POPULARITY
Herzlich Willkommen zur 3. Folge "Die Stars von Morgen"!Darin spreche ich mit jungen Spielerinnen und Spielern, die vom Profihandball träumen, ihren ersten Profi-Vertrag unterschreiben oder die Jugendbundesliga rocken. Ich will wissen, was sie investieren, um ihren Traum irgendwann mal zu leben.Diesmal begrüße ich Daniel Weber von der TSV Hannover-Burgdorf, der gerade seinen ersten Profivertrag bei den Recken unterschrieben hat.Wer muss als Nächstes in diese Rubrik eingeladen werden?Viel Spaß mit der neuen Folge.Die 1. Folge mit Georg Löwen (HSG Wetzlar) gibt's hier: https://open.spotify.com/episode/4qtgpj4GOci4RXEBDZZVnS?si=bc7104a874684393Die 2. Folge mit Jason Wilfer (MT Melsungen) findet ihr hier: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5vEcGbJugofrkFIarvcfqJ?si=ac55503bf539454eDie nächste Folge "FOMtastisch" gibt's am Montag, 12.05.2025 um 5:00 Uhr. Dann ist es wieder Zeit für den Wochenstart mit "FOM für Henning".Tägliche Handball-News gibt es übrigens in meinem WhatsApp Channel: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va8iNIb7YSd542MZxC1t
EEG is the single most useful ancillary test to support the clinical diagnosis of epilepsy, but if used incorrectly it can lead to misdiagnosis and long-term mental and physical health sequelae. Its application requires proper understanding of its limitations and variability of testing results. In this episode, Katie Grouse, MD, FAAN, speaks with Daniel Weber, DO, author of the article “EEG in Epilepsy,” in the Continuum® February 2025 Epilepsy issue. Dr. Grouse is a Continuum® Audio interviewer and a clinical assistant professor at the University of California San Francisco in San Francisco, California. Dr. Weber is the director of adult epilepsy and vice chair of clinical affairs at the St. Louis University in St. Louis, Missouri. Additional Resources Read the article: EEG in Epilepsy Subscribe to Continuum: shop.lww.com/Continuum Earn CME (available only to AAN members): continpub.com/AudioCME Continuum® Aloud (verbatim audio-book style recordings of articles available only to Continuum® subscribers): continpub.com/Aloud More about the American Academy of Neurology: aan.com Social Media facebook.com/continuumcme @ContinuumAAN Guest: @drdanielweber Full episode transcript available here Dr Jones: This is Dr Lyell Jones, Editor-in-Chief of Continuum, the premier topic-based neurology clinical review and CME journal from the American Academy of Neurology. Thank you for joining us on Continuum Audio, which features conversations with Continuum's guest editors and authors who are the leading experts in their fields. Subscribers to the Continuum journal can read the full article or listen to verbatim recordings of the article and have access to exclusive interviews not featured on the podcast. Please visit the link in the episode notes for more information on the article, subscribing to the journal, and how to get CME. Dr Grouse: This is Dr Katie Grouse. Today, I'm interviewing Dr Daniel Weber about his article on EEG and epilepsy, which appears in the February 2025 Continuum issue on epilepsy. Welcome to the podcast and please introduce yourself to our audience. Dr Weber: Hi, thanks for having me. My name is Dan Weber and I'm an epileptologist at Saint Louis University. I direct the adult epilepsy program here and also serve as the vice chair for Clinical Affairs. Been my pleasure to work on this article. Dr Grouse: I'm so happy to have you today. I read your article. I found it to be incredibly useful as someone who often orders EEG in the general neurology clinic. So, I wanted to start with asking, what is the most clinically relevant message or takeaway from your article that you'd really like neurologists to know? Dr Weber: Yes, when I was asked to write this article, I looked back at the previous Continuum on epilepsy and just the general literature. And there's a lot of good articles and books out there on EEG and epilepsy and sort of giving you a primer on what you might see and how to interpret it. So, we wanted to try to go a slightly different direction. This article gives you some of that gives you the background of EEG and some of the basic things that you may see, but the real thrust of it is more about the limitations of EEG in the clinical picture of epilepsy and common things you might avoid. There are some things that we get hammered into our brains in training that aren't always true and there's plenty of examples in the literature to review, and this article sort of tries to encapsulate as many of those as possible in a digestible format. The main takeaway would be that EEG is an extremely helpful tool in the diagnosis of epilepsy, is the best tool we have to help supplement your clinical acumen. But it does not make the diagnosis of epilepsy. And there are certain circumstances when it may not be as helpful as you may have been led to believe in residency. Dr Grouse: Maybe not the most comforting of messages, but certainly an important one, very important to learn more about this. So, we appreciate that. Can you tell us your decision-making process when deciding whether to order a routine EEG, an extended EEG, prolonged ambulatory EEG, or inpatient video EEG? Dr Weber: Sure. So, it's a multi-part question because each one, I think, has a different clinical scenario. In the current state, our best data for estimating risk of recurrence after an initial seizure comes with routine EEG abnormalities. So, often I will order routine EEGs in those scenarios. So new patient presentation, new patients coming in with an initial seizure who want to know what's their risk of recurrence. So, risk stratification, I use a lot of routine EEG for, often sleep deprived if possible to increase the sensitivity. If you'd like, the extended EEG does offer higher sensitivity, or you can repeat the routine EEG if the first routine EEG is nonconclusive. For generally extended EEGs, I tend to order them in my practice if patients have come to see me with a suspected diagnosis of epilepsy but haven't yet had any electrographic confirmation. Maybe they've already had routine EEGs done in the past, so we'll try to obtain just a little more data. The longer-term EEGs I tend to use in different clinical scenarios, in patients usually who already have established diagnosis or people who have become refractory and we haven't yet confirmed their diagnosis. I tend to do inpatient EEGs in those situations. Ambulatory EEGs I do more when there are certain characteristics of the patient or the patient 's presentation that may not fit well on the inpatient side. Patients who are reliant on substances who can't use while they're inpatient and may have withdrawal effects complicating the stay. Or people who have a strong activation component to their epilepsy where activity really draws it out, certain activities that they do at home that they might not do during the inpatient stay. Those are the sorts of people I'll do ambulatory EEGs on. There are a couple other scenarios as well that come up less commonly, but everything has its own little niche. Dr Grouse: That's a really helpful review as we sort of think about which way we want to go as we're working up our patients in the inventory setting. Can you tell me a little more about the difference between sensitivity of, for instance, doing maybe two routine EEGS versus prolonged ambulatory EEG? Dr Weber: Generally speaking, the longer you're recording someone's brain waves, the higher the sensitivity is going to be. So routine EEG is twenty to forty minutes at most places. One of those gives you a certain sensitivity. More of them will give you more sensitivity. And there was a recent study highlighted in the article that