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Health officials think that dead and sick birds showing up between Hyde Park and Wilmette could be a sign that the highly contagious bird flu is spreading in the Chicago area. Reset learns more about avian flu and discusses what this could mean for birds, pets and Chicago-area residents with infectious disease specialist at the University of Chicago Dr. Emily Landon and the director of Chicago Bird Collision Monitors Annette Prince. For a full archive of Reset interviews, head over to wbez.org/reset.
HealthLeaders CMO Editor Christopher Cheney talks with Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control at UChicago Medicine, about a range of issues, including respiratory virus season, emerging pathogen considerations, and healthcare-acquired conditions.
On episode 115 of PSQH: The Podcast, Dr. Emily Landon, Associate Professor of Medicine, University of Chicago, talks about how hospitals are improving their hand hygiene practices. This episode is sponsored by BioVigil and Inovalon and presented as part of International Infection Prevention Week.
The CDC tracker shows coronavirus levels are much higher nationwide than they were this time last year. With infection levels on the rise, should folks get another COVID booster? Are tests effectively catching the latest strains? How long are we supposed to isolate again? To learn more, Reset checks in with UChicago Medicine's infectious disease specialist Dr. Emily Landon. For a full archive of Reset interviews, head over to wbez.org/reset.
Step into the role of a hospital epidemiologist managing a measles outbreak response with Drs. Palak Patel, Emily Landon, and David Zhang from the University of Chicago!Episodes | Consult Notes | Subscribe | Twitter | Merch | febrilepodcast@gmail.comFebrile is produced with support from the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA)
This week, City Cast Chicago host Jacoby Cochran and WBEZ metro reporter Adora Namigadde stop in to talk about Burning Man, a truly horrific accident on a plane, and whether there's hope for salvaging New Year's resolutions 9 months into the year. Plus, when should we start masking in public again? How long should we isolate for if we get COVID? What's the deal with a new booster? Is it safe to get married this fall?!? University of Chicago infectious disease specialist Emily Landon answers your questions about COVID.]]>
All Advocate Health Care locations in the Chicago area are dropping mask requirements and easing visitor limits starting Monday. The policy changes at the health care system will affect patients and care teams at locations in Chicago, the suburbs and Northwest Indiana. Reset hears the details of Advocate's plans from Chicago Sun-Times reporter David Struett and checked in with University of Chicago infectious disease specialist Dr. Emily Landon.
On this episode of The ICHE Podcast, Editor-in-Chief, David Calfee, MD, MS discusses the most recently published section of The Compendium, “SHEA/IDSA/APIC Practice Recommendation: Strategies to prevent healthcare-associated infections through hand hygiene: 2022 Update.” Guests on this episode are Katherine Ellingson, PhD, Janet Glowicz, PhD, RN, CIC, LTC-CIP, and Emily Landon, MD. Listen as they discuss changes in the updated document, key essential practices, recommendations for monitoring hand hygiene, and tips for started in this improvement work in hand hygiene. After listening, be sure to visit cambridge./org/iche to read the full articles featured in today's episode.
