in the AI era Divergent approaches to AI regulation in the US, EU, and China, and the implications for global AI leadership The importance of trust calibration and intentional human-AI collaboration in practical applications How education and lifelong learning can be reshaped by AI to support individualized growth and mistake-enabled reasoning Opportunities for AI to amplify individual talents, address educational gaps, and enable more specialized and innovative skills Episode Resources Transcript Ross Dawson: Henrik, it is wonderful to have you on the show. Henrik von Scheel: Thank you very much for having me, Ross. Ross Dawson: So I think we’re pretty aligned in believing that we need to approach AI from a human-centered perspective and how it can bring us prosperity. So I’d just love to start with, how do you think about how we should be thinking about AI? Henrik von Scheel: Well, I think, like every technology that comes into play, it brings a lot of changes to us. But I think the center of any change that we’re doing in the fourth industrial revolution is always the human being, because humans have an ability to adapt, adapt to skills, and adjust to an environment. So technology is something that we apply, but it’s the strategy on how we adapt with it that makes a difference. It’s never the technology itself. So I’m excited. It’s one of the most exciting periods for the industry and for us as people. Ross Dawson: There’s a phrase which I’ve heard you say more than once around AI should make us smarter, healthier, and wealthier. So if that’s the case, how do we frame it? How do we start to get on that journey? Henrik von Scheel: So I think what people experience today in AI is that they experience a lot of media hype—large language models, ChatGPT, and all of this—and they consume it from the media. So there’s a big hype around it, and I believe that AI is about to crash fundamentally, but crashing in technology is not bad, right? There are a lot of promises and then an inability to deliver, and then it crashes. What you hear in the media today is very much driven by a story of them raising funds because it’s so expensive, and so they are promising the world of everything and nothing, and the reality looks a little bit better. The world that they are presenting is that you will be replaced, and you will be happy, and you’ll be served by everything else. And somehow it will work out. We don’t know how, but it will work out. And that’s not a future that is really a real future. The future must include that everybody gets smarter, wealthier, and healthier. And when I say everybody, I mean not only the guys that have money, that they become more rich, or the middle class. It’s like everybody in society should get smarter from AI. That means part of the things that they need to learn or how human evolution works should be better, and it should make us healthier people and wealthier people. So it should not only be that we sacrifice our convenience with our freedom, with our privacy, with our environment, or any other things that we put on the table to get convenience back. That exchange we have done a couple of times, and it’s not working really well for humans, and it’s not a good trade for us, right? Ross Dawson: Yeah, I love that. And since it’s quite simple, you know, you can say it, it’s clear, it sounds good, and it is a really clear direction. But you’re actually pointing in a couple of ways there to capital allocation. So obviously, if you’re looking at the AI economic story, this is around this diversion of capital from other places to AI model development, data centers, deployment, and so on. But also, when you’re saying wealth here, this is around the distribution of wealth—where we’re allocating capital to AI development, but also from the way in which AI is developed, there will be creation of wealth. There is the real potential for productivity improvement. But then it’s about finding, how do we have the mechanisms for allocation of wealth or capital from that which is allocated? Let’s call it equitably. Henrik von Scheel: I’m a firm believer that this year, 35 to 45% of the money invested in AI will evaporate. Companies that have invested—they’re the early adopters—they have this format, so they’re rushing to it. From a company perspective, you always adapt the best practices. When it goes beyond the hype, and the performance curve and adoption curve is low. For example, for AI, the simple version is there. You heard that Deloitte and McKinsey talked 10 years ago about robotic process automation like God’s gift to mankind in AI. Today, you don’t hear them talking about it, because you can download it for free—for HR, for forecasting, planning, budgeting, and so on, you can save 20 or 30%, and as an organization, you can do it yourself. You download two, three models, you test it, and you run it. Good, okay, so that’s when you apply best practices. Then you have industry practices, like AI agents. So when you have AI agents for manufacturing, for industrial sectors, for energy sectors, they are nothing else than workflow optimization. You use robotic process optimization, you do a visualization on it, so it’s far more practical at a level, because you use the data they already have in the organizations under a simple line on the process flow, on the safety, security—it’s very much down at the level where they can apply it and use it. So this version of large language models, where you have this magic powder you spread over the organization and it’s totally working—it’s not really there. And then there’s the third leg that companies are quite aware of. It’s called Shadow AI, right? Shadow AI is because AI is the biggest infringement on intellectual capital within organizations. The reason why normal people are not allowed to look at pornography at their work is because of cybersecurity. It’s not that your boss doesn’t like you to look at pornography; it’s because of cybersecurity. It’s the same reason with AI—you should not be allowed to use Copilot latest version or large language models as a CFO or as a worker, because you’re exporting your own information outside. Copilot takes, every five seconds, a screenshot for the large language models’ learning. So as a corporate point of view, that’s the first thing—you should actually protect your own data so you can monetize your data in the future. From an economic point of view, if you go two, three steps behind this, you ask, okay, what is it that makes sense in this? There’s something really, really strange in this. Australia was built by building railways—they take 100 years to build, they also last 100 years. The infrastructure that lasts. So there’s a return on investment. You build streets, you build education systems—everything we build as humans, as society, has a lasting element to it. Now, we build data centers that last three months until the chips need to be returned, or six months. So there’s no sense in that we are building data centers around the world where we capture all data. It has a volume of hundreds of trillions of dollars, and we need to exchange them at a rate between three to six months to maintain the data. And then you say, wow. And you do that via license models of large language models—the data can never, in its entire life cycle, be that much worth. So there’s a very strange element, because most of the entrepreneurs that go to large language models and use their solutions on Gemini and ChatGPT and so on, you say, okay, you are building your solution on large language models, but you don’t own the model. You don’t own the data. You don’t own your own data. So what are you doing? Ross Dawson: You have architectural choices, to a point, as to— Henrik von Scheel: That’s Architectural choices, but you are limiting yourself. So the first element you always say, if my value is customizing a solution, your value is actually the data. So you must have a way to keep and maintain the data yourself. We can take another call to say how you apply AI and what the future of AI looks like, because AI today is very much focused on language models, and language models are the most limited version of AI science of all. It has the least data, but it’s the one we’re most excited about, because it resembles something we do—our wording, our formation of words. It’s a recognition. Recognitions are what we do. I wanted to come back to this about the economy, right? The US economy puts all chips on this. It’s highly energy sensitive, and it’s working all railroads. However, the US dollar is on a really, really bad track record. Three and a half years ago, there was a president in the US—he was sleeping—and meanwhile, he was sleeping, Saudi Arabia’s King MBS went in and he did a divorce, which is called the divorce of the petrodollar. So the gold linked with US dollar linked with oil—that was the solution. The US had that anybody, they could print as much money as they wanted, and the rest of the world was paying the dividend for it. It was the only country that could just print money. That brought the US into a mode, and when the new president came into his office, it’s very rare that in the US, you are writing an accord. An accord is only written when the Federal Reserve goes into the president’s office saying, guys, we’re hitting the wall. We need to do something. And they wrote five plans, what they wanted to do. And here’s the funny thing—when I mention them, you will recognize them very much. Number one, bring back manufacturing. Number two, implement tariffs so they can pull back US dollars. Number three, then they wanted to implement stable coins to pull back US dollars. I forgot number three, actually. Number four, and number five was actually they want to go to war. Now they go to war, right? So they are going to war, not because of any reasons besides their economy is based on a war machine, and the economy is becoming unstable. So that’s one of the main reasons. The US has put all cards on AI—all their economy cards are on AI. And that’s, from a country perspective, a very dangerous thing to do because you need energy and you need data, and AI from the US perspective has become a defense mechanism. When you look at the regulatory aspect of AI, Europe is very much put into human and center, and that the human owns the data, protects teenagers up to 16 years old, and that you can work as an entrepreneur with data, but you have to coordinate how you protect and manage the data. You have to be transparent on how you use the data and how much data you use. The US is very different—red tape off, no regulations at all, full-blown power to the market, and you are seen as a consumer, Ross, so all power to the guys who earn money to make more money. So no protections of anything, of your data—that’s the US version and literally, no regulations, no redtape regulations. Ross Dawson: In a moment, I want to move on to the human-AI collaboration. But just to round this out, you said before about your prediction that 35 to 40% of the investment in AI is gone, which I think is very, very fair. So back when we both were speakers at the Future of Sex Summit in Dubai last year, I was on a panel where I was asked, is it boom or bust? And basically both, in the sense of 35–40%—that’s bust. But at the same time, there are other parts of the market which can prosper. Of course, consolidation of the market means that there’s massive investments and in some cases massive losses, but there still are sectors where high value can be created. But this goes back to your point where still a lot of the center is in the US. We are starting to see sovereign AI initiatives and other initiatives around the world, but those are often open source foundation models. And obviously the regulation, particularly around the EU, provides a still very differentiated AI landscape with US, China, EU, and then some other players as well, where if we see boom and bust, that could be very much focused on the US, with potential for other parts of the world to see more growth in AI. Henrik von Scheel: So Ross, you’re using large language models, right? Ross Dawson: Yes. Henrik von Scheel: Do you have the feeling that they, since last year, are getting stronger or weaker? they’re getting weaker? Ross Dawson: They’re getting better. Henrik von Scheel: My feeling is the opposite. My feeling is that they’re getting weaker and weaker, and that’s because part of the data — Ross Dawson: In which content? Henrik von Scheel: They’re using old, old content. They’ve already used old content. So now you need to go to specialized, you need to go to public sources, to go for research data, you know. But from a content-wise perspective, it becomes extremely weak. I mean, last year, I’m extremely disappointed by large language models—very, very disappointed in terms of what they can deliver and what they do. Ask it whatever—ask it about futurism prediction, or ask about Industry 5.0, 5.6, whatever answer you give it, you can get an answer. You know, 110%—like CPAM, there are 19 regulations on CPAM, and you ask, how many regulations are there? They will give you sometimes 19, sometimes 17, sometimes 23—they just make up stuff. It just gets worse and worse. So if the valid data is not strong enough, it becomes actually a very, very weak tool after all, right? Ross Dawson: So are these using the top models from the frontier labs, because they are very good. Henrik von Scheel: Yeah, but then you have to have the paid model. But it’s not like I’m really, really impressed by it. It’s not kicking my bum where it says, holy smokes. In the beginning, the first two years, you were surprised, right? So I have a little bit of the feeling that AI today is a little bit where emails were in the beginning, and then digitalization came. With emails, we were all excited, but emails just created not less workload, but more workload for us—it decreased our productivity. There are really good signs of this. Then you look at digitalization, right? We were all excited because we can connect, we can talk to our friends, all of this. But what ended up with WhatsApp Business? WhatsApp Business is no business, right? We are using it, but it decreases our productivity level far more. So today, with digitalization, we are becoming generalists—quick information, we know something, but we don’t know anything, right? It’s not that you would put the finger on it and say, well, it has really increased our innovation level. No. Has it really increased our research level? No. Has it really made us better human beings? No. So I’m not negative against it. I’m just saying we have to be careful, because we have a knife or a hammer—we shouldn’t use the hammer for everything. And you mentioned that really well, right? AI’s hype cycle is, with any technology, there’s a hype, and then it goes down and matures, and then the application of this is different than what you thought in the beginning, of course, but that’s AI—it’s very much relevant. But you know, the big message today in AI is AI physical, right? What is AI physical? Ross Dawson: Well, just going back to the point—a lot of what I’m working on at the moment is the idea of appropriate trust. So you trust the models enough, but not too much, so that if they are going to give you bad results, you’re not relying on them. But if they are useful, you can use them. So we have to continue to calibrate for any particular model, which is different in every particular context. This is both essentially a skill or a capability, where we need to know when and how to use models at any particular time, because they’re changing in whatever way. So that becomes a foundation of how we can trust them to the right degree—not too much, but enough that we can actually use them if they are useful. Which comes back to this frame of the human-AI collaboration, which you’ve been doing a lot of work on. So if AI can be useful in some contexts, how is it that we can best build effective human-AI collaboration? Henrik von Scheel: I like this. Let’s play a little bit, right? So if human evolution is evolving with the birth certificate, we go to kindergarten, we go to school, and we learn differently. Everybody’s individual—we learn differently, right? It takes humans a long time to learn, to sense, to do all of this. And then you have AI, which is a supporting learning model for you to store information. But today you learn, and the model learns on you. You log in, and every time you learn, the model learns from you. That means that all your information is captured there, right? So the next evolution of a model should be that the privacy of Ross is throughout your last five years with large language models—you’ve studied Porter’s models, you’ve studied this and this. Well, if I ask you next day about Porter’s model, you still forget it, but the machine should be able to help you to learn, to adopt the skills in your daily life. So it cannot be a machine knowledge learning that is owned somewhere else by a big company—it must be something that is attached to Ross throughout your life, that you go from where you are now, and in five years, you’re somewhere else. So the knowledge that you have searched and gained and adopted, it follows your life, right? This is, for me, AI—the real AI revolution happens in the bio revolution in 2030, because the biggest amount of data we have is biophysical data. So the interconnection between our body, the modules, the biosystem modules, the biophysical systems, how we eat food, how material, with their level, is coming all in there, and part of this is the knowledge center of you, Ross. So if you learn something, how does it follow your evolution? Do you learn the same way today you learned 10 years ago? Ross Dawson: And it’s a wonderful thing that we continue to learn and forget and evolve. We are the same person, sort of, but, you know, we