compared routine EEGs to initial multi-day ambulatory EEG, and the ambulatory EEG obviously, as would be expected, has a higher sensitivity than either of the routines. So, there may be some cases with that initial evaluation where an ambulatory EEG may be held and we get into that in more detail in the article. But with the caveat, a lot of this article is about limitations, and the data that we have to talk about increased risk of recurrence was based off seeing epileptic form discharges on routine EEG. So you could hypothesize that if you only have one epileptic form discharge in three days on an ambulatory EEG, that may not carry the same recurrent significance as catching one on a twenty minute EEG. But we don't have that knowledge. Dr Grouse: Getting a little bit more into what you mentioned about the limitations, when is the scalp EEG less useful or limited in the evaluation of epilepsy? Dr Weber: So, one thing I see a lot in my residence at here and other places where I've worked is, I get them very excited about EEG and they may order it a bit too much. So, if patients have a known, established diagnosis of epilepsy, electrographically confirmed, and they come in with a breakthrough seizure and they're back to their baseline, there's really not a strong reason to get an EEG. We often seem to in the emergency department as part of our evaluation, but we already know what happened to the patient. The patient's not doing poorly right now, so the EEG is not going to give you any additional information. Just like really any test, you should think, what are the possible outcomes of this test and how would those outcomes alter the care of this patient? And if no outcome is going to affect the care of the patient or give you any additional diagnostic information, then probably don't need to be doing that test. Dr Grouse: This is probably a good segue into asking, what is an area of confusion or common pitfalls that you've seen in the clinical application of EEG and epilepsy? Dr Weber: So, a lot of times on the inpatient service, we'll get longer-term EEGs for patients who are having spells that are occurrent while they're in the ICU or other places or altered in some way, encephalopathic. And these patients will have their spell, and in my report, I'll say that there is not any electrographic correlate. So, there's no EEG finding that goes along with the movement that they're doing that's concerning for a seizure. And that doesn't always mean that it's not an epileptic seizure. An EEG is not a one-hundred-percent tool. Epilepsy and seizures are a clinical diagnosis. The EEG is a helpful tool to guide that diagnosis, but it is not foolproof, so you need to take the whole clinical picture into account. Particularly focal seizures without impaired awareness often can be electrographically silent on surface EEG. If you see something that looks clinically like a seizure but doesn't show up on the EEG, there are circumstances that they get to in the paper a little bit where that can still be an epileptic seizure. And you just have to be aware of the limitations of the tests that you're ordering and always fall back on the clinical skills that you've learned. Dr Grouse: Are there any tips or tricks you can suggest to improve the clinical utility of EEG for diagnosis of epilepsy? And also thinking about the example you just gave, but maybe other cases as well? Dr Weber: Again, definitely need to incorporate EEG as part of a larger picture. The video component of EEG is incredibly helpful. You can't interpret EEG in isolation. Regardless of what the EEG shows, you can't make a diagnosis of epilepsy, but you certainly can be very suspicious of one. So, in those cases where you have a high suspicion for an epileptic seizure and the EEG has not given you any confirmatory evidence, it's really helpful to rely on any clinical expertise that you have access to. So, people who have seen lots of seizures may be helpful in that situation. Getting good recordings, good data to prove yourself one way or the other is helpful and continuing to evaluate. So usually, as I said, focal seizures that don't show up well on the EEG. People who have focal seizures will often have larger seizures if left untreated. So, you can try to admit them to an epilepsy monitoring unit where we try to provoke seizures and try to provoke a larger seizure to help confirm that diagnosis. Dr Grouse: This kind of gets into what we've already reviewed to some degree, but what is the easiest mistake to make (and hopefully avoid) when using EEG to diagnose epilepsy or make other treatment decisions? Dr Weber: I think the easiest, most common mistake I see is overreliance on the test. There's a lot of subjectivity to the interpretation of this test. There are a lot of studies out there on interrater reliability for epilepsy and intrarater reliability for epilepsy. We continue to try to make the findings more objective and get more quantified. The articles talk about our six criteria for epileptiform discharges and have reference to where that came from and the sorts of specificity that each of those criteria lead to. Just because an EEG report has said something, that does not diagnose or negate a clinical diagnosis of epilepsy. It is common for folks with non-epileptic seizures to have a history of reported epileptic form discharges on their EEG. Again, because there is some subjectivity to the test, some abnormal-looking normal variants will pop up and get interpreted as epileptiform discharges. It's important to review the whole patient, as much of the data as you can, and make the best clinical judgment you can of the overall case. Dr Grouse: What is quantitative EEG and how can it be clinically useful? Dr Weber: Now that most EEG is obtained digitally through the use of computer software, we have been able to employ computers to do a lot of the work for us. There are many different ways of looking at the EEG data, but it's all frequency bands over time. The quantitative EEG goal is really to simplify and condense what you're seeing on your normal EEG page into a more digestible format. Lets you look at a larger amount of data faster, which becomes more and more important as we're doing more of these long-term recordings, particularly in the intensive care unit. Quantitative EEG can help you assess a lot of data at a snapshot and get a general sense of what's going on with the patient over the past several hours. It does require some extra training to become familiar with it, but it's training that can be done at all levels. Again, it can help you see more, faster. Obviously, like everything, it has its own limitations. Sometimes the sensitivity and specificity may be a little off from the raw data review, and you should always go back to the raw data anytime there are questions. But it can be helpful to make things faster. Dr Grouse: Do you think you could give me a hypothetical example of a case where this would be something really nice to have? Dr Weber: The most common example is folks with repetitive seizures in the ICU. If you're just looking at the raw data, you will get a sense of how often the seizures are happening. But if you look at the quantitative data, it sort of compresses that all down to a much smaller snapshot. So you can see much more readily, yes, these are how many seizures were happening. And here's where we gave our intervention; and look, there are fewer seizures after that intervention. So, it can help you assess response to treatment, help you assess just overall volume of seizures in a much more condensed fashion, and you can get through it much faster with the appropriate training. Dr Grouse: Can you tell us about any new developments in