Emily Landon is the Crypto Recruiter, she began her journey in this space after working in the financial services industry for three years. She was passionate about helping the Blockchain industry to develop and saw a need for a crypto recruiting firm. This inspired Emily to start the company as a New Year's resolution to the recruiting space. She wanted to provide a humanized approach to the process and make finding a job more fun. To do this, Emily and her team focused on doing the opposite of what people typically complain about with recruiters. They worked hard to build a good reputation and initially didn't take on any business for six months just so they could focus on networking and pipelining. Emily's company The Crypto Recruiters.io focuses on niche spaces and provides staffing services for companies within the Web3 space. The speaker discussed his experience in the Web Three industry, which is a space related to cryptocurrency. She discussed the training he provided to recruiters, the positive aspects of working in the Web Three space, the importance of making connections with people, and the confidential project he is helping staff up. She also discussed how Web Three is impacting the recruitment industry, noting the use of AI tools and the need to source talent from Twitter due to spam on LinkedIn. Finally, she advised that Twitter is a great place to find Web Three talent. Emily also shared great advice on what recruiters need to do to become successful no matter what niche they are in. Highlights: You really need to be passionate about changing lives. I know that may sound a little silly, but I mean, seriously, if I can help someone find a job at a 25% more salary and they can use that extra money to build a family, to buy a home, that's life-changing. Emily Landon LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thecryptorecruiter/ The Crypto Recruiters: https://thecryptorecruiters.io/ The Crypto Recruiters Talent Hub: https://thecryptorecruiters.io/category/available-candidates/ The Crypto Recruiters Twitter: https://twitter.com/CrptoRecruiting The Crypto Recruiters IG: https://www.instagram.com/thecryptorecruiters/ Emily Landon Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thecryptorecruiter The Crypto Recruiters TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thecryptorecruiters With your Host Benjamin Mena with Select Source Solutions: http://www.selectsourcesolutions.com/ Benjamin Mena LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/benjaminmena/ Benjamin Mena Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/benlmena/ Benjamin Mena TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@benjaminlmena Benjamin Mena Twitter: https://twitter.com/benjamin_l_mena The Elite Recruiter Podcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theeliterecruiter/
Emily Landon, founder of The Crypto Recruiters, and Recruiting Director Sarah Otsuki join Rich Pasqua and Matt Sky to discuss the 2023 crypto/web3 jobs market from a hiring and job-seeking perspective. We cover: How recent tech layoffs can cater their profiles and resumes to the web3/crypto space. Where hiring and interest in crypto recruiting is centered as we enter 2023. A look at recent events and their impact on the crypto jobs market, FTX, major entry from prominent brands, etc. The Crypto Recruiters, their growth, and promotion, offering free recruiting services to interesting companies. Episode links: The Crypto Recruiters: https://www.thecryptorecruiters.io Linktree: https://linktr.ee/landontop Emily Landon: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thecryptorecruiter Sarah Otsuki: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cryptorecruitingdirector Learn more about Arc: https://arctai.com https://linktr.ee/arctai
Nerdette's “resident epidemiologist,” Dr. Emily Landon of University of Chicago Medicine, explains everything you need to know about navigating Covid, the flu and RSV this holiday season.
In episode 7 of Web 3 and Thrive, I invited The Crypto Recruiter, Emily Landon on the show. She has built her small but mighty recruitment business whilst enduring all the seasons of this industry and I wanted to hear from her what the Web 3 hiring space looks like right now,, how women ( and guys!) can understand where to start with getting hired or moving roles in the current market and why so many females in senior roles- really don't want to move into leadership roles- so should we really push them to?We also discussed:The difficulties with building a remote cultureHow to optimize your Linkedin and reach more peopleHow to hire quality talent in web 3 + beyondUnderstanding ‘candidate / team fitLinks:The Crypto RecruitersEmily Landon LinkedinSupport the show⭐️ Help us reach more leaders like you: Subscribe, leave a 5-star review, and share your fave episodes with friends & colleagues.
Emily Landon, founder of TheCryptoRecruiters.io join Rich Pasqua and Matt Sky to discuss the exploding crypto, blockchain, web3 job market, the importance of networking and establishing human connections, how candidates can maximize their chances of success, and how hiring managers can discover and retain top talent.Find Emily Landon at:http://www.thecryptorecruiters.ioLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/thecryptorecruiter/We'll cover:The importance of networking in the crypto, web3, blockchain space.How job seekers can maximize their chances of success.Advice for hiring managers looking to build productive, collaborative teams.Fascinating hiring trends and observations in the crypto space.How blockchain, anonymity, crypto, Discord, and a connected global workforce are changing the way we think about staffing and career paths.Medium Companion Piece:https://tinyurl.com/7hfnywz5
Nerdette's “resident epidemiologist,” Dr. Emily Landon of The University of Chicago, returns to give us her advice for navigating monkeypox and COVID-19.