are a different person at the same time. Henrik von Scheel: I was talking yesterday to a psychiatrist who’s studying human evolution, and she’s called Trina Gondo, and I had this interesting discussion with her, because she says humans’ learning capacity changes throughout their life. So if we have learning modules that can support us throughout our life—to go through how conscious, how focused we are on things, how much stress level we can take, because stress levels are also different, how much breadth are you covering in terms of your work, your private life, how are you in terms of setup, in terms of your spiritual life—all of this has something to do with your learning, because it’s your perspective you drive. It’s your values you drive. I actually developed with her a model in terms of how the six aggregates of the brain work to understand our human evolution. For the last eight months, I’m trying to map human evolution, to map it to what AI—how it affects it, what we should regulate and how we should protect it, and how the human can monetize its own data, right? So just look at— Ross Dawson: The initiative by Doc Searls. So there’s a couple of really interesting initiatives. This is one where he worked originally on VRM, the vendor relationship management—you own your own data and trade that as effective—and is now building, or being instrumental in setting up, an AI initiative where it is around your personal AI, so you own the data, you own the systems, and you’re able to evolve with it. There are some other interesting initiatives like this, but these are obviously very tiny compared with the ways in which most people are using—essentially giving off their data to other people. But this is certainly part of the potential, to build the structures and architectures where we do own our data and our models and how they are used and what comes from them. Henrik von Scheel: So let’s go back into one element, right? Originally, Ross, you and everybody else of us who live in a society, we made an agreement with the government—a social agreement. And the social agreement is, I’m using, you’re protecting me, and I’m willing to pay tax somehow, right? So in reality, the government you made an agreement with should have the ability to protect you. However, in an AI model today, it’s not possible, because if they should protect you from the very beginning and keep the store of your data and maintain your data, the amount of money they need just to maintain your data is immense. So we need to define and find a model with governments where governments and the human being can, in co-ownership, hold the data structure—like in a blockchain, that you have a public and a private key, and both can hold the data, but the data is only unlocked both ways. Why? Because there’s a monetization model on your own data throughout your life. And when you die, your data goes on to your children, because that’s your DNA data, that’s your history life data, that’s all of it. So there should be an ability to monetize it. The challenge we face with this is the amount it will cost to maintain your data throughout your life, and we need to find—in the fourth industrial revolution, we’re going through the bio revolution, then we’re going to the consumer revolution, and then we go to the fusion revolution. And in the fusion revolution, the objective and the hope is that we are finding mechanisms to have cheap energy, because the amount of energy we use today in terms of data is literally crazy. It’s utterly, utterly crazy. We should be ashamed of ourselves if we see that, and that’s just for the amount of convenience. So if we find a model for our government to do this, we should actually work on this. This is what I’m trying to look at. I want to alert you to one interesting thing. My key field of study is patternicity with probabilities. So when you look at trends that are coming, you look at probabilities—not ChatGPT stuff, right? When you look at this, there’s one trend that emerged last week that hasn’t been emerging before—the trend of anarchy in Europe. Anarchy is an interesting aspect, because anarchy is your distrust in the government. And when anarchy comes, it’s just an equation of 25%. If 25% in a country like Germany or UK or France will take it, 25% is a flipping chart for everybody, because the petrol prices are too high, expenses for food are too high, they get too many promises they never—and then take the power in their own hand. When you look at it a little bit, you say, but anarchy—is that something new? No, the US is living in anarchy today. Trump is the true version of anarchy. They distrust the government, and they choose him, and he, from all aspects, says, okay, I’m doing something very different. I give all the power to the market. There’s been no time in history where all the power is residing within the market—Elon Musk and Amazon, Apple, all of them have literally all the power. It’s totally, utterly crazy. This is the highest version of anarchy you can see in a country. And if we’re not careful, it’s spreading. Why am I discussing this in an AI human element? Because if the human is the centerpiece, what is the core element of human development? It’s that we have safety, security, and trust. If trust is broken, anarchy emerges. So if anarchy emerges, AI can take on very different versions that we don’t want in a scenario thinking, but AI can also take on the version that it can support us in our evolution. Ross Dawson: Well, just going to that—education. You are a professor. You are an educator. You look at the future of education, and you alluded to that before. So in this world where AI is already and is becoming more significant, how do we reinvent education? How do we educate ourselves as individuals, as educational institutions, or society? How do we shape the education that we need for the exciting coming times? Henrik von Scheel: I think one of our challenges with education is that we as people, when we go beyond eight years old, the key element we’re learning is reasoning, and our reasoning skills are learned by doing mistakes, unfortunately. We never learn by getting an answer. If you study Porter’s model on ChatGPT, and you get all the answers from Porter’s model, and I ask you the next day, if you haven’t applied it, you haven’t learned it. If I would ask you, you will learn it. You do mistakes, and it’s by doing the mistakes, by putting yourself into the content, working with the content, and doing mistakes, you learn. Unfortunately, most of the stuff we learn today—now, human evolution in reasoning is by doing mistakes. So we need to find a very smart way how AI can support us in this mistake learning phase, because it’s the way that we are built to learn, right? Ross Dawson: And I think that’s a critical thing—where as individuals, we need to understand that if we delegate our thinking to AI, it’s not going to work; you’re going to be dumber rather than smarter. But if we can have the intent of using it to hone our thinking and helping us to make mistakes or be a Socratic dialog or whatever, we can do that, but that requires the individual intent. So again, we also need to frame as educators and also in organizations—which should be educational institutions in their own right, because they are learning organizations—it’s this framing of the use of AI as a cognitive foil for us, as opposed to something where we delegate our work, which is never going to get us anywhere good. Henrik von Scheel: And where do you think we can use it in education? Ross Dawson: The good thing is, you know, personalized education, where I think that there is definitely this ability to address where individuals are and their understanding, the metaphors that will be relevant to them, the frames for that. But it never has to be in a form of giving the answer. So there’s always this complement of human—as in, the educator needs to be inspiring. They need to help the person to find themselves. They have that relationship with them. So it’s this complement with the AI, which can guide to specific lessons or frames or examples that people resonate with, which can assist them. And so again, it needs to be very much—individuals need to understand, they have to shape it for themselves. I think we can present things in the right way. And there’s very much a human plus AI educational frame. Henrik von Scheel: I think you’re spot on with this. When you look at the five aggregates that we have in human evolution and in education phases, our sensory—our forming of ourselves to the outside world—is shaped quite early on, until we are maybe 12 years old, but quite early, the first two years. That means our sight, our smell, how we hear, how we taste, how we feel, and how our balance works—we learn quite fast. This is what AI is focusing on in AI physical today. They’re trying to come from a language model point of view outside to the physical world. Then we have this cognitive version of us, which is the intellect version. It’s very different. The intellect version of us is a version of awareness, a version of how we comprehend things, how we understand things, how our knowledge is conceived and given out. So it’s both communications, it’s storytelling, it’s our comprehension, it’s our perspective, it’s our reasoning, it’s our awareness. These four things are never the same for the same person. I can have a room of 200 students, I can talk about the same element on Adam Smith’s first principle, and they will all understand it differently because of their different backgrounds. So this part of cognitive understanding, the intellect, is far more complex. Then you go to the versions of who we are as a person. Our memories—our memories are a whole element of our emotions, which is a hugely important part of our learning, because memories have nothing to do with truth. Large language models always look for the truth, but in our own memories, we are lying to ourselves to keep our sanity. We are partly, not consciously but unconsciously, lying to ourselves because we view it only from one perspective. So our reflection of our memories or our impulses are related to our memories or our conceptual things. All these elements are our emotional elements, in terms of how strongly we can link to knowledge, how strongly we can see the future, how we can see ourselves in the future—all of this. When you look at the crisis now, the memory is on how resilient we are as people, how resilient we are in our learning phase, how comfortable we are with the unknown, how comfortable we are to learning. Then you have the next two ones. The other one is our mental formation or our identity. This is the element we’re trying to protect in digitalization—how we form our opinions, our insight, our resolution, our understanding, ourselves, and our retentiveness, who we are. All of these things are being shaped as teenagers. We don’t want this to be in a social aspect. We want this to be a safe, secure element. So this is the identity you form. Then you have the consciousness. The consciousness is a strange thing. You have two layers running in your education. You have the layers that are running long term and the unconsciousness that actually takes the decision—the analytical versions and the underlying elements. For example, why are you doing something? So you come with purposes, you come with energy, you come with desire, or you come with willpower. Then you say, well, they’re more etheric. No, they’re not. Because, Ross, you wake up every morning with that much amount of energy. You can use this the next eight hours you work. You can use it on emails the first four hours, but then you’re using your most precious willpower and energy right then. You have your willpower to train, for example, if you want to do training. When you want to train in the evening, when your willpower is lower, you want to train early in the morning. So this willpower and the energy is what we as humans in our consciousness—how we are aware of things, what we focus on, we magnify. So these are the five aggregates you’re using from the learning perspective. If we apply these, you and I, Ross, we would go into an initiative to say, how can we apply this to understand human evolution when we evolve this? Because I’m nearly 60 years old now, and that means, for me, my concept of life, experience of life, is different than when I was 30, than when I was 20. You cannot go to a young person that is 15 years old and say, let me tell you about love—there are four different phases of love. They need to experience them themselves, because it’s not my job to take that away from them. And it’s not my job to tell a young man, now you want to conquer and do, you want to have freedom, Generation X and all of this. And then you realize, easy, easy, easy. I’ll let you know. When you fall in love and you become a father, it changes you. Why does it change you? Because accountability moves into a man’s focus area, as before he was conquering. And then accountability—a man wants to be a caretaker of something, and it fulfills and magnifies a man. And then you say, well, this is not part of the five aggregates—very much so, right? Because it’s part of human evolution. Ross, you have experienced that in your life. So then you say, how do we connect that with our evolution and learning? Ross Dawson: Yeah, no, I think that’s a really important point around accountability for ourselves, for those around us, directly in the broader community. And I think that’s kind of this big humans plus AI frame. So we’re obviously just touching the surface of what we could dig into now. But how can people find out more about your work Henrik? Henrik von Scheel: I’m a public figure. I’m doing a lot of research projects with universities. I have a lot of PhD students and coaching and supporting governments on policy initiatives. Currently, I’m focusing a lot in the Gulf regions on strategic briefings, on crisis management, in terms of doing scenarios for strategic, tactical, operational, for short term and long term. But my passion is actually teaching, and this is far more a personal story on teaching. People see me always as the Industry 4.0 originator on everything I have accomplished. But my true story is actually quite different. When I was young, I was dyslexic. I’m actually double dyslexic, and I was stuttering. I had a very, very difficult time in school. That’s why I am a little bit passive aggressive, because I’m always on the defensive, because many years I went through life just being some sort of an outcast. So within that phase, I had a very strong teacher that actually supported me and used time and effort to see my skills, and he helped me to overcome my dyslexia—which is not really true. You never overcome your dyslexia. You are just getting tools to work with it. So that means I’ve written today nine books, and five of them are bestsellers, but I cannot even read my own books aloud. So what is the message I’m giving? Everybody of us is made different, and because we’re made different, it’s not that—because society is often built on, if you don’t fit that frame, then you’re not part of that frame. But I think AI opens up something for us—that the breadth of who we are as people is a beautiful thing. And because I cannot speak the same way, like I have a good friend Tarek, who is also your friend—he’s a gifted storyteller. My gift is that I can see patterns. So I believe that every human being should be able to see their superpower. Your gift, Ross, is a very different gift. You can gather communities, you can convey difficult things in a simple thing, you have an ability to put the human in the future, where everybody sits today and they freak the hell out because they don’t see them part of the future. So I think everybody has a future in that. To answer your question, I’m a quite reachable person. I believe the future looks like a good future for us, Ross. I believe this is the time for our educators to wake up out of their long-term sleep. We need to evolve our teaching material. We need to evolve the way that we learn and teach. We have terrible lessons in terms of how boys and girls evolve in their learnings, and we’re not doing anything about it. This is our chance with AI to change the learning mechanisms for boys and girls, our learning mechanisms if you’re one like me that doesn’t fit these templates, if you have special needs. We have the ability with AI to specialize ourselves far more in detail. One of the challenges we have with education today—when you go from primary school to higher education, and then go beyond higher education—our challenge with higher education is we have become generalists, and our generalism is actually inhibiting us to innovate, so we’re not meeting some of the core challenges that we have in science today, and we need to push the boundaries on where we go to research to really become innovative. We need to push our boundaries in terms of manufacturing, energy sector, and so on, to specialize in special fields. When you look at engineering schools, engineering schools have become more and more generalist in six fields, and they should become specialists in fields. So I think that’s where we need to really push the boundaries. Ross Dawson: Yeah, no, I think, to your point, what I see as one of the ultimate possibilities from AI is that it amplifies our individuality. And so that’s an extraordinary possibility. So thank you so much for your time and your insights, Henrik. You’re sharing some great work, and we’ll share in the show notes links to one of your research papers and the work you do. Thank you. Henrik von Scheel: Okay, thanks a lot. Good. Goodbye. The post Henrik von Scheel on making people smarter, wealthier and healthier, biophysical data, resilient learning, and human evolution (AC Ep37) appeared first on Humans + AI.