EEG that are on the horizon we should be aware of? Dr Weber: Yeah. So, I think my two favorites, which I highlight in the article, are longer-term recordings---so, there's some companies that are working on subcutaneous EEG. So, implanted EEG electrodes that can stay in your body for the short, long term on the order of year or years and constantly send some EEG data. Obviously, it's not a full montage in most of those cases, but some EEG data that can help you assess long-term trends in epilepsy and long-term response to therapies. I think that's going to be really cool. I think it's very exciting and I think it'll change how we do clinical trials in the future. I think we'll be able to rely less on seizure diaries from folks and more on objective seizure data for patients who have these implanted. But with that will come an ever-increasing amount of data to be reviewed, which leads into the other exciting future trend is AI in the use of interpretations. AI is becoming more and more advanced and there are very exciting articles out on how good AI is getting at interpreting our EEGs. I think soon, in the very near future, the AI platforms will be able to dramatically reduce the amount of time it takes the experts to review an EEG. They'll be able to do a lot of the screening for us and then we can go back, just like I was talking about the quantitative EEG, go back and review segments of the raw data rather than having to review every page of every file, which is quite time consuming. Dr Grouse: Wow, that's really exciting. It certainly does seem like AI is making breakthroughs in just about every area of how we touch the practice of medicine. Exciting to hear that EEG is no exception. Dr Weber: Yeah, I'm fully excited. I think it's going to revolutionize what we're doing and also just greatly expand people's ability to access that level of expertise that the AI will offer. Dr Grouse: I wanted to transition to talking a little bit more about you and your career in neurology. How did you become interested in this area of neurology to begin with? Dr Weber: Yeah, it's sort of a roundabout fashion. So, I started out planning to be a neurointerventionalist, and then I realized that I didn't want that sort of call. For a hot minute in my PGI 3 year. I was planning to be a neuro-ICU doctor. I think that's largely because medicine is all I had been exposed to at that point and the ICU seemed like a very comfortable place. Then as I transitioned into PGI 3 we started doing more electives and outpatient rotations in my residency. And then I was planning on being a movement disorder specialist or an epileptologist, couldn't make up my mind for the longest time. And then I started to like EEG more than I liked watching videos. So, tilted myself towards epilepsy and haven't looked back. Dr Grouse: Well, I really appreciated you coming to talk with us today about your article. I can't recommend it enough to anyone out there, whoever treats patients with epilepsy or orders the EEGs, I just think it was just incredibly useful. And it was such a pleasure to have you. Dr Weber: Thank you very much for having me, Katie. Dr Grouse: Again, today I've been interviewing Dr Daniel Weber about his article on EEG and epilepsy, which appears in the most recent issue of Continuum on Epilepsy. Be sure to check out Continuum Audio episodes from this and other issues. And thank you to our listeners for joining today. Dr Monteith: This is Dr Teshamae Monteith, Associate Editor of Continuum Audio. If you've enjoyed this episode, you'll love the journal, which is full of in-depth and clinically relevant information important for neurology practitioners. Use this link in the episode notes to learn more and subscribe. AAN members, you can get CME for listening to this interview by completing the evaluation at continpub.com/audioCME. Thank you for listening to Continuum Audio.
This Week's Episode:This week, we're joined by Daniel Weber, Brett Robinson, and Marie Muizelaar, who are here to tell us all about their upcoming Gunfighter Series! Tune in to hear all the exciting details and get the inside scoop on what to expect from this epic event.
Die Freikirche GvC Winterthur hat nach der Stabübergabe von Gründer Johannes Wirth zum neuen Leitungsteam die Segel für die Zukunft neu gesetzt. Neu ist die Hauptverantwortung auf drei Köpfe verteilt, was ganz andere Formen der Zusammenarbeit und Kommunikation erfordert. Wie lässt sich diese Führung im Team ganz praktisch leben? Welche Führungstechniken leben sie in der unsicheren, oft von Angst geprägten Welt? Reto Lussi und Daniel Weber teilen im Livenet-Talk mit Florian Wüthrich ihre Erfahrungen und zeigen auf, wie wichtig es ist, den Menschen aufzuzeigen, dass nur Jesus in unserer Zeit echten Halt geben kann. Zum Podcast «Zukunft war gestern»: https://zukunftwargestern.ch/ Zur Website der GvC Winterthur: https://www.gvc-winterthur.ch/ Youtube-Kanal von GvC Winterthur: https://www.youtube.com/@gvcwinterthuronline Zum Talk «Entschleunigen und vom Meister lernen | im Gespräch mit Reto Lussi und Daniel Weber»: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I2-aQnhrA9Y #führungstechniken #kirche #angst
Conversamos com Daniel Weber sobre sua carreira e trajetória na montagem de longas e séries nacionais.ApresentaçãoRafa Costa: instagram.com/rafacostaeditorMarcelo Porto: instagram.com/porto.softConvidadosDaniel Weber: instagram.com/danielweberArtesDaniel Brito: instagram.com/dbritoEdiçãoRodrigo Rocha: instagram.com/editorfcxbrSala VIPhttps://apoia.se/saladeedicaoSeja você também um apoiador do Sala VIP, ganhe benefícios exclusivos e faça parte do nosso grupo do Telegram!Canal do Telegramhttps://t.me/saladeedicaoSiga o canal do Sala de Edição e fique por dentro das promoções, descontos dos patrocinadores, pesquisas e novidades sobre o podcast.Canais:www.saladeedicao.com.brinstagram.com/saladeedicaoyoutube.com/@saladeedicaoTelegram: t.me/saladeedicao
Hektik prägt unseren Alltag – oft auch in geistlichen Bereichen. Wie können wir bewusst entschleunigen und Raum für «Mini-Sabbate» mit Gott finden? Reto Lussi und Daniel Weber, Teil des Leitungsteams der GvC Winterthur, sprechen im Livenet-Talk mit Florian Wüthrich über das Leben in der Nachfolge Jesu. Inspiriert von John Mark Comers Buch "Leben lernen vom Meister" reflektieren sie, wie Jesus keine religiöse Hektik aufkommen liess. Wer ihm nachfolgte, erlebte eine verbindliche und doch befreiende Gemeinschaft. Jesus hat einen völlig neuen Lebensstil vorgelebt – ein Leben, das uns einlädt, von ihm zu lernen. Zum Buch «Leben vom Meister lernen»: https://www.fontis-shop.ch/products/leben-vom-meister-lernen?queryID=ed741b0fbc765cbfae7929b6c418bd5a Zum Podcast «Zukunft war gestern»: https://zukunftwargestern.ch/ Youtube-Kanal von GvC Winterthur: https://www.youtube.com/@gvcwinterthuronline Dir gefallen unsere Talks und du möchtest uns unterstützen? Unterstütze uns als Videopartner: https://www.livenet.ch/news/29345_videopartner Unterstütze den Verein Livenet: https://www.livenet.ch/spende Du findest uns auch auf Instagram, Twitter, Facebook und anderen Social-Media-Plattformen: https://www.livenet.ch/service/social_media #nachfolge #entschleunigen #jesus
Adventist Voices by Spectrum: The Journal of the Adventist Forum
Daniel Weber was the Communication Director of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in North America and is now chair of the Dept. of Visual Art, Communication and Design at Andrews University. We debate about the value and propriety of Adventists making public declarations about their political views, particularly candidate support. In addition, we discuss the history and meaning of Adventist social values, particularly separation of church and state.
