Podcast appearances and mentions of david stuckler

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Best podcasts about david stuckler

Latest podcast episodes about david stuckler

Bio Eats World
Scaling Medicaid Innovation with Afia Asamoah, Rajaie Batniji, and Sanjay Basu

Bio Eats World

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2025 33:45


Rajaie Batniji, MD, PhD, Afia Asamoah, JD, and Sanjay Basu, MD, PhD, cofounders of Waymark, join Vineeta Agarwala, MD, PhD, a16z Bio + Health general partner, to discuss their transformative approach to Medicaid care delivery. This episode dives into their rising risk signal prediction framework, where cutting-edge machine learning predicts patient needs and enables community-based care teams to reduce preventable ER visits and improve health outcomes at scale. The team recently published their real-world results—including a 23% reduction in unnecessary acute care—in the New England Journal of Medicine Catalyst.Additional resources:Supporting Rising-Risk Medicaid Patients Through Early Intervention, NEJM CatalystThe Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills, by David Stuckler and Sanjay Basu

Temprano en la Tarde... EL PODCAST
Sobre el abandono de los viejos, más allá del simplista discurso moralista: Luis Varela en la casa

Temprano en la Tarde... EL PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2023 59:27


Propuesta de rundown: Julio César y los Idus de Marzo: 2067 años del asesinato más famoso de la historia. El dictador romano fue asesinado por el temor de que se proclamara rey. https://amp.marca.com/tiramillas/actualidad/2023/03/15/64116f7fca4741ad688b45d0.html Comentario sobre libro de Rey Quiñones “Fiesta en la colonia: Puerto Rico: enclave y capitalismo 1508-2018” de Luis Rey Quiñones Soto "El texto expone fundamentos de la crisis alojada en una estructura económica desarticulada por la rémora del enclave y por el peso fiscal del coloniaje: el colonizador hace pagar al colonizado el coloniaje porque su inversión externa directa, exenta y subsidiada (IED), repatria ganancia sin reinvertir." Introducción donde presenta su hipótesis sobre la deuda como producto de la finansiación del coloniaje Marco teórico marxista Coloniaje de enclave Desarrollo de la burguesía intermediaria La Marcha del Sol: Puerto Rico Triunfa https://casapueblo.org/marcha-del-sol/ Aumenta la cifra de adultos mayores en el olvido. Familia atiende más casos de abandono en los hospitales y pide un aumento de fondos https://www.elvocero.com/noticia_rotary/article_a7264cf0-c2cf-11ed-9fac-9bbec4d8df6d.html Por qué la austeridad mata: El coste humano de las políticas de recorte Paperback – June 12, 2013 https://www.amazon.com/-/es/David-Stuckler/dp/8430602186 Licenciado Luis Varela Ortiz: "Dependiendo las circunstancias sociales y económicas de alguien, dejar a sus viejos en un hospital para que el Estado los atienda puede ser el acto más responsable y amoroso que esas personas puedan tener con sus viejos." ¿La alternativa es la criminalización? "Hemos normalizado la encarcelación" "no apreciamos la libertad" El discurso moral simplifica el problema Los que hoy critican desde la moral el abandono de los viejos, celebran y empujan que las mujeres no aborten y abandone al ién nacido en una instituciones Ya no es el Estado pues tras la privatización se supone que las empresas privadas asuman este rol La salud y la transportación son servicios fundamentales aunque sean perdidiosas Preocupan posibles recortes en Medicare Advantage https://www.elvocero.com/gobierno/agencias/preocupan-posibles-recortes-en-medicare-advantage/article_b0e758be-c2cb-11ed-bbe8-3ba3519d2c3e.html

It's Not Just In Your Head
#66: Striketober

It's Not Just In Your Head

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2021 62:08


Harriet takes a deep dive into the events of Striketober and the hope it offers. Harriet & Liam also discuss the issues raised in the Medium article 'Why Are Americans and Conservatives So Afraid of Socialism?'. Email us with feedback, questions, suggestions at itsnotjustinyourhead@gmail.com. Become a patron at patreon.com/itsnotjustinyourhead to gain early access to episodes, our discord server, and monthly reading/discussion groups. Show notes: Why Are Americans and Conservatives So Afraid of Socialism?: https://aninjusticemag.com/why-are-americans-and-conservatives-so-afraid-of-socialism-33409294290 Rainbow Pie book: https://uk.bookshop.org/books/rainbow-pie-a-memoir-of-redneck-america/9781846272585 Deaths of Despair and the Future of Capitalism book: https://uk.bookshop.org/books/deaths-of-despair-and-the-future-of-capitalism/9780691217079 Dressing like all the the other car salesmen (misremembered as Estate Agents / Realtors in the recording): https://www.unz.com/isteve/classic-from-files-why-do-car-salesmen/ How Politics makes Us Sick, Ted Schrecker, Clare Bambra Palgrave, 2015 The Body Economic, David Stuckler, Sanjay Basu. Basic Books, 2013 Loneliness, John Cacciopo and William Patrick, Norton 2008 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/itsnotjustinyourhead/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/itsnotjustinyourhead/support

Social Science Bites
Whose Work Most Influenced You? A Social Science Bites Retrospective, Part 3