Navigantes
#82 Amandine Deslandes, l'éclectique

Navigantes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2026 68:39


A 42 ans Amandine Deslandes a déjà derrière elle un parcours aussi riche qu'éclectique, puisqu'elle a notamment été manager à l'Urssaf, DRH à la CPAM,directrice de cabinet d'un député, écrivaine... Aujourd'hui, cette bête de concours et maman d'un petit garçon de 4 ans est la directrice générale associée de la société marseillaise Marsail, fondée par son compagnon, le skipperChristopher Pratt, et par Dimitri Deruelle, autre marin marseillais."Quand j'ai rencontré Chris, je ne savais même pas ce qu'était le Vendée Globe, on partait de loin", sourit-elle. De son propre aveu, elle se sent aujourd'hui parfaitement à sa place, confiant : "Ce métier et ses différentes facettes me permettent de faire appel à toutes mes anciennes expériences et de placer le social au centre de tout." Amandine Deslandes a un leitmotiv : rendre le monde de l'entreprise meilleur.Navigantes est animé par Hélène Cougoule et produit par SailorzPrésenté par PaprecDiffusé le 18 mars 2026Post production : Théo LevillainGénérique : All the summer girlsHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Esperluette
Douleurs chroniques - Se mettre en mouvement pour préserver sa santé mentale

Esperluette

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2026 32:03


Comment rester en mouvement et préserver sa santé mentale quand son propre corps devient un obstacle ?Aujourd'hui, à l'occasion du Podcasthon, je retrouve avec plaisir deux de mes invitées de l'année dernière, Sandrine & Delphine, accompagnées d'Isabelle et Cécile, pour continuer la sensibilisation autour de la gestion des douleurs chroniques.En octobre dernier, à l'occasion des Semaines d'Information sur la Santé Mentale, l'équipe de l'association Vivre Doul'heureux au quotidien a proposé des temps d'échanges et des ateliers autour du lien entre douleurs chroniques, activités physiques et santé mentale.Quand on souffre, on a tendance à rester statique pour de multiples raisons. A cause de la douleur bien évidemment qui bloque le corps, mais également de la pression sociale, du manque d'écoute et de connaissance sur tout ce que la douleur a comme impact sur une vie, à cause de l'isolement aussi subi par bon nombre de malade, douloureux ou non.Dans cet épisode on parle sans filtre de ces réalités et de comment le collectif, permet de déposer ce qui pèse, pour retrouver une forme d'élan, pour réussir à se remettre en mouvement.Allez, je laisse les quatre pipelettes se présenter et vous parler de leurs réalités face à la maladie.Écoutez, vous allez comprendre ! ----------------------------------- Faire un don à l'association Vivre Doul'heureux au quotidienMerci à la CPAM et l'ARs du Vaucluse pour avoir rendu possible les actions réalisées lors de la Semaine d'information sur la santé mentale en 2025 et ce podcast. -----------------------------  Esperluette, anthropologue du quotidien, à chaque épisode rencontre celles & ceux qui se passionnent, s'engagent, créent une société plus humaine, solidaire, créative, positive. L'objectif est de raconter les choses même complexes avec simplicité, en posant les questions que tout le monde se pose mais n'ose pas forcément formuler. Parce qu'il n'y a jamais de questions bêtes seulement des réponses à écouter pour mieux comprendre l'autre. Si vous souhaitez garder le contact, écouter des audios en avant-première, découvrir les coulisses des épisodes, abonnez-vous à la newsletter "Esperluette...entre nous" Cet épisode d'Esperluette a été enregistré en février 2026 et produit par Marie-Cécile Drécourt. Vous pouvez retrouver la retranscription de l'interview sur mon blog (Merci Autoscript ! ) Si l'épisode vous a plu, pensez à mettre un commentaire sur votre appli audio préférée, à le partager et à mettre 5 étoiles quand c'est possible sur votre application d'écoute. Si vous souhaitez produire votre podcast ou sponsoriser Esperluette, contactez-moi via LinkedIN 

La Cohorte, le podcast qui rapproche les freelances
REDIFF - MM #173 – Savoir dire HELP ! | freelance, difficultés financières, aide publique