Blockchain Insiders Report presented by Borderless Blockchain Alliance
Emily Landon founded The Crypto Recruiters to be a firm responsible for helping people find jobs they love at companies that are motivated by the success of their people. Emily is a Chicago native with six years of experience recruiting in fintech, crypto, blockchain, web3, and financial services. She is a passionate servant leader that puts her people first and prioritizes ethics. LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/thecryptorecruiter Twitter: twitter.com/TheNFTRecruiter Instagram: instagram.com/thecryptorecruiter Web: TheCryptoRecruiters.io
Over Memorial Day weekend, Chicago reached high community risk level for COVID-19 transmission. New cases and hospitalizations are up. Reset asks a University of Chicago Medicine infectious disease specialist to break down what high risk means and explain how to stay safe at this stage in the pandemic. Host: Sasha-Ann Simons Producer: Christian Elliott Guest: Dr. Emily Landon
Yes, COVID is still a thing. Nerdette's “resident epidemiologist” Dr. Emily Landon gets us up to speed.
More than two years into the COVID-19 pandemic, cases are low in the U.S., but concerns remain about the BA.2 variant. Reset charts the variant's spread and ask an expert how we can stay safe. Plus, the FDA is planning to authorize another COVID-19 booster for adults 50 and up.
For some, the news that Illinois will be lifting mask and vaccine card mandates is a relief—a sign that the worst part of the omicron surge is behind us. But for immunocompromised people, that's not the case. We talked to infectious disease specialist Dr. Emily Landon and Atlantic staff writer Ed Yong, who wrote about this issue in the magazine. Immunocompromised people and caregivers of immunocompromised people called in to share their thoughts.
For some, the news that Illinois will be lifting mask and vaccine card mandates by the end of the month is a relief — a sign that the worst part of the omicron surge is behind us. But for immunocompromised people, that's not the case. Reset talks to infectious disease specialist Dr. Emily Landon and Atlantic staff writer Ed Yong, who wrote about this issue in the magazine. Plus, we hear from immunocompromised people and caregivers of immunocompromised people about their thoughts.
Start your engines!! Shaun is extra revved up after Pritzker's press conference and shows extra disdain for Dr. Emily Landon. PLUS, Car expert and YouTube personality Scotty Kilmer joins Shaun and tells him how useless electric cars are. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nerdette's "resident epidemiologist" Dr. Emily Landon is back to cut through the noise and help us navigate the pandemic now.
Emily Landon, MD, Executive Medical Director, Infection Prevention and Control, University of Chicago, makes her long-awaited return to the show to provide an update on the status of COVID-19 in the US. Chadi and Dr. Landon discuss the proportion of people in America that have gotten their vaccine and booster, how Omicron has come along so quickly as an “escape” variant, how effective the vaccines are against contracting and fighting Omicron, whether vaccine mandates for healthcare workers are justifiable, why Omicron is likely to be worse in the US than in South Africa, when and where people should wear masks now, weighing the risk (ie, myocarditis) and benefits of vaccines for children, and so much more. Check out Chadi's website for all Healthcare Unfiltered episodes and other content. www.chadinabhan.com/ Watch all Healthcare Unfiltered episodes on Youtube. www.youtube.com/channel/UCjiJPTpIJdIiukcq0UaMFsA
Illinois' first Omicron case has been detected in a fully vaccinated Chicago resident. Reset asks infectious disease specialist, Dr. Emily Landon, what she knows about the new variant.