ZS de Negócios - 30/08/2024 - Daniel Weber, Analista De Embrapa E Andressa Silva Dir.exec. Abiarroz by Rádio Gaúcha
Flexibel von A nach B zu kommen, ist für alle Menschen erstrebenswert. Für Menschen mit Behinderung ist das alles andere als eine Selbstverständlichkeit. Trotzdem ist Autofahren für beeinträchtigte Menschen unter bestimmten Voraussetzungen möglich und erlaubt ihnen so, ein Stück Autonomie zurückzugewinnen. Welche Voraussetzungen das sind und wie die erfüllt werden können, darüber sprechen wir in dieser Folge mit Daniel Weber, Mobilitätsberater bei der Paravan Fahrschule, einer Fahrschule für Menschen mit Handicap.
Mein Gast heute: Daniel Weber er ist Senior Manager Security Solutions bei telent. Gemeinsam haben wir über 7 Jahre zusammen gearbeitet, viele Projekt durchgeführt u.a. auch das OT SoC der telent.In unserem Gespräch werden wir uns mit dem OT-SoC Projekt befassen, dessen Aufgabe und warum ein SoC u.a. für die KRITIS sehr nützlich ist. telent SoC: https://www.telent.de/de/loesungen-services/cybersecurity/siem-/-soc
Mein Gast heute: Daniel Weber er ist Senior Manager Security Solutions bei telent. Gemeinsam haben wir über 7 Jahre zusammen gearbeitet, viele Projekt durchgeführt u.a. auch das OT SoC der telent.In unserem Gespräch werden wir uns mit dem OT-SoC Projekt befassen, dessen Aufgabe und warum ein SoC u.a. für die KRITIS sehr nützlich ist. telent SoC: https://www.telent.de/de/loesungen-services/cybersecurity/siem-/-soc
Mein Gast heute: Daniel Weber er ist Senior Manager Security Solutions bei telent. Gemeinsam haben wir über 7 Jahre zusammen gearbeitet, viele Projekt durchgeführt u.a. auch das OT SoC der telent.In unserem Gespräch werden wir uns mit dem OT-SoC Projekt befassen, dessen Aufgabe und warum ein SoC u.a. für die KRITIS sehr nützlich ist. telent SoC: https://www.telent.de/de/loesungen-services/cybersecurity/siem-/-soc
„Udržitelnost je dneska buzzword, které je velmi často používané velkými řetězci. Stalo se z něj něco, co teď jako konzumenti rádi slyšíme. Je potřeba se ale dívat na fakta a hledat skutečnější slova než udržitelnost. Je to široký pojem a vlastně nikdo moc neví, co si pod ním představit. Osobně si myslím, že je to etický a zodpovědnější přístup k výrobě,” popisuje význam často skloňované udržitelnosti designér oblečení Daniel Weber.Všechny díly podcastu On Air můžete pohodlně poslouchat v mobilní aplikaci mujRozhlas pro Android a iOS nebo na webu mujRozhlas.cz.
Thu, 31 Aug 2023 05:45:00 +0000 https://omt-magazin.podigee.io/9372-neue-episode 9cbff6cab36fda194943a2bb4093edfd ℹ️ Daniel Weber beim OMT ℹ️ OMT-Webinare ℹ️ OMT Konferenz ℹ️ Agency Day 2023 9372 full no
Kari, Greg, and Don discuss changes in insect and disease pressure due to the rapidly changing weather conditions. Additionally, Dr. Daniel Weber has a brief additional segment highlighting the multi-state Virtual Meetups.Virtual meetups can be joined at: bit.ly/2023-virtual-meetupDon Seifrit (host)Kari Peter (speaker)Greg Krawczyk (speaker)Daniel Weber (speaker)Lead Image: K. Peter, Penn StateMake sure you sign up to get notified of future Extension events for tree fruit growers! Sign UpFlight Seasonalities of Main Fruit Pests During the Growing SeasonWeekly update information on trap counts for Codling Moth, Obliquebanded Leafroller, Oriental Fruit Moth, Redbanded Leafroller, Spotted Tentiform Leafminer, and Tufted Apple Bud Moth during the 2023 growing season.
My guest in this episode is Simrat Bohra, a Celebrity & Personal Stylist in Mumbai, India.She takes great privilege to have been on a style transformation journey with more than 300 women & men from different walks of life all around the world, including numerous acclaimed celebrities from India such as Jasmin Bhasin, Daniel Weber, Nikki Tamboli, Kanika Mann, Abhishek Bajaj, Shakti Arora, Gurfateh Pirzada and more. She not only curates her client's clothes & accessories, but also addresses obstacles they face when it comes to their personal style & how it affects their self confidence & self esteem.CONNECT WITH SIMRAT:FacebookInstagramwww.simratbohra.com Produced by: Northgate Marketing, Inc. Host: David Allen Tracy CONNECT WITH DAVID:InstagramLinkedinwww.davidallentracy.com FOLLOW NORTHGATE:LinkedinInstagramFacebookYouTubewww.wearenorthgate.com
This week Daniel Weber of NME Paintball returns to tell us about a new game format he want to bring to his field. Support us by supporting our ad sponsors Save 10% with code "BIGDADDYG"Defconpaintballgear.com Experience one of New Brunswick's premier paintball fields.Moncton Paintball --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/maritimepaintballpodcast/message
This week on "Pushing the Limit” Dr. Daniel Weber is internationally renowned as an informative and passionate speaker, traveling extensively lecturing on modern botanical medicine, psycho physical diseases, microbiome and its spectrum of diseases as well as cancer. Dr Weber has nearly 50 years experience across a wide variety of fields including Chinese Medicine Integrated Oncology Herbal Medicine CEO of Panaxea™ International, Autoimmune diseases Botanical oncology isolates Dr Weber is a deep thinker, a master, philosopher, pioneer, artist and this discussion dives deep into medical philosophies, history, oriental medicine and western medicine, paradigm shifts that humanity is experiencing and much more. You will come away inspired and challenged by this interview and if you are someone dealing with cancer then Dr Weber is someone you want to have on your radar and learn from. If you want to learn more about Dr Weber's work go to https://drdanielweber.com/ Or to visit his botanicals company Panaxea go to https://au.panaxea.com/ If you want help with your cancer please also check out Lisa's Ebook "What your oncologist isn't telling you" Dr Daniel Webber Bio Daniel is author of many books and published articles on integrative medicine. Daniel is deeply committed to research and evidence based medicine (EBM), and works to promote integrative clinics. Daniel is Vice-Chair Oncology of the World Federation of Chinese Medicine Societies and editor of the Journal of Chinese Integrative Medicine. Daniel is a member of the Mederi Scientific Advisory Board, USA, and Advisor to the NIH and Global Consortium of Oncology and Chinese Medicine (Beijing). Daniel holds a Master Degree in Botanical Medicine and has been a Registered Somatic Psychotherapist since 1987. Daniel Weber is a Doctor of Health Science (DSc) from Charles Sturt University and maintains an international practice from his Clinic. Health Optimisation and Life Coaching with Lisa Tamati Lisa offers solution focused coaching sessions to help you find the right answers to your challenges. Topics Lisa can help with: Lisa is a Genetics Practitioner, Health Optimisation Coach, High Performance and Mindset Coach. She is a