La Cohorte, le podcast qui rapproche les freelances

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2026 5:38


C'est en testant l'outil Perplexity que je suis tombée sur un dispositif dont je n'avais jamais entendu parler : HELP.Un accompagnement gratuit et coordonné de la CAF, de la CPAM et de l'URSSAF, pour les freelances confrontés à des difficultés financières.Je ne l'ai pas testé moi-même, donc je ne peux pas t'en dire plus sur son efficacité.Mais je trouve que c'est le genre d'info à garder sous le coude.Tu connaissais ? Tu l'as déjà sollicité ? Je suis preneuse de retours !(Pour me répondre, envoie-moi un mp sur Linkedin

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn
Le dépistage du cancer colorectal avec la CPAM de Pau

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2026 21:56


durée : 00:21:56 - Le dépistage du cancer colorectal avec la CPAM de Pau Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

ESE décrypte
Parlons-en ! Plongée dans les CPTS avec le Dr Guillaume Darmaillacq

ESE décrypte

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2026 21:00


Dans ce nouveau numéro du podcast « Parlons-en ! », la rédaction d'ESE s'entretient avec le docteur Guillaume Dairmallacq, médecin généraliste et président de la CPTS Adour Gave Relancées dans le cadre du déploiement de la stratégie gouvernementale « Ma Santé 2022 », les communautés professionnelles territoriales de santé (CPTS) ont constitué, aux yeux de l'Assurance Maladie, l'un des fers de lance pour lutter contre la désertification de certains territoires tout en améliorant la pratique de l'exercice coordonnée. Qu'en est-il pour les acteurs du soin sur le terrain ? ESE donne la parole au Dr Guillaume Darmaillacq, président de la CPTS Adour Gave couvrant une partie des départements des Landes et des Pyrénées-Atlantiques. Au travers de cet échange, ce médecin généraliste entrepreneur nous décrit très concrètement quelle est la réalité de ce modèle organisationnel. Que ce soit dans son articulation entre professionnels de santé, ses interactions avec l'ARS et les CPAM ainsi que la portée de son projet médicale. Un chantier qui, contrairement à ce qu'on pourrait penser, n'en est encore qu'à ces débuts Bonne écoute à tous !

Revenir en France
Souscrire une assurance santé temporaire au retour en France

Revenir en France

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2026 14:41


Dans ce flash info, j'aborde les enjeux de la santé pour les expatriés qui rentrent en France. J'explique comment fonctionne le délai de carence de trois mois imposé par la Sécurité sociale et comment tu vas être impacté en fonction de ta situation. S'inscrire à la Sécurité sociale est l'une de tes premières démarches à faire quand tu arrives en France. J'aborde également les solutions/situations pour éviter le délai de carence avec notamment le cas particulier pour les Français revenant du Québec, qui ne subissent pas ce délai. Voici le lien de l'assurance santé temporaire que je recommande pour le retour en France. Clique pour demander un devis en direct : https://www.chapkadirect.fr/index.php?action=produit&id=750&app=cd_retourenfrEnfin, je vous propose des ressources gratuites et un accompagnement plus poussé sur plusieurs mois pour faciliter le retour en France.Rejoignez nous sans plus attendre !----------- --------------- -------------- -------------- -------------- -------------Pour plus d'informations, des conseils au quotidien, voici quelques liens utiles.Tu peux rejoindre la communauté sur Facebook, Instagram et Linkedin sous le nom de Voyage, emploi & retour en France.Le site web : https://voyage-emploi-retourenfrance.frPrépare toi avec le kit du retour en France : https://voyage-emploi-retourenfrance.fr/retour-en-france-apres-expatriation/Les outils gratuits pour le retour en France : https://voyage-emploi-retourenfrance.fr/boite-a-outils/Prendre rendez-vous gratuitement avec Magali : https://calendly.com/retourenfrance-emploi> info.retourenfrance.emploi@gmail.comHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Surgical Educator podcast
CPAM & BPS- Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation & Broncho Pulmonary Sequestration- Season 3- Episode 28

Surgical Educator podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2025 34:26


Highly interactive audio podcast on CPAM & BPS- Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation & Broncho Pulmonary Seqestration. Highlighting embryology, etiopathogenesis, clinical features, investigations, severity grading, treatment, and prognosis.

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn
Fauteuils roulants remboursés à 100 % et carte Vitale numérique : deux avancées majeures avec la CPAM de Pau

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2025 20:59


durée : 00:20:59 - On s'en parle en Béarn Bigorre - Depuis le 1er décembre 2025, les fauteuils roulants sont désormais remboursés à 100 % et leur prise en charge simplifiée. En parallèle, l'application carte Vitale est accessible à tous les assurés, offrant une version numérique pratique, sécurisée et toujours à jour. Le point avec la CPAM de Pau. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

K6FM Podcasts
« La carte virtuelle a plus d'avantages que la physique » : la nouvelle carte vitale expliquée

K6FM Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2025 9:16


Vous n'avez pas manqué l'information, la carte vitale est désormais disponible sur votre smartphone. Une carte digitale qui fait office d'alternative à la carte physique, elle ne la remplace pas. Et qui présente des avantages. Écoutez le directeur de la CPAM de Côte d'Or Lilian Vachon.

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn
CPAM : santé des hommes, mois sans tabac, vaccinations

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2025 22:09


durée : 00:22:09 - La santé des hommes avec la CPAM - Novembre : mois sans tabac, vaccination grippe, et le mois des gentlemen autour de la santé des hommes sont les thèmes abordés par la Caisse Primaire d'Assurance Maladie de Pau et la ligue contre le cancer des Pyrénées Atlantiques. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Le dossier du jour FB Drôme Ardèche
Accès aux soins : découvrez les solutions locales avec les CPAM et CPTS Ardèche Drôme

Le dossier du jour FB Drôme Ardèche

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2025 33:12


durée : 00:33:12 - Bienvenue chez vous, l'invité - Comment être mieux soigné près de chez soi ? Avec Sandrine Vercasson, Jonathan Roche et Stéphane Adam, découvrez des leviers concrets pour faciliter l'accès aux soins en Drôme et en Ardèche. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

C dans l'air
Dette: Bruno Le Maire règle ses comptes...l'opposition s'indigne - L'intégrale -

C dans l'air

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2025 64:27


C dans l'air du 10 novembre 2025 « Secret ». La mention est tamponnée en haut à gauche de la missive, datée du 6 avril 2024. Sur France 5, hier soir, #Cdanslair a dévoilé en exclusivité, dans le cadre du documentaire intitulé Dette, un scandale français ?, la lettre d'alerte sur la dérive des comptes publics envoyée par Bruno Le Maire, alors ministre de l'Économie et des Finances, au président de la République, Emmanuel Macron. Et son contenu est explosif.Pointant une chute des recettes fiscales, le patron de Bercy y demandait des mesures d'économies pour limiter le déficit à 4,9 % en 2024. Ses recommandations n'avaient pas été suivies par le chef de l'État à l'époque. Le déficit public avait atteint 5,8 % du PIB cette année-là. Adressée deux mois avant les élections européennes, qui ont été suivies de la dissolution, Bruno Le Maire affirmait que, sans loi de finances rectificative, le gouvernement pourrait être accusé d'« insincérité ».« Nous risquons de nous faire accuser de cacher notre copie et des économies douloureuses pour le lendemain des élections européennes. »« Nous ouvrirons immédiatement un contentieux avec toutes les oppositions », avait-il écrit, prévenant Emmanuel Macron que « toute stratégie d'évitement est vouée à l'échec ».Questionné ce lundi sur franceinfo, l'actuel ministre de l'Économie, Roland Lescure, a déclaré qu'il n'avait jusque-là pas connaissance de cette lettre d'alerte de son prédécesseur.« Je me sens aussi responsable que lui et que tous les autres de la situation dans laquelle on est », a-t-il dit.« Il y a une omission d'État », a fustigé, le même jour, Éric Coquerel, président de la commission des Finances de l'Assemblée nationale, interrogé sur BFMTV.« Rétrospectivement, ça veut dire que le budget qui était présenté était insincère », a-t-il ajouté.De son côté, le Rassemblement national dénonce « un scandale d'État ».Ces révélations interviennent alors que le marathon budgétaire se poursuit à l'Assemblée nationale. Les députés examinent le projet de loi de financement de la Sécurité sociale : après avoir adopté samedi la partie recettes à une courte majorité, ils débattent désormais du volet dépenses, qui comprend l'article suspendant la réforme des retraites.Sur le terrain, la grogne monte. Après les manifestations de la semaine dernière pour défendre le pouvoir d'achat des retraités, la Fédération nationale des médecins radiologues estime qu'environ 70 à 80 % de la profession est en grève ce lundi, pour protester contre les baisses tarifaires imposées par la CPAM.Le secteur associatif tire lui aussi la sonnette d'alarme. Invité récemment de #Cdanslair, Benoît Hamon a alerté sur les coupes budgétaires massives que pourrait subir le monde associatif dans le projet de budget 2026.Nos experts : - Bruno JEUDY - Directeur délégué et éditorialiste La Tribune Dimanche- Fanny GUINOCHET - Éditorialiste économique - France Info- Sylvie PIERRE-BROSSOLETTE - Éditorialiste politique - Le Point - Jérôme FOURQUET - Directeur du département Opinion - Institut de sondages IFOP, auteur de "Métamorphoses françaises"- Thierry BRETON - Ancien ministre des Finances et ancien commissaire européen

C dans l'air
Dette: Bruno Le Maire règle ses comptes...l'opposition s'indigne - L'intégrale -