Social Science Bites

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2017 11:47


Ask a number of influential social scientists who in turn influenced them, and you’d likely get a blue-ribbon primer on the classics in social science. Wright Mills’ The Sociological Imagination. Ernest Becker’s The Denial of Death. Irving Goffman’s The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life. Emile Durkheim’s Suicide. Michel Foucault’s The Archaeology of Knowledge. During the recording of every Social Science Bites podcast, the guest has been asked the following: Which piece of social science research has most inspired or most influenced you? And now, in honor of the 50th Bites podcast to air, journalist and interviewer David Edmonds has compiled those responses into three collections. This last of the three appears here, with answers presented alphabetically from Toby Miller to Linda Woodhead. “I remember as a graduate student reading classics in epidemiology and sociology and feeling like a kid in the candy store,” recalls David Stuckler, now a University of Oxford sociologist, before namedropping? Durkheim. Several of the guests gently railed at the request to name just one influence. “There isn’t one,” starts Mirca Madianou, a communications expert at Goldsmiths, University of London. “There may have been different books at different times of my formation.” Social psychologist Steve Reicher said he instead liked the idea of desert Island books, which give multiple bites of this particular apple, and then named several influences, including E.P. Thompson’s The Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century and Natalie Davis’s The Rites of Violence: Religious Riot in Sixteenth-Century France, which he describes as “beautiful and rich depictions of patterns of social behavior.” “I’m unprepared to answer this!” exclaims behavioral economist and Nobel laureate Robert Shiller before he cites Hersh Shefrin and Richard Thaler’s work that pioneered the connection between neuroscience and eEconomics. Sometimes, though, the answer comes instantly. “Not a day that I don’t think about him or talk about him to somebody,” said Lawrence Sherman of Austin Bradford Hill, an economist whose work evaluating the use of streptomycin in treating tuberculosis created the template for randomized controlled trials.

Up Close Research Talk Show
#362: Costing us dearly: The toll of austerity policy on public health

Up Close Research Talk Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 25, 2016


Oxford sociologist and political economist Prof. David Stuckler argues that austerity policies imposed by national governments in response to economic crises bring about increases in disturbing public health outcomes -- particularly among those societies' most vulnerable people -- while countries that opt for stimulus-based policies have demonstrably healthier outcomes. Presented by Eric van Bemmel.  Download mp3 (29.7 MB)      Listen now      Read transcript read more

The Fifth Estate
The Body Economic

The Fifth Estate

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2016 58:00


Can our economy make us sick? David Stuckler thinks it can. Stuckler is an Oxford University professor whose focus is the intersection of political economy and public health. In 2013, he co-wrote The Body Economic: Why Austerity Kills, arguing that some countries have turned recessions into public health disasters in misguided efforts to get the budget back on track. Sally Warhaft and David Stuckler Stuckler has studied large data sets from across the globe to learn how economic upheavals – from the Great Depression to the collapse of the Soviet Union to the Asian Financial Crisis to the Global Financial Crisis – have affected the health of citizens. Australia's economy has held up better than most in recent times, so how do Stuckler's findings relate to us? And what lessons can Australian policy-makers learn from mistakes made in other countries? For our first Fifth Estate event in 2016, join Sally Warhaft and a fascinating international guest for a discussion of health and economic upheaval.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Social Science Bites
David Stuckler on Austerity and Death

Social Science Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2013 16:17


You might assume that deaths increase in a recession, but that doesn't necessarily happen. What is clear, however, is the relation between government austerity responses to recession and an increase in rates of death. David Stuckler explains in this episode of the Social Science Bites podcast. Social Science Bites is made in association with SAGE.

death austerity david stuckler
Thinking Allowed
Scottish nationalism and identity; Austerity

Thinking Allowed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2013 27:59


Does Austerity Kill? Laurie Taylor talks to political economist, David Stuckler, about the human costs of the financial crisis as documented in his book 'The Body Economic' (co-authored with Sanju Basu) -the culmination of ten years research. They're joined by David Smith, Economics Editor of the Sunday Times. We're well aware of the extreme costs of banking crisis in terms of the wealth of nations, but much less idea of how they affect one of the most central issues of all: our physical and mental health. Why has health in Iceland actually got better whilst it's deteriorated in Greece? From the Great Depression of the 1930s to post communist Russia and the US foreclosure scandal; Dr Stuckler study examines the surprising, seemingly contradictory nature of economic disasters' role in public health. They are joined by David Smith Economic Editor of the Sunday Times. Also, Nasar Meer discusses his study into ethnic minority Scots' relationship to Scottish Nationalism and identity Producer: Jayne Egerton.

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Audio News - LSHTM Podcast
Non Communicable Diseases: Crisis For Low And Middle Income Countries

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Audio News - LSHTM Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2011 6:29


LONDON—Heart disease, stroke, cancer, diabetes and other non-communicable diseases pose a looming threat to low- and middle-income countries just as in the rich world according to experts meeting in London. At the Global Health Lab symposium in London Martin McKee and Erica Richardson of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine with Richard Horton Editor of The Lancet told Peter Goodwin about the importance of the issues raised by the experts contributing to the session: Allison Beattie of the UK Department for International Development, Philip James from the International Association for the Study of Obesity and David Stuckler from the University of Cambridge.