qualified Ph360 Epigenetics coach and a clincian with The DNA Company and has done years of research into brain rehabilitation, neurodegenerative diseases and biohacking. She has extensive knowledge on such therapies as hyperbaric oxygen, intravenous vitamin C, sports performance, functional genomics, Thyroid, Hormones, Cancer and much more. Testing Options Comprehensive Thyroid testing DUTCH Hormone testing Adrenal Testing Organic Acid Testing Microbiome Testing Cell Blueprint Testing Epigenetics Testing DNA testing Basic Blood Test analysis She can help you navigate the confusing world of health and medicine and can advocate for you. She can also advise on the latest research and where to get help if mainstream medicine hasn't got the answers you are searching for whether you are facing challenges from cancer to gut issues, from depression and anxiety, weight loss issues, from head injuries to burn out.: Consult with Lisa Join our Patron program and support the show Pushing the Limits' has been free to air for over 8 years. Providing leading edge information to anyone who needs it. But we need help on our mission. Please join our patron community and get exclusive member benefits (more to roll out later this year) and support this educational platform for the price of a coffee or two You can join by going to Lisa's Patron Community Lisa's Anti-Aging and Longevity Supplements Lisa has spent years curating a very specialised range of exclusive longevity, health optimising supplements from leading scientists, researchers and companies all around the world. This is an unprecedented collection. The stuff Lisa wanted for her mum but couldn't get in NZ. Check out the range at her LongLifeLabs shop Subscribe to our popular Youtube channel with over 600 videos, millions of views, a number of full length documentaries, and much more. You don't want to miss out on all the great content on our Lisa's youtube channel. Youtube Order Lisa's Books My latest book Relentless chronicles the inspiring journey of how my mother and I defied the odds after an aneurysm left my mum, Isobel, with massive brain damage at age 74. The medical professionals told me there was absolutely no hope of any quality of life again. Still, I used every mindset tool, years of research and incredible tenacity to prove them wrong and bring my mother back to full health within three years. Get your copy here: Lisa's Books Our NMN Bio Flagship Longevity Range A range by molecular biologist Dr Elena Seranova NMN: Nicotinamide Mononucleotide, an NAD+ precursor Researchers have found that Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide or NAD+, a master regulator of metabolism and a molecule essential for the functionality of all human cells, decreases dramatically over time. What is NMN? NMN Bio offers a cutting edge Vitamin B3 derivative named NMN (beta Nicotinamide Mononucleotide) that can boost the levels of NAD+ in muscle tissue and liver. Take charge of your energy levels, focus, metabolism and overall health so you can live a happy, fulfilling life. Founded by scientists, NMN Bio offers supplements of the highest purity and rigorously tested by an independent, third-party lab. Start your cellular rejuvenation journey today. Support Your Healthy Aging We offer powerful third-party tested NAD+ boosting supplements so you can start your healthy ageing journey today. Shop now: NMNBIO NMN (beta Nicotinamide Mononucleotide) 250mg | 30 capsules NMN (beta Nicotinamide Mononucleotide) 500mg | 30 capsules 6 Bottles | NMN (beta Nicotinamide Mononucleotide) 250mg | 30 Capsules 6 Bottles | NMN (beta Nicotinamide Mononucleotide) 500mg | 30 Capsules Boost Your NAD+ Levels — Healthy Ageing: Redefined Cellular Health Energy & Focus Bone Density Skin Elasticity DNA Repair Cardiovascular Health Brain Health Metabolic Health Listen to the episodes with Dr Seranova on the show: https://www.lisatamati.com/podcast--dr-elena-seranova/ https://www.lisatamati.com/podcast--dr-elena-seranova-part-3/ Perfect Amino Supplement by Dr David Minkoff Introducing PerfectAmino PerfectAmino is an amino acid supplement that is 99% utilized by the body to make protein. PerfectAmino is 3-6x the protein of other sources with almost no calories. 100% vegan and non-GMO. The coated PerfectAmino tablets are a slightly different shape and have a natural, non-GMO, certified organic vegan coating on them so they will glide down your throat easily. Fully absorbed within 20-30 minutes! No other form of protein comes close to PerfectAminos Listen to the episode with Dr MInkoff here: Ketone Products by HVMN The world's best exogenous Ketone IQ Listen to the episode with Dr Latt Mansor Lisa's ‘Fierce' Sports Jewellery Collection For Lisa's gorgeous and inspiring sports jewellery collection, 'Fierce', go to Jewellery For Vielight Device Vielight brain photobiomodulation devices combine electrical engineering and neuroscience. To find out more about photobiomodulation, current studies underway and already completed and for the devices mentioned in this video go to www.vielight.com Use code "tamati" at checkout to get a 10% discount on any of their devices. Enjoyed This Podcast? If you did, subscribe and share it with your friends! If you enjoyed tuning in, then leave us a review and share this with your family and friends. Have any questions? You can contact my team through email (support@lisatamati.com) or find me on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube. For more episode updates, visit my website. You may also tune in on Apple Podcasts. To pushing the limits, Lisa and team
Odcinek #114, w którym spotykam się w Big Book Cafe w Warszawie z Izabelą Janiszewską, żeby przeprowadzić małe śledztwo. Towarzyszą nam herbata i kawa, otaczają dźwięki.Siedzą wokół nas L jak „Ludzie z mgły”. Każda z P jak postaci ma w sobie mglisty obłok. Z autorką próbujemy dostrzec to, co się w nim kryje. Szukamy S jak skazy. Pojawiają się m.in.: Marcin Majewski, heroina Weronika, Jagoda Borowiec, Daniel Weber i ta, która zaginęła we mgle- Alicja Jarosz. Podcast jak pokój - wypełnia się kolejnymi postaciami. Pytam autorkę, jak się w nim, przy P jak pisaniu, siedzi. Jest O jak obawa braku słów, W jak wrażliwość, N jak niepewność i Z jak zaczynanie od nowa. Trafiamy do zmyślonego M jak miejsca na Podlasiu, sprawdzamy kto uciekł z Bronxu, kto mierzy się z przeszłością. I przyglądamy się relacjom, oczekiwaniom, nieświadomemu sterowaniu czyjąś przyszłością. Po śladach idziemy od jednej opowieści do drugiej. Trafiamy do małego domku, do narracji, z której trudno się wydostać. Dołącza do nas chłopiec i jego losy, które zagarniają myśli podczas lektury "Ludzi z mgły".Mówimy o U jak udawaniu, uzależnieniu i o trudnej miłości. Brodzimy we mgle, widząc tylko fragment tego, co przed nami. Partnerem tego odcinka jest Audioteka- dobrze opowiedziane historie.