C dans l'air

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2025 64:27


C dans l'air du 10 novembre 2025 « Secret ». La mention est tamponnée en haut à gauche de la missive, datée du 6 avril 2024. Sur France 5, hier soir, #Cdanslair a dévoilé en exclusivité, dans le cadre du documentaire intitulé Dette, un scandale français ?, la lettre d'alerte sur la dérive des comptes publics envoyée par Bruno Le Maire, alors ministre de l'Économie et des Finances, au président de la République, Emmanuel Macron. Et son contenu est explosif.Pointant une chute des recettes fiscales, le patron de Bercy y demandait des mesures d'économies pour limiter le déficit à 4,9 % en 2024. Ses recommandations n'avaient pas été suivies par le chef de l'État à l'époque. Le déficit public avait atteint 5,8 % du PIB cette année-là. Adressée deux mois avant les élections européennes, qui ont été suivies de la dissolution, Bruno Le Maire affirmait que, sans loi de finances rectificative, le gouvernement pourrait être accusé d'« insincérité ».« Nous risquons de nous faire accuser de cacher notre copie et des économies douloureuses pour le lendemain des élections européennes. »« Nous ouvrirons immédiatement un contentieux avec toutes les oppositions », avait-il écrit, prévenant Emmanuel Macron que « toute stratégie d'évitement est vouée à l'échec ».Questionné ce lundi sur franceinfo, l'actuel ministre de l'Économie, Roland Lescure, a déclaré qu'il n'avait jusque-là pas connaissance de cette lettre d'alerte de son prédécesseur.« Je me sens aussi responsable que lui et que tous les autres de la situation dans laquelle on est », a-t-il dit.« Il y a une omission d'État », a fustigé, le même jour, Éric Coquerel, président de la commission des Finances de l'Assemblée nationale, interrogé sur BFMTV.« Rétrospectivement, ça veut dire que le budget qui était présenté était insincère », a-t-il ajouté.De son côté, le Rassemblement national dénonce « un scandale d'État ».Ces révélations interviennent alors que le marathon budgétaire se poursuit à l'Assemblée nationale. Les députés examinent le projet de loi de financement de la Sécurité sociale : après avoir adopté samedi la partie recettes à une courte majorité, ils débattent désormais du volet dépenses, qui comprend l'article suspendant la réforme des retraites.Sur le terrain, la grogne monte. Après les manifestations de la semaine dernière pour défendre le pouvoir d'achat des retraités, la Fédération nationale des médecins radiologues estime qu'environ 70 à 80 % de la profession est en grève ce lundi, pour protester contre les baisses tarifaires imposées par la CPAM.Le secteur associatif tire lui aussi la sonnette d'alarme. Invité récemment de #Cdanslair, Benoît Hamon a alerté sur les coupes budgétaires massives que pourrait subir le monde associatif dans le projet de budget 2026.Nos experts : - Bruno JEUDY - Directeur délégué et éditorialiste La Tribune Dimanche- Fanny GUINOCHET - Éditorialiste économique - France Info- Sylvie PIERRE-BROSSOLETTE - Éditorialiste politique - Le Point - Jérôme FOURQUET - Directeur du département Opinion - Institut de sondages IFOP, auteur de "Métamorphoses françaises"- Thierry BRETON - Ancien ministre des Finances et ancien commissaire européen

Univox
Étudiant.e.s en difficulté ? Sur les épaules de l'AIDE | Univox

Univox

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2025 30:19


L'AIDE est un lieu d'accueil qui informe, conseille, accompagne et oriente vers le bon interlocuteur et peut intervenir face aux urgences lorsque des étudiant.e.s sont un grande diffcultés. Un dispositif imaginé sur le Campus d'Orléans qui essaime ailleurs en France. - La coordinatrice de l'AIDE propose des informations sur l'ensemble des aides accessibles aux étudiants de l'université ainsi qu'un accueil et suivi individualisé pour une prise en compte globale de leurs problématiques. Elle peut intervenir face aux urgences et orienter chaque étudiant vers les bons interlocuteurs pour leurs problèmes d'isolement, de logement, d'alimentation, de matériel informatique, de jobs, … pour compléter et renforcer les actions déjà mises en œuvre par le CROUS, le Service de Santé Universitaire (SSU) et la Maison de l'Etudiant. Dans ce lieu, les principaux acteurs sociaux (CROUS, CPAM, CCAS, préfecture, missions locales, associations…) sont également présents de manière récurrente pour répondre aux questions, faciliter et accompagner chaque étudiant dans l'ensemble de ses démarches administratives. Ce dispositif fonctionne en collaboration avec les nombreuses initiatives à destination des étudiants, dont celles de la Région Centre-Val de Loire avec la mise en place d'étudiants référents dans l'ensemble les CRIJ, Centres régionaux d'information jeunesse, qui permettront de relayer les informations dans toutes villes du territoire régional où l'université d'Orléans est présente (Bourges, Chartres, Châteauroux, Issoudun, Blois). Un reportage de Thomas Derais et Hassan Kerim, montage Viviane Berreur Radio Campus Orléans, oct.2025 ------------------------------------------------------ UNIVOX l'émission Les radios Campus scrutent en permanence les jeunesses de leur territoire et tendent chaque semaine leurs micros aux étudiant.e.s, jeunes citoyen.ne.s engagé.e.s, habitant.e.s et associations des villes et des campus de France. Une radiographie bouillonnante et itinérante de l'écosystème étudiant. Tous les podcasts : https://www.radiocampus.fr/emission/univox ------------------------------------------------------ RADIO CAMPUS FRANCE Radio Campus France est le réseau des radios associatives, libres, étudiantes et locales fédérant 30 radios partout en France. NOUS SUIVRE | FOLLOW US www.radiocampus.fr Insta @radio_campus NOUS ÉCOUTER | LISTENHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Radio Campus France
Étudiant.e.s en difficulté ? Sur les épaules de l'AIDE | Univox

Radio Campus France

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2025 30:19


L'AIDE est un lieu d'accueil qui informe, conseille, accompagne et oriente vers le bon interlocuteur et peut intervenir face aux urgences lorsque des étudiant.e.s sont un grande diffcultés. Un dispositif imaginé sur le Campus d'Orléans qui essaime ailleurs en France. - La coordinatrice de l'AIDE propose des informations sur l'ensemble des aides accessibles aux étudiants de l'université ainsi qu'un accueil et suivi individualisé pour une prise en compte globale de leurs problématiques. Elle peut intervenir face aux urgences et orienter chaque étudiant vers les bons interlocuteurs pour leurs problèmes d'isolement, de logement, d'alimentation, de matériel informatique, de jobs, … pour compléter et renforcer les actions déjà mises en œuvre par le CROUS, le Service de Santé Universitaire (SSU) et la Maison de l'Etudiant. Dans ce lieu, les principaux acteurs sociaux (CROUS, CPAM, CCAS, préfecture, missions locales, associations…) sont également présents de manière récurrente pour répondre aux questions, faciliter et accompagner chaque étudiant dans l'ensemble de ses démarches administratives. Ce dispositif fonctionne en collaboration avec les nombreuses initiatives à destination des étudiants, dont celles de la Région Centre-Val de Loire avec la mise en place d'étudiants référents dans l'ensemble les CRIJ, Centres régionaux d'information jeunesse, qui permettront de relayer les informations dans toutes villes du territoire régional où l'université d'Orléans est présente (Bourges, Chartres, Châteauroux, Issoudun, Blois). Un reportage de Thomas Derais et Hassan Kerim, montage Viviane Berreur Radio Campus Orléans, oct.2025 ------------------------------------------------------ UNIVOX l'émission Les radios Campus scrutent en permanence les jeunesses de leur territoire et tendent chaque semaine leurs micros aux étudiant.e.s, jeunes citoyen.ne.s engagé.e.s, habitant.e.s et associations des villes et des campus de France. Une radiographie bouillonnante et itinérante de l'écosystème étudiant. Tous les podcasts : https://www.radiocampus.fr/emission/univox ------------------------------------------------------ RADIO CAMPUS FRANCE Radio Campus France est le réseau des radios associatives, libres, étudiantes et locales fédérant 30 radios partout en France. NOUS SUIVRE | FOLLOW US www.radiocampus.fr Insta @radio_campus NOUS ÉCOUTER | LISTEN

undeuxdroit
⚠️ Recevabilité en justice de l'enregistrement d'un médecin conseil ⚠️

undeuxdroit

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2025 1:47


Tribunal judiciaire de BobignyAffaire : N° RG 24/02270 N° Portalis DB3S-W-B7I-2CLFJugement du 16 OCTOBRE 2025Sur la recevabilité de l'enregistrement de l'entretien avec le médecin conseil(rappel du droit à la preuve) ● En l'espèce, la décision de guérison a été prise par la CPAM dans les suites de l'entretien intervenu entre l'assuré et le médecin conseil de la caisse le 5 juin 2024.● La CPAM ne conteste pas la licéité ou la loyauté de ce mode de preuve et ne fait pas valoir d'atteinte à l'un de ses droits.● Dans ces conditions, il convient d'autoriser la production de cette pièce dans le cadre de la présente instance.#preuve #enregistrement #justice #enregistrer #CPAM #médecin #conseil

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn
Les témoignages d'auditrices sur le cancer du sein et les actions de la CPAM de Pau

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2025 23:43


durée : 00:23:43 - On s'en parle en Béarn Bigorre - C'est Octobre Rose le mois de sensibilisation au cancer du sein. Quels sont vos parcours de vie autour de cette maladie ? Vous nous les racontez dans l'émission. Des actions Octobre Rose sont mises en place sur le Béarn et la Bigorre. On vous en donne quelques dates. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Liaisons Sociales
Programme de travail des partenaires sociaux, RCC chez Stellantis, licenciement des victimes d'AT-MP, fiche de paie… 3 minutes de social

Liaisons Sociales

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2025 4:24


Dans ce nouvel épisode, nous revenons sur le courrier du Premier ministre Sébastien Lecornu adressé aux partenaires sociaux dans lequel il propose un programme de travail à court terme et, à plus long terme, une discussion autour de cinq grands thèmes. Nous évoquons aussi l'accord relatif à la gestion des emplois et des parcours professionnels et aux ruptures conventionnelles collectives conclu au sein du géant de l'automobile Stellantis. Notre « focus texte », porte sur deux arrêts de la Cour de cassation, qui juge que ni la demande de reconnaissance du caractère professionnel d'un accident ou d'une maladie formée par le salarié auprès de la CPAM, ni la décision de prise en charge de la caisse ne suffisent à déclencher l'application de la protection contre le licenciement des victimes d'AT-MP. Enfin, notre chiffre de la semaine provient d'une étude menée par ViaVoice pour le Club Landoy sur la fiche de paie.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

La Cohorte, le podcast qui rapproche les freelances
MM #173 – Savoir dire HELP ! | freelance, difficultés financières, aide publique

La Cohorte, le podcast qui rapproche les freelances

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2025 5:38


C'est en testant l'outil Perplexity que je suis tombée sur un dispositif dont je n'avais jamais entendu parler : HELP. Un accompagnement gratuit et coordonné de la CAF, de la CPAM et de l'URSSAF, pour les freelances confrontés à des difficultés financières. Je ne l'ai pas testé moi-même, donc je ne peux pas t'en dire plus sur son efficacité. Mais je trouve que c'est le genre d'info à garder sous le coude. Tu connaissais ? Tu l'as déjà sollicité ? Je suis preneuse de retours ! (Pour me répondre, envoie-moi un mp sur Linkedin

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn
Faut-il obligatoirement un certificat médical pour la pratique d'un sport

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2025 22:16


durée : 00:22:16 - On s'en parle en Béarn Bigorre - Le certificat médical est-il toujours obligatoire pour pratiquer du sport ? Anne Arnault est chargée de communication de la CPAM de Pau et nous dit tout à ce sujet dans l'émission. Et ce n'est pas simple ! Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les autres épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France.

Happy Work
#2395- Tout savoir sur... le bien-être au travail dans le service public - Interview de Pierre Feneyrol - Directeur CPAM Haute Savoie

Happy Work

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2025 23:19


Les Experts France Bleu Béarn
Juin vert, la prévention contre le cancer du col de l'utérus avec la CPAM et le Dr Nakpane

Les Experts France Bleu Béarn

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2025 22:18


durée : 00:22:18 - Juin vert, la prévention du cancer de l'utérus avec la CPAM et le Dr Nakpane - Juin vert c'est le mois consacré au dépistage du cancer du col de l'utérus. Des actions sont menées par la CPAM de Pau. Explications d'Anne Arnault chargée de communication et du Dr Nakpane pour la prévention.

undeuxdroit
Reconnaissance automatique des maladies hors tableau - délai de 10 jours avant CRRMP ⁉️

undeuxdroit

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2025 17:24


Tech&Co
Dounia El Guasmi, directrice de la relation client Cpam Pau & Bayonne – 22/05

Tech&Co

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2025 14:15


Dounia El Guasmi, directrice développement et transformation RH à la Cnav, était l'invitée de François Sorel dans Tech & Co, la quotidienne, spéciale La Nuit de l'IA, ce jeudi 22 mai. Elle s'est penchée sur l'utilité de l'IA pour la Cnav et les techniques pour éviter les abus en matière d'intelligence artificielle, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au jeudi et réécoutez-la en podcast.

INFORMATION LOCALE
20 MAI 2025

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2025 4:00


Sujets traités : Hier, la journée a été marquée par une forte perturbation à Strasbourg et en Alsace. Double mobilisation à Strasbourg : d'un côté les taxis ont organisé une opération escargot dès 7h du matin. Ils protestent contre les VTC et une nouvelle convention jugée non rentable. En parallèle, environ 150 familles de forains ont mené une opération statique dans le secteur de la place de l'Etoile. Ils contestent la décision de la mairie d'annuler pour la deuxième année consécutive la foire Saint-Jean. Des actions qui ont provoqué d'importants bouchons et l'interruption des trams A et D. A Colmar, une soixantaine de chauffeurs se sont rassemblés devant la CPAM, où une délégation a été reçue pour exprimer leur mécontentement. À Colmar, une librairie pas comme les autres vient d'ouvrir ses portes. Son nom : Le Chat Pitre. Installée place Sainte-Catherine, cette nouvelle adresse combine deux plaisirs : la lecture et les chats ! Un concept original importé d'Aix-en-Provence. Caroline Picard, la gérante, a sélectionné soigneusement chacun des félins présents dans la boutique, elle nous explique. La librairie est ouverte du mardi au samedi, de 10h à 18h30. L'Orphéo Tour débutera ce jeudi, une randonnée cycliste avec des cyclistes de la police nationale et certains du sprinter club de Mulhouse. Le projet débutera à Mulhouse, sera de passage à Colmar et prendra fin à Nancy. Le but, faire connaître l'organisme qui aide les orphelins de policiers et qui les suit jusqu'à leur émancipation. Nicolas Scharff, président du Munster Bike Club, en dit plus. Retrouvez notre article complet sur notre site internet azur-fm.com.Une inauguration symbolique ce dimanche à Vogelgrun. 120 collégiens et lycéens de Freiburg, Breisach et Fessenheim, réunis au sein d'un même projet autour des 80 ans de paix entre la France et l'Allemagne, étaient présents lors du baptême du pont du Rhin en pont Julius Leber, journaliste natif de Biesheim et résistant de la première heure au nazisme. Lors de cet événement, les jeunes ont aussi présenté un travail chorégraphique mené cette semaine avec une compagnie de danse new-yorkaise. L'émission Super Nanny débarque dans le Grand-Est. Si vous rencontrez des problèmes au quotidien, que vos enfants sont accros aux écrans, que vous avez perdu toute autorité ou encore que vous vous sentez dépassés, vous pouvez postuler via le Facebook de l'émission ou contacter l'adresse mail casting.supernanny@wbitvp.fr. Deux français ont été tués dans un accident de voiture au Brésil. Un couple de touristes, originaires de Strasbourg, ainsi que leur chauffeur, sont décédés ce samedi 17 mai. L'une des roues de leur pick-up se serait détaché, provoquant la perte de contrôle du chauffeur. Le véhicule aurait quitté la route avant de finir dans une petite mare, au bord de l'autoroute. Le couple venait d'assister au mariage de leur fils, qui vit à Rio de Janeiro.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

INFORMATION LOCALE
19 MAI 2025

INFORMATION LOCALE

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2025 4:05


Sujets traités : Opérations escargot en Alsace aujourd'hui. Les taxis sont appelés à faire la grève des transports, notamment à Strasbourg, Colmar et Mulhouse. Au coeur des revendications de ce mouvement national : la baisse de la tarification du transport médical et la concurrence des VTC. A Colmar, l'Union des taxis d'Alsace évoque plus de 80 taxis mobilisés avec un convoi qui partira à 11h de l'Union des Groupements Artisanaux Centre Alsace pour se rendre à la CPAM. A Strasbourg, ce sera plus du double avec deux cortèges de 6h à 19h. Un convoi partira de l'aire de Brumath vers le nouvel hôpital civil à Strasbourg et le second de Dorlisheim vers le CHU de Hautepierre. Le cheval métallique de la cérémonie d'ouverture des JO sera à Strasbourg. La sculpture cinématique monumentale poursuit sa course à travers la France et l'Europe. L'œuvre de l'atelier blam, soutenue par Sanofi, mesure 2m50 de haut, 70cm de large et près de 4m de long. Zeus marquera donc un arrêt à la terrasse des Rohan et sera exposé sur un podium de présentation, en accès libre et gratuit. Il sera également à admirer depuis le quai des Bateliers et depuis le pont Sainte-Madeleine. Il se mettra en marche régulièrement, galopant au-dessus du bassin, du 27 mai au 8 juin. Dans le cadre de "Colmar, capitale des vins d'Alsace", la Ville et l'Agglomération ont organisé ce vendredi une nouvelle opération de remontée des bouteilles de crémant immergées dans le plan d'eau de la base nautique. Cette deuxième phase d'une expérimentation scientifique unique en son genre a permis d'évaluer l'évolution du crémant d'Alsace conservé dans des conditions exceptionnelles. Eric Straumann, le maire, apporte des précisions. Retrouvez notre article complet sur notre site internet azur-fm.com et la dégustation du crémant par Serge Dubs sur nos réseaux sociaux. La Ville de Scherwiller commémore la bataille qui a eu lieu durant la Guerre des paysans en 1525. A cette occasion, une série d'événements est prévue. Michel Corbin, conseiller municipal, nous en dit plus sur la programmation du mardi 20 mai, jour anniversaire de la guerre. Le samedi et le dimanche, les visiteurs pourront notamment découvrir une exposition et un spectacle. Pour retrouver toute la programmation, consultez notre site internet azur-fm.com. On termine ce journal par un mot de sport. Le Racing Club de Strasbourg a conclu sa saison par une défaite à domicile face au Havre, sur le score de 2-3. Malgré deux buts signés Andrey Santos et Sebastian Nanasi, les Strasbourgeois se sont inclinés. Cette défaite place le club à la 7ème position du classement final. Une qualification européenne reste possible si le Paris Saint-Germain remporte la finale de la Coupe de France face à Reims. Du côté du SAHB de Sélestat, l'équipe a remporté son match aller des quarts de finale de ProLigue en s'imposant 29-21 contre Saran. Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

La Vie Creative
EP: 520 How to Move to France with Fabien Pelissier of FabExpat

La Vie Creative

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 29:21


Send us a textFabien is the founder and managing director of FAB, established in 2015. FAB specializes in insurance and offers a network of relocation experts, administrative support, and specialist partners to help people settle and thrive in France. With extensive experience handling visa applications, Fabien likes to be regarded as an "immigration GP." He also served on the board of URSSAF Aquitaine and CPAM "Pays Basque" for four years, giving him in-depth knowledge of the French system.https://www.fabexpat.com/https://www.fabfrenchinsurance.com/https://www.survivefrance.com/https://www.youtube.com/@fabexpatshttps://www.instagram.com/fabexpats/Support the show

Still A Part of Us: A podcast about stillbirth and infant loss
Things I Wish I Knew One Year Ago | Advice From A Stillbirth Mother

Still A Part of Us: A podcast about stillbirth and infant loss

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2025 29:29


Evelina talks with Winter about what has happened since the birth of her daughter Alia, who was stillborn at 29 weeks due to complications with CPAM (congenital pulmonary airway malformation). Evelina talks about getting professional help from a therapist and the good that has done for her in navigating the wide variety of emotions and feelings from experiencing the death of Alia. Evelina also reads a letter she wrote for past self giving encouragement and love for the future.  DONATE $5 (aka "buy us a coffee/hot cocoa") to support the continued production of these stories. We appreciate all the help toward production and hosting costs.  Or if you want to purchase an "Always a Part of Us" Legacy Gift for $20, you'll be providing to one of these families that shares their story, full transcriptions, mp3s, and mp4s of the recordings of their baby's birth story and advice episodes for their family history records. You will also get a shout-out on an upcoming episode. Thank you! Donate: https://ko-fi.com/stillapartofus SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for more birth stories from families who have experienced a stillbirth or infant loss. We're grateful that you're part of our community! https://www.youtube.com/stillapartofus SUBSCRIBE to our podcast Still A Part of Us, wherever you find podcasts. Links (some of these links are affiliate links, which means we may get a small commission off your purchase, at no extra cost to you): Website: http://stillapartofus.com/ Grief Support Groups: https://nationalshare.org/ #stillbirthstory #stillborn #stillbornstory #birthstory #infantloss #infantdeath #babydeath #stillmychild #podcast  #birthstories #babyloss #mybabydied #bereavedmother #bereavedfather #infantlossawareness #dadsgrievetoo #mamasgrief #pals #childloss #lifeafterloss #saytheirnames #babylossawareness #breakingthesilence #grievingmom #grievingdad #bereavedparents #pregnancyandinfantlossawarenessmonth