This week we're joined by Daniel Weber of NME Paintball, a not for profit paintball field focused on providing competitive players a space to skirmish and sharpen their skills on the speedball field. Support us by supporting our ad sponsors Save 10% with code "BIGDADDYG"Defconpaintballgear.com Experience one of New Brunswick's premier paintball fields.Moncton Paintball --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/maritimepaintballpodcast/message
“The HrishiKay Sessions” are produced & presented by Hrishikesh Kannan popularly known as Hrishi K Thanks for listening. Should you want to experience more ….for starters hit “subscribe” / “follow” and check out more episodes & be notified when further sessions go up! If ur looking for Hrishi across media & social networking then here goes: Twitter : https://www.twitter.com/hrishikay Facebook : https://www.facebook.com/hrishikay Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/hrishikay Youtube : https://youtube.com/c/hrishikeshkannan Soundcloud : https://www.soundcloud.com/hrishikay LinkedIn : http://linkedin.com/in/hrishikay
Mit 6 Jahren geht Daniel auf dem Schulweg zwanghaft in die Hocke. Wenig später beginnt er, im Unterricht zu bellen. Daniel Weber lebt seit fast 40 Jahren mit dem Tourette-Syndrom.
Daniel Weber and his family are sharing a tragic story about their 2-year-old son Conner to increase awareness towards raising funds for the Hospital via The Children's Hospital Trust. Connor passed away after drowning in a bucket filled with water stored outside the house during the droughts in Cape Town. “We rushed to the Emergency Centre at the Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, a memory spanning a few crucial minutes of anxiety as we hurried through passages with other families, children, medical equipment, an air of hope and, thankfully, dedicated medical professionals everywhere.” Connor had been admitted to the Intensive Care Unit of the Hospital, where the family spent five crucial days hoping to save Connor before he devastatingly passed on. “Although our child passed away, we will always remember and be thankful to the Red Cross Children's Hospital. From the Doctors who provided such specialist care that it felt like Connor was the only child in the ward in a busy Hospital, to the amazing Nurses who prayed and sang with us every night”. The Weber family, courageous in the memory and celebration of their son's life, is sharing their child's story to increase awareness towards raising funds for the Hospital via The Children's Hospital Trust.
Daniel Weber and his family are sharing a tragic story about their 2-year-old son Conner to increase awareness towards raising funds for the Hospital via The Children's Hospital Trust. Connor passed away after drowning in a bucket filled with water stored outside the house during the droughts in Cape Town. “We rushed to the Emergency Centre at the Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital, a memory spanning a few crucial minutes of anxiety as we hurried through passages with other families, children, medical equipment, an air of hope and, thankfully, dedicated medical professionals everywhere.” Connor had been admitted to the Intensive Care Unit of the Hospital, where the family spent five crucial days hoping to save Connor before he devastatingly passed on. “Although our child passed away, we will always remember and be thankful to the Red Cross Children's Hospital. From the Doctors who provided such specialist care that it felt like Connor was the only child in the ward in a busy Hospital, to the amazing Nurses who prayed and sang with us every night”. The Weber family, courageous in the memory and celebration of their son's life, is sharing their child's story to increase awareness towards raising funds for the Hospital via The Children's Hospital Trust.
Daniel Weber, who oversees multiple ASCs on the west coast, joined the podcast to talk about the value of surgery centers, alternative payment models and new tech for patient engagement.
Remember: you can also always follow the show on twitter @dotnetcoreshow, and the shows host on twitter @podcasterJay In this episode of the .NET Core Podcast we talked with Daniel Weber about what Gremlinq is, how it's related to TinkerPop and Gremlin. We also talk about graph databases and where you might use them over traditional table-based databases. The full show notes, including links to some of the things we discussed and a full transcription of this episode, can be found at https://dotnetcore.show/episode-81-gremlinq-with-daniel-weber/ Remember to rate and review the show on Apple Podcasts, Podchaser, or wherever you find your podcasts, this will help the show's audience grow. Or you can just share the show with a friend. You can support the show by making a monthly donation one the show's Patreon page at: https://www.patreon.com/TheDotNetCorePodcast The .NET Core Podcast is a proud member of Jay and Jay Media. If you like this episode, please consider supporting our Podcasting Network. One $3 donation provides a week of hosting for all of our shows. You can support this show, and the others like it, at https://ko-fi.com/jayandjaymedia
In the part 2 of our conversation about diversity and inclusion in the finance world, hosts Damita Menezes and Masa Najjar invited four more students to take part in the discussion. Jose Rivera and Jevaughn Thompson begin by discussing microaggressions, what they are and how to respond to them in the workplace, diving deep into how microaggressions can be detected and also avoided. In the segment that follows, minority students Sebastian Moreno and Daniel Weber give advice on how to succeed in the finance world, outlining the steps they took to achieve success and gain fantastic internship experiences which ultimately led to their full-time roles. For more information, check out https://bit.ly/2QvmppC and follow us on all social media @financedepaul
Para fechar o ano com finalização, tivemos um divertido encontro com o finalizador e supervisor de pós-produção Renato Briano. Ele nos conta sobre essa importante figura que é responsável por zelar pelas pessoas da pós e pela boa entrega do projeto. Esta é a primeira parte da entrevista. A imagem de capa é um registro do eclipse solar do dia 12 de dezembro de autoria do montador Daniel Weber.
Buchbesprechungen, Theaterkritiken, aber auch philosophische Erörterungen. Das leistet der Kulturjournalismus – noch. Geht es dem Journalismus nicht gut, geht es dem Kulturjournalismus umso schlechter. Er gerät bei Sparrunden noch mehr unter Druck. Das klassische Feuilleton wird dünner, Alternativen im Internet gibt es, aber die aufwändigen Produkte haben auch dort ein Finanzierungsproblem. Auch SRF muss sparen, auch bei der Kultur. Wo steuert der Kulturjournalismus hin? Braucht es ihn noch? Und wenn ja – wo und wie? Dies diskutieren in der Sendung «Kontext» Susanne Wille, Kulturchefin von SRF, Daniel Weber, Leiter Feuilleton bei der Weltwoche sowie Guy Krneta, Schriftsteller und Medienkritiker.