Still A Part of Us: A podcast about stillbirth and infant loss
I Never Thought Anything Bad Was Going To Happen | A Mother's Stillbirth Story

Still A Part of Us: A podcast about stillbirth and infant loss

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2025 65:34


Evelina talks with Winter about the birth of her sweet baby Alia, who was stillborn at 29 weeks due to complications with CPAM (congenital pulmonary airway malformation) and a placental abruption. Evelina tells about how she and her husband would love to have a large family and that Alia was their second daughter. Evelina also suffered with polyhydramnios, which is excessive amniotic in the womb. DONATE $5 (aka "buy us a coffee/hot cocoa") to support the continued production of these stories. We appreciate all the help toward production and hosting costs.  Or if you want to purchase an "Always a Part of Us" Legacy Gift for $20, you'll be providing to one of these families that shares their story, full transcriptions, mp3s, and mp4s of the recordings of their baby's birth story and advice episodes for their family history records. You will also get a shout-out on an upcoming episode. Thank you! Donate: https://ko-fi.com/stillapartofus SUBSCRIBE to our YouTube channel for more birth stories from families who have experienced a stillbirth or infant loss. We're grateful that you're part of our community! https://www.youtube.com/stillapartofus SUBSCRIBE to our podcast Still A Part of Us, wherever you find podcasts. Links (some of these links are affiliate links, which means we may get a small commission off your purchase, at no extra cost to you): Website: http://stillapartofus.com/ Grief Support Groups: https://nationalshare.org/ Mom Music: "Flickering Flame" by Josh Woodward. Free download: http://joshwoodward.com/​​ #stillbirthstory #stillborn #stillbornstory #birthstory #infantloss #infantdeath #babydeath #stillmychild #podcast  #birthstories #babyloss #mybabydied #bereavedmother #bereavedfather #infantlossawareness #dadsgrievetoo #mamasgrief #pals #childloss #lifeafterloss #saytheirnames #babylossawareness #breakingthesilence #grievingmom #grievingdad #bereavedparents #pregnancyandinfantlossawarenessmonth

Entendez-vous l'éco ?
Accidents du travail : les morts cachés

Entendez-vous l'éco ?

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 5:45


durée : 00:05:45 - Le Journal de l'éco - par : Anne-Laure Chouin - 759 morts en 2023, soit deux morts par jour en moyenne. C'est le chiffre révélé par le rapport de la CPAM sur les accidents de travail. Des chiffres qui pourraient s'avérer en-dessous de la réalité, certains décès n'étant pas reconnus comme accidents du travail.

Ask the Expert
1216. Transcutaneous Spinal Stimulation

Ask the Expert

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2024 24:53


In this "Ask the Expert" episode, Dr. GG deFiebre of SRNA was joined by Dr. Rebecca Martin, who detailed the mechanism and benefits of transcutaneous spinal cord stimulation (TSS). Dr. Martin explained how TSS, a non-invasive method, aims to amplify spinal cord excitability and improve neurological functions like movement and sensation [00:01:25]. She contrasted TSS with implanted spinal stimulators, noting their respective applications and advantages [00:02:34]. Dr. Martin shared the promising outcomes of TSS in clinical trials, emphasizing its potential for widespread clinical use, and she urged patients to inquire about it at their clinics [00:05:42]. You can read her group's recent paper here: "Transcutaneous Spinal Cord Stimulation Enables Recovery of Walking in Children with Acute Flaccid Myelitis" https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/11/9/1116 Rebecca Martin, OTR/L, OTD, CPAM received her Bachelor of Science in Occupational Therapy from Boston University in 2001 and her Occupational Therapy Doctorate from Rocky Mountain University of Allied Health Professions in 2008. Prior to joining the Kennedy Krieger Institute, Dr. Martin worked in brain injury rehabilitation in Boston, Massachusetts. Dr. Martin joined Kennedy Krieger in 2005 as a Senior Occupational Therapist in the International Center for Spinal Cord Injury. Since 2010, Dr. Martin has been the Manager of Clinical Education and Training at ICSCI and is responsible for program development, staff training, and oversight of the clinical research program. Dr. Martin speaks nationally on topics related to Activity-Based Rehabilitation; she has taught many continuing education courses for rehabilitation professionals in the areas of neurological pathology, rehabilitation, and research. She has been the principal investigator and co-investigator for grants from the Paralyzed Veterans of America Education Foundation and Department of Defense to develop, promote, and disseminate an activity-based restorative therapy training program and curriculum. In 2011, Dr. Martin was awarded the Leader in Spinal Cord Injury Care by the International Center for Spinal Cord Injury at Kennedy Krieger. From 2011-2016, Dr. Martin served as a Committee Chair for the annual Contemporary Trends in Spinal Cord Injury Management Symposium at Kennedy Krieger. As a consultant for SwissStim, she has helped create clinical use guidelines for training and documentation. In 2015, Dr. Martin was invited to serve on the NIH and NINDS Committee to establish Pediatric Spinal Cord Injury Common Data Elements.

The Incubator
#249 -

The Incubator

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 51:47 Transcription Available


Send us a textIn this episode of Beyond The Beeps, host Leah Jayanetti speaks with Adriane Rodriguez, a mother whose daughter, Viviana, was born with Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation (CPAM), a rare lung condition. Adriane shares the emotional journey of discovering Viviana's condition during pregnancy, navigating complex medical decisions, and spending months in and out of hospitals, including time at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. Adriane recounts the difficult decisions they faced, including the possibility of fetal surgery and the uncertainty about Viviana's ability to survive outside the womb. Viviana's eventual birth was a moment of triumph as she defied expectations, breathing on her own and crying—a miracle after months of anxiety. Adriane discusses the challenges of NICU life, from not being able to hold her daughter to managing Viviana's recovery after surgery. She also reflects on the importance of hope, resilience, and self-care for parents in the NICU, urging them to lean on their support systems. Viviana is now a thriving nine-year-old, embodying the strength and determination she displayed from the moment she was born. This heartfelt episode provides hope and comfort to parents facing similar journeys.As always, feel free to send us questions, comments, or suggestions to our email: nicupodcast@gmail.com. You can also contact the show through Instagram or Twitter, @nicupodcast. Or contact Ben and Daphna directly via their Twitter profiles: @drnicu and @doctordaphnamd. The papers discussed in today's episode are listed and timestamped on the webpage linked below. Enjoy!

Cloud Security Podcast
Traditional PAM vs Cloud CPAM for a cloud first world

Cloud Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2024 34:22


In this episode of the Cloud Security Podcast, Ashish sat down with Art Poghosyan, CEO and co-founder of Britive, to explore the changing world of identity and access management (IAM) in the cloud era. With over two decades of experience in the identity space, Art breaks down the challenges of traditional Privileged Access Management (PAM) and how cloud-native environments require a rethinking of security strategies. From understanding the complexities of cloud infrastructure entitlements to unpacking the differences between on-premise and cloud-based PAM, Art explains why "Identity is the new perimeter" and how modern organizations must adapt. They dive deep into the importance of Just-in-Time (JIT) access, non-human identities, and the critical role identity plays as the first and last line of defense in cloud security. Guest Socials:⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Art's Linkedin Podcast Twitter - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠@CloudSecPod⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ If you want to watch videos of this LIVE STREAMED episode and past episodes - Check out our other Cloud Security Social Channels: - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Cloud Security Podcast- Youtube⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Cloud Security Newsletter ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ - ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Cloud Security BootCamp Questions asked: (00:00) Introduction (01:53) A bit about Art (02:51) What is IAM? (04:02) What is Cloud Privilege Access Management? (06:08) Why do we need CloudPAM in 2024? (07:52) Non Human Identities (08:39) Privilege in Cloud vs On Premise (09:49) SAML vs PAM (12:21) Just in Time provisioning in Cloud (17:17) Making Access Management Developer Friendly (19:12) What should security team be looking at ? (21:22) Communicating IAM vulnerabilities (23:45) Tactical steps to level up IAM (27:20) Zero Trust and IAM (30:56) Fun Questions

ICU Life and Recovery Podcast
Getting back to life: an OTs guide to addressing cognition , delirium , and function in the ICU

ICU Life and Recovery Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 54:26


This episode is recorded with Dr. Kelly Casey, OTD, OTR/L, BCPR, ATP, CPAM. Who has been an occupational therapist in the acute care and ICU settings at The Johns Hopkins Hospital for the past 18 years. She is the Acute Care Rehab Therapy Manager for PT, OT, and SLP. She is the Director of the Johns Hopkins OT Acute Care Fellowship Program. She is also the Director of the Johns Hopkins Assistive Technology Clinic We discuss delirium in the ICU and the Occupational therapist's role in helping identify and prevent it inside the multi-disciplinary team environment inside ICU. Having worked together at the Johns Hopkins Conference on Mobility in ICU we show in our discussion how patients and staff can work together to create a better outcome for all involved in the icu All opinions expressed are solely those of the speaker and do not represent any company or institution with which they have a relationship or association with