Sujets traités : La composition du nouveau gouvernement dévoilée hier. Et parmi les nouveaux entrants, Brigitte Klinkert. La présidente du Conseil départemental du Haut-Rhin sera en charge de l'insertion auprès de la ministre du Travail et de l'Emploi, Elisabeth Borne, qui était auparavant ministre des Transports. Il n’y avait plus eu d’Alsacien dans le gouvernement depuis Philippe Richert, entre novembre 2010 et mai 2012. Le bas-rhinois avait fait partie du gouvernement Fillon III, dans lequel il était en charge des Collectivités territoriales. La nomination de Brigitte Klinkert laisse entrevoir la nomination de Frédéric Bierry à la présidence de la nouvelle Collectivité européenne d’Alsace. 1 nouveau décès dû au Covid-19 à déplorer dans le Bas-Rhin pour la journée d’hier. 5 nouveaux malades ont été admis dans les hôpitaux du Haut-Rhin. C’est ce que révèle le bilan quotidien de Santé Publique France qui précise que 511 malades du Covid-19 sont toujours hospitalisés en Alsace, dont 18 en réanimation. La disparition de Daniel Weber, l’ancien maire de Guebwiller entre 2001 et 2008. Il est décédé dimanche, à l’âge de 76 ans. Il avait également siégé au conseil général du Haut-Rhin de 1998 à 2011 et en avait été l’un des vice-présidents. De 2001 à 2008 il a aussi présidé la Communauté de communes de la région de Guebwiller. Il avait renoncé à la vie politique en 2011, après avoir découvert qu’il était atteint de la maladie de Parkinson. 6 mois de prison ferme et autant avec sursis pour un homme de 33 ans d’origine arménienne, résident à Colmar. Mi-juin, il avait été interpellé par la police alors qu’il venait de frapper sa compagne enceinte de 7 mois. Une simple dispute, selon le prévenu, alors que son épouse déplore des violences à répétition. Maintenu en détention, il lui est aussi interdit d’entrer en contact avec son épouse et se présenter au domicile familial. 200 jobs d’été à pourvoir dans les services de la Ville et de l’agglomération de Colmar. Avec l’annulation ou le report de nombreux événements estivaux, le travail se fait rare en ce moment et les jeunes en sont les premières victimes. C’est Eric Straumann qui, pendant la campagne, avait proposé ces jobs saisonniers qui sont disponibles depuis hier. Pour connaître les différents emplois proposés, rendez-vous sur colmar.fr Après une crise inédite, l’Alsace doit se relever. Région très touristique, la désertion du territoire par les étrangers pourrait la mettre encore plus en difficulté. Pour y remédier, les offices de tourisme du pays de Colmar ont créé plusieurs vidéos à destination des alsaciens. Un moyen, selon Claire Weiss pour montrer aux locaux qu’il est toujours possible de découvrir sa région. Toutes les vidéos, déjà diffusées, ou celles à venir, sont à retrouver sur les sites des offices de tourisme de colmar, Ribeauvillé ou encore Eguisheim. Et pour trouver des sorties à faire dans le secteur, ça se passe au même endroit.
Sujets traités : - La composition du nouveau gouvernement dévoilée hier. Et parmi les nouveaux entrants, Brigitte Klinkert. La présidente du Conseil départemental du Haut-Rhin sera en charge de l'insertion auprès de la ministre du Travail et de l'Emploi, Elisabeth Borne, qui était auparavant ministre des Transports. Il n’y avait plus eu d’Alsacien dans le gouvernement depuis Philippe Richert, entre novembre 2010 et mai 2012. Le bas-rhinois avait fait partie du gouvernement Fillon III, dans lequel il était en charge des Collectivités territoriales. La nomination de Brigitte Klinkert laisse entrevoir la nomination de Frédéric Bierry à la présidence de la nouvelle Collectivité européenne d’Alsace. - 1 nouveau décès dû au Covid-19 à déplorer dans le Bas-Rhin pour la journée d’hier. 5 nouveaux malades ont été admis dans les hôpitaux du Haut-Rhin. C’est ce que révèle le bilan quotidien de Santé Publique France qui précise que 511 malades du Covid-19 sont toujours hospitalisés en Alsace, dont 18 en réanimation. - La disparition de Daniel Weber, l’ancien maire de Guebwiller entre 2001 et 2008. Il est décédé dimanche, à l’âge de 76 ans. Il avait également siégé au conseil général du Haut-Rhin de 1998 à 2011 et en avait été l’un des vice-présidents. De 2001 à 2008 il a aussi présidé la Communauté de communes de la région de Guebwiller. Il avait renoncé à la vie politique en 2011, après avoir découvert qu’il était atteint de la maladie de Parkinson. - 6 mois de prison ferme et autant avec sursis pour un homme de 33 ans d’origine arménienne, résident à Colmar. Mi-juin, il avait été interpellé par la police alors qu’il venait de frapper sa compagne enceinte de 7 mois. Une simple dispute, selon le prévenu, alors que son épouse déplore des violences à répétition. Maintenu en détention, il lui est aussi interdit d’entrer en contact avec son épouse et se présenter au domicile familial. - 200 jobs d’été à pourvoir dans les services de la Ville et de l’agglomération de Colmar. Avec l’annulation ou le report de nombreux événements estivaux, le travail se fait rare en ce moment et les jeunes en sont les premières victimes. C’est Eric Straumann qui, pendant la campagne, avait proposé ces jobs saisonniers qui sont disponibles depuis hier. Pour connaître les différents emplois proposés, rendez-vous sur colmar.fr - Après une crise inédite, l’Alsace doit se relever. Région très touristique, la désertion du territoire par les étrangers pourrait la mettre encore plus en difficulté. Pour y remédier, les offices de tourisme du pays de Colmar ont créé plusieurs vidéos à destination des alsaciens. Un moyen, selon Claire Weiss pour montrer aux locaux qu’il est toujours possible de découvrir sa région. Toutes les vidéos, déjà diffusées, ou celles à venir, sont à retrouver sur les sites des offices de tourisme de colmar, Ribeauvillé ou encore Eguisheim. Et pour trouver des sorties à faire dans le secteur, ça se passe au même endroit.
Sunny Leone and Daniel Weber have had a fairytale romance. In an age where Tinder and casual dates have become the order of the day, these two redefine old school, classic romance. In this candid conversation with Nayandeep Rakshit on Episode 2 of No More Secrets season 2, Sunny and Daniel reveal it all about their love story - how they met, how she met his mother, and how they decided to end up getting married. Today, they are proud parents of three - Nisha, Asher and Noah - and admittedly, their world has changed. Sunny reveals their house goes silent after 8 pm and also talks about the paparazzi's obsession with kids these days. Along with all this, Sunny and Daniel also talk about what she went through post that controversial interview where she was disrespected beyond imagination.
Dr Zieve talks with Daniel Weber, PhD, MSc about our emerging understanding of how cancer works and what causes it. Daniel Weber, PhD, MSc is visiting Professor at Tianjin University, where he lectures post-graduate students and is doing research. He is the author of many books and published articles on integrative medicine. CEO of Panaxea International, Daniel travels extensively, lecturing on modern botanical medicine. He is deeply committed to research and evidence -based medicine, and works to promote integrative clinics. He is Vice-Chair Oncology; World Federation of Chinese Medicine Societies and editor of the Journal of Chinese Integrative Medicine. Daniel founded the Association of Integrative Oncology and Chinese Medicine and is currently its president. Read more at danielweberinternational.com. If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element
On Mother's Day, Sunny Leone posted a picture posing with her children on her social media page. She captioned by wishing Mother's Day to all mother. Further, Sunny Leone stated that she, Daniel Weber and their children flew to Los Angeles to stay safe against invisible killer "coronavirus". The picture was taken in their secret garden in Los Angele. Even her husband posted a selfie on his social media page by captioned on it "getting better with the new vibes!". In the comment section, someone asked "How? Did you do a KLM or Air India?" he replied, "KLM Government Flight" --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/latestnewssuno/support
Daniel Weber nous parle de la galerie des bulle ainsi que de sa vision sur l'évolution de Charleroi ! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mixxfmradio/message
Predigt im Connect Unterland vom 08. März 2020 zum Thema Gemeinschaft auf Augenhöhe (Daniel Weber)Mehr Infos: https://connectzhu.chFolge uns auf: https://www.instagram.com/connect_unt...
Niemand hat das NZZ Folio so geprägt wie Chefredaktor Daniel Weber. Er war bei der Gründung 1991 dabei und leitete das Magazin 20 Jahre lang. Im Gespräch erklärt er, was hinter dem Konzept des Heftes steckt, welche Ausgaben er am liebsten mochte und wo er auf gute Autoren gestossen ist. Daniel Weber spricht auch über den Fall des Reporters Claas Relotius, der viele seiner Texte gefälscht hat - und sagt, was für Lehren die Journalisten und Preisjurys daraus ziehen könnten.
The systematic degradation of gastrointestinal health is breaking down one of our most primal pathways to wellbeing. According to Dr Daniel Weber, the gut is the second organ system in evolution and is by far, the most complex, with the intestines being both the largest endocrine and the largest immunological organs in the body. The gut is the lynch pin to it all and is at the seat of most psychophysical disease presentations we know today. Dr Weber joins us today ahead of his forthcoming key note speaking engagement at the ATMS Functional GI Symposium in Sydney in September 2019. Find today's show notes and transcript here: https://www.fxmedicine.com.au/content/gut-brain-axis-and-rise-psychophysical-disease-dr-daniel-weber *****DISCLAIMER: The information provided on FX Medicine is for educational and informational purposes only. The information provided is not, nor is it intended to be, a substitute for professional advice or care. Please seek the advice of a qualified health care professional in the event something you learn here raises questions or concerns regarding your health.*****
Cardiac - Post Infarct VSD (Scot Merrick & Daniel Weber) by TSRA
Host Ben Rice travels to Windsor, CA with guest Steve Ausburne of Barrel Proof Comedy Podcast to sit down with Daniel Weber and Wes Deal of Barrel Brothers Brewing Company to discuss their first year in business and their plans to expansion. We take a few sidebars down some unsavory paths before coming out clean on the other side, thanks to some double-filtered, two-ply assistants. Then we get into their bottling and canning side, how to properly and improperly barrel a beer, and what goes into naming beers in an increasingly competitive and creative beer community. All this and more, on Episode 55 of Barley & Me! Follow Barley & Me @barleyandmepod Find out more about Barrel Brothers Brewing at www.barrelbrothersbrewing.com or find them on social media: @barrelbrothersbrewing on Facebook and Instagram and @barrelbrosbeer on Twitter Follow Steve Ausburne @doctorausburne on Twitter and @mondaleferraro on Instagram Check out Barrel Proof Comedy Podcast @barrelproofcomedy on Facebook and @barrelproofpod on Twitter This episode was brought to you by Lyft. Enter the promo code "BarleyAndMe" for $5 off your first ride. Intro music: "JamRoc" by Breez (@mr4proaudio) Logo by Jessica DiMesio (@alivingclicheart)
Niche Radio — Heraclitus said that the only constant in life is change, yet it appears that we as humans are struggling to adapt to the constantly changing world we find ourselves living in. And as the speed of that change increases, we need mechanisms and hacks to help us adapt, slow down and respond to life as opposed to merely reacting. One of these hacks, believe it or not, is better communication! Ha! Who would have thought we can talk our way to better health?! Well, I absolutely loved my chat with the incredibly dapper and super intelligent, Dr Daniel Weber because his thoughts on diseases such as cancer are quite refreshing: he believes that cancer in the body is a breakdown of communication within the cells and that this is a mirror of current, modern-day life! He refers to social media as the ‘junk food of communication’ because it offers us all the bells and whistles, but with no real nutritional value! Isn’t that true! Now I’m not knocking social media, it certainly has its place and carries a great deal of benefits and without it how would I communicate with you? But, as with anything in life, if something is not used for its intended or true purpose, that constitutes abuse (misuse) and we can definitely abuse social media, using it in a manner that doesn’t necessarily serve us. We are thus challenged by Dr Weber to transform our thinking around communication, which can lead to transformative health! You can follow Dr Weber’s blog and access his resources on http://www.panaxea.com/index-newwebsite.php/about-daniel-weber.html and if you, or someone you know, is fighting cancer check out his blog on http://integrativecancernetwork.com http://integrativecancernetwork.com. This interview was recorded at the Pan African Congress on Integrative Medicine: http://integrativemedicinecongress.com
The Beiimaan Love Writer, Director and Producer Rajeev Chaudhari is miffed with the way Sunny Leone and Daniel Weber felt insecure with the presence of Zeisha Nancy's cameo appearance in the film and more secrets were revealed
Audio clip: Adobe Flash Player (version 9 or above) is required to play this audio clip. Download the latest version here. You also need to have JavaScript enabled in your browser.AudioPlayer.embed("audioplayer_420", {soundFile:"http%3A%2F%2Fsupplychaininsights.com%2Fwp-content%2Fuploads%2Fpodcasts%2FInterview_with_Daniel_Weber_of_Beiersdorf-Podcast_27.mp3"}); Daniel Weber, SVP of Supply Chain at Beiersdorf, is our very special guest on this episode of Straight Talk with Supply Chain Insights. Lora Cecere, Founder and CEO of Supply Chain Insights interviews Daniel on the reasons why his company is able to perform on top of our Supply Chain Index analysis. Hear his story of why it is a marathon not a sprint at his company to do so. Constance Korol is your host as Lora Cecere interviews Daniel Weber, SVP of Supply Chain at Beiersdorf as they discuss the recent findings in our company’s Supply Chain Index Research....
Michelle Maylene, Sunny Leone, Daniel Weber