La Matrescence
EP 186 - La thérapie pour les enfants

La Matrescence

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2024 30:06


J'ai longtemps hésité avant de parler de ce thème, parce que je voulais forcément protéger la vie privée de mes enfants. Je sais aussi, à quel point ce sujet reste tabou et limité à une poignée de personnes privilégiées qui peuvent se permettre d'avoir le temps et les moyens financiers d'emmener leurs enfants en thérapie. Même si en France notre système n'est pas parfait, il nous permet quand même de pouvoir bénéficier de séances gratuites. Vous avez par exemple un dispositif appelé psy enfant ado pour les 3- 10 ans avec jusqu'à 10 séances remboursées. Vous devez être adressés par un médecin pour en bénéficier. Vous avez également des psychiatres qui sont médecins et donc remboursés. Je sais, parfois, il y a des dépassements d'honoraires, mais c'est une piste à explorer. Je vous ai mis aussi une ressource complète de la CPAM pour vous aiguiller en fonction de votre problématique. Si on revient au cœur du sujet, j'avais envie de vous raconter à quoi peut servir un suivi psy avec vos enfants, à quoi ressemble une séance à laquelle j'ai assisté et pourquoi cela a eu un immense impact bénéfique sur la vie de nos enfants. https://sante.gouv.fr/archives/archives-presse/archives-communiques-de-presse/article/lancement-du-dispositif-psy-enfant-ado-430693#:~:text=sante.gouv.fr&text=Il%20a%20pour%20objectif%20de,par%20adressage%20d'un%20m%C3%A9decin. https://www.ameli.fr/gironde/assure/sante/themes/sante-mentale-enfant/difficultes-psychologiques-chez-l-enfant-comment-etre-aide

Les Transformateurs by Lowpital
#47 - Philippe Pujol - Raconter la santé en 2040

Les Transformateurs by Lowpital

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2024 54:59


Philippe Pujol est journaliste et écrivain. Lauréat du Prix Albert Londres, il a notamment écrit le livre "Marseille 2040, le jour où notre système de santé craquera" à partir d'une enquête auprès d'experts et de données prospectives. Dans cet épisode, il raconte la démarche et ses impacts et nous parle de l'intérêt de raconter les futurs. Merci à la CPAM de la Manche qui nous a accueillis dans son Lab à Cherbourg pour réaliser cet enregistrement, suite à un projet de design fiction mené par Lowpital avec la CPTS du Cotentin ! Pour voir le replay de notre soirée Design Fiction à Cherbourg : https://youtube.com/live/lMSEPvzAH_g Pour commander le livre de Philippe Pujol, Marseille 2040 : https://editions.flammarion.com/marseille-2040/9782081422292 Vous avez l'âme d'un Transformateur et souhaitez vous aussi transformer le système de santé ? Notre formation Design Thinking en Santé vous donnera l'inspiration et les outils nécessaires pour passer à l'action ! Plus d'informations sur ⁠https://lowpital.care/formations/design-thinking-sante⁠ Crédits de l'épisode Interview : Aude Nyadanu Musique : Aude Nyadanu & Pierre Roquin Montage : Charline Yao

Libre antenne week-end
Après s'être rendu à la CPAM, Jean-Robert a été placé en garde à vue

Libre antenne week-end

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2024 43:28


Au cœur de la nuit, les auditeurs se livrent en toute liberté aux oreilles attentives et bienveillantes de Valérie Darmon. Pas de jugements ni de tabous, une conversation franche, mais aussi des réponses aux questions que les auditeurs se posent. Un moment d'échange et de partage propice à la confidence pour repartir le cœur plus léger.

Ça peut vous arriver
ALERTE ARNAQUE - Un centre dentaire soupçonné de fraude

Ça peut vous arriver

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2023 3:08


Jessica Bisson, reporter pour l'émission, relate une arnaque dévoilée dans "Le Parisien". Le centre Dentosphère, au cœur d'Évry-Courcouronnes, est soupçonné d'avoir facturé à la CPAM de fausses interventions. Le préjudice est colossal. Alertée, l'Assurance maladie a suspendu sa convention et les responsables ont été mis en examen. Tous les jours, retrouvez en podcast les meilleurs moments de l'émission "Ça peut vous arriver", sur RTL.fr et sur toutes vos plateformes préférées.

Reshape Your Health with Dr. Morgan Nolte
205. How to Improve Lymphatic System Drainage With Marissa Horak, MOTR/L, CLT-LANA, CPAM

Reshape Your Health with Dr. Morgan Nolte

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2023 60:28


Marissa Horak, MOTR/L, CLT-LANA, CPAM is an occupational therapist who specializes in lymphedema, oncology, and pelvic floor. She is a LANA board-certified lymphedema therapist and also has advanced specialty breast cancer rehab and male pelvic oncology certifications.In this interview you'll learn about the importance of our lymphatic system, how to know if your is working properly and how to maximize its performance. Connect with Marissa on instagram @wellnessot and work with her at Thrive OT | https://thrive-ot.com. Subscribe & ReviewSubscribing and leaving a rating and review are important factors in helping the Reshape Your Health Podcast and the YouTube Channel reach more people. If you haven't already subscribed, please do that today.We would also be grateful if you left a rating and review, too. In your listening app, scroll to the “Ratings and Reviews” section, then click “Write a Review” and let us know what you enjoy about our show. We appreciate you taking the time to show your support. Thank you!Resources From This Episode>> Join Zivli>> Book a Free Zivli Discovery Call>> Freebie: The Ultimate Food Guide>> Thrive OT Website>> Lymphology Association of North America (LANA) Website>> Follow Marissa on Instagram

Hands In Motion
Strength and Conditioning in Hand Therapy

Hands In Motion

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2023 44:06


On this episode we are joined by our first repeat guest, Jim Wagner. Jim is an occupational therapist and Certified Hand Therapist who also has a background in strength training and conditioning. He shares with us how to implement strength and conditioning in our hand therapy practices and why it's important for our patients. Jim Wagner OTD, OTR/L, CHT, CPAM, CSCSDr. Wagner is an occupational therapist/Certified Hand Therapist with 28 years of clinical experience working in the upper extremity orthopedic setting. He received his post professional clinical doctorate from Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions with a specialty in hand therapy. Dr. Wagner is credentialed in physical agent modalities and is a certified strength and conditioning specialist. Jim is currently the team leader of the Guthrie Hand Center and is an adjunct professor at both Keuka and Ithaca College occupational therapy programs. Jim has been involved in competitive powerlifting/bodybuilding for 35 year and has been in 28 competitions. He has traveled extensively teaching on topics such as kinesiology taping, cupping, instrument-assisted soft tissue mobility, orthotic fabrication and blood flow restriction training. Jim is a member of the American Society of Hand Therapists. He has been published in the practice forum section of the Journal of Hand Therapy and serves on the Education Division of the ASHT.Article Links:Comparison of blood flow restriction devices and their effect on quadriceps muscle activation. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ptsp.2021.02.005Practical Blood Flow Restriction Training Increases Acute Determinants of Hypertrophy Without Increasing Indices of Muscle Damage.https://journals.lww.com/nsca-jscr/Fulltext/2013/11000/Practical_Blood_Flow_Restriction_Training.20.aspxBlood Flow Restriction Training: Implementation into Clinical Practice.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5609669/Differences in the limb blood flow between two types of blood flow restriction cuffs: A pilot study. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2022.931270/full

Joaquín López-Dóriga
Arbitraria, la reducción de operaciones en el AICM, advierte el presidente del CPAM

Joaquín López-Dóriga

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2023 12:47


El capítán Ángel Domínguez, presidente del Colegio de Pilotos Aviadores de México (CPAM), criticó la implementación de una reducción de operaciones en el AICM

The Mark White Show
Baby Maegan with Renee Dendy & Cora's Corner

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2023 54:23


Today, I have the privilege of talking with Renee Dendy of Houston, Mississippi, who is currently with her baby, Maegan, at Le Bonheur Children's Hospital. Celebrating her first 100 days of life yesterday, Baby Maegan and her family have been through some serious challenges from the very beginning, including CPAM and a trisomy 18 diagnosis. On today's show, you'll hear from Renee, this brave and courageous mom of four boys and Maegan. After that, you'll hear Cora's Corner from Cora White.

The Mark White Show
Baby Maegan Celebrates 100 Days!

The Mark White Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2023 49:06


Tonight, I have the privilege of talking with Renee Dendy of Houston, Mississippi, who is currently with her baby, Maegan, at Le Bonheur Children's Hospital. Celebrating her first 100 days of life on Friday, Baby Maegan and her family have been through some serious challenges from the very beginning, including CPAM and a trisomy 18 diagnosis. On tonight's show, you'll hear from Renee, this brave and courageous mom of four boys and Maegan.

Hands In Motion
Blood Flow Restriction with Jim Wagner, OTD, OTR/L, CHT, CPAM, CSCS

Hands In Motion

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 36:49


On this episode we are joined by Jim Wagner, OTD, OTR/L, CHT, CPAM, CSCS, to discuss blood flow restriction and its application to upper extremity rehab. Jim discusses the science behind blood flow restriction, how it can be utilized in the rehab setting, and how it can benefit patients. Article Links:Comparison of blood flow restriction devices and their effect on quadriceps muscle activation. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ptsp.2021.02.005Practical Blood Flow Restriction Training Increases Acute Determinants of Hypertrophy Without Increasing Indices of Muscle Damage.https://journals.lww.com/nsca-jscr/Fulltext/2013/11000/Practical_Blood_Flow_Restriction_Training.20.aspxBlood Flow Restriction Training: Implementation into Clinical Practice.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5609669/Differences in the limb blood flow between two types of blood flow restriction cuffs: A pilot study. https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fphys.2022.931270/fullGuest Bio:Dr. Wagner, OTD, OTR/L, CHT, CPAM, CSCS, is an occupational therapist and certified hand therapist with 28 years of clinical experience working in the upper extremity orthopedic setting. He received his post professional clinical doctorate from Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions with a specialty in hand therapy. Dr. Wagner is credentialed in physical agent modalities and is a certified strength and conditioning specialist. Jim is currently the team leader of the Guthrie Hand Center and is an adjunct professor at both Keuka and Ithaca College occupational therapy programs. He has been involved in competitive powerlifting/bodybuilding for 35 year and has participated in 28 competitions. Jim has traveled extensively teaching on topics such as kinesiology taping, cupping, instrument assisted soft tissue mobility, orthotic fabrication, and blood flow restriction training. Jim is a member of the American Society of Hand Therapists (ASHT). He has been published in the practice forum section of the Journal of Hand Therapy and serves on the Education Division of the ASHT.

Les pieds sur terre
Les décrocheurs de la Sécurité sociale

Les pieds sur terre

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 29:09


durée : 00:29:09 - Les Pieds sur terre - par : Sonia Kronlund - Par manque de moyens et d'informations, Raymonde, soixante-dix ans, et Hervé, quarante-trois ans, avaient renoncé à se soigner. Grâce à un dispositif récent, quatre agents de la CPAM de Dunkerque ont pu les repêcher. Leur vie en a été transformée !