On this week's episode of A.D. Q&A, Dr. Emily Landon, a professor and the medical director for infection prevention and control at UChicago Medicine, describes what we know – and don't yet know – about omicron. "On paper, it looks like a superpredator," Landon says of the variant, which appears more transmissible and less susceptible to vaccines. It will take days or weeks to know how it affects more vaccinated populations. "What we need to know is how fast this spreads and how well it does in, basically, a cage match against delta. Then how effective vaccines really are with it." Ideally, omicron may be very spreadable and include a sickness equivalent to the cold, giving plenty of people natural immunity. But right now, "we really don't know" if omicron will be a superpredator, a "nothingburger," or more likely, Landon says, something in between. Landon discusses what the new variant may mean for the return to the office many hoped for at the start of 2022. She also shares what grade she'd give Gov. Pritzker for his handling of the virus, areas where they've disagreed, and why she still thinks hosting Lollapalooza the way the city did was a bad idea.
Winter sure is coming, so Nerdette's resident epidemiologist Dr. Emily Landon is back to answer all of your COVID questions.
Since the COVID-19 vaccine was recently approved for children ages 5 to 11, some Chicago kids have already gotten the shot. President Biden wants the vaccine available in 20,000 locations by next week. Reset brings on an infectious disease expert to discuss common parent concerns and answer questions from listeners.
This week we featuring Emily Landon, The Crypto Recruiter. This probably our most impactful NFT Heat episode yet. This episode is packed with major NFT alpha on how to break into the NFT world even if you don't have any prior experience!
You asked, we delivered! Infectious disease expert Emily Landon is back to take your questions on variants, vaccines, and more.
This week we checked back in with Dr. Emily Landon, an epidemiologist and infectious disease specialist at the University of Chicago, to get all of your latest COVID questions answered! We talked about the CDC’s new masking guidelines -- which she calls a “mistake” -- how to navigate reopening with unvaccinated kids, and the future of the pandemic. Thanks to everyone who submitted questions this week!
Coronavirus cases in Illinois are down to the lowest the state has seen in a month. What does this mean, ahead of the upcoming “bridge phase” set to begin Friday? Reset checks in with infectious disease specialist Dr. Emily Landon.
Baseball games are coming back to Chicago... kind of. How would you feel if you never had to tip again? Cancel culture is after Pepe Le Pew; when is this going to stop? Infectious disease specialist Dr. Emily Landon believes we should consider obesity a disease. Bruce and Judy talk to the head coach for the Illinois men's basketball team Brad Underwood. Chef Dominique Tougne, Chef and Owner of Chez Moi and French Quiche, was tired of working for others, so during the pandemic French Quiche was born!
After a 2 month pause, Emily Landon (@emilymicheleL), MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, returns for her eighth appearance on the show to comment on which COVID-19 population statistics should be considered most important for determining societal policy effectiveness, whether asymptomatic people are as likely to spread the virus as symptomatic people, the best types of masks for everyday people, the nuances of schools reopening with remote vs in-person learning, and the vaccine landscape as it currently exists.
Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, makes her seventh appearance on the show to discuss phased plans to reopen across the country, including how to keep the spread of the virus under control while interacting in indoor settings (eg, barber shops, gyms, airplanes, and restaurants), the importance of furthering contact tracing, and more.
Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, makes her sixth appearance on the show to discuss practical considerations for "ramp-up" testing, what a negative test result really means (or does not mean) and how often to repeat the test, updates on data for remdesivir, and more.
Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, returns to discuss crucial considerations for reopening the country, reactions to the way infection control experts have handled new information, and the overreaction to a recent preliminary report from the University of Chicago on a potential treatment option.
Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, returns for her fourth update on COVID-19 testing options and timeliness, whether asymptomatic patients with the disease can transmit it to others, a simple and helpful practice to keep patients needing more oxygen off the ventilators, and more.
Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, returns to share valuable information on COVID-19 testing, ethical dilemmas regarding treatment decisions, proper N95 mask reuse and disposal, potential of durable immunity to the virus, and more.
添加笨笨老师微信:benbenkouyu1(长按复制),速速加入口语学习群,免费每日纠音打卡,0元抢购5天直播口语训练营(仅限100名),领取三大听课好礼!好礼一:价值299元《走遍美国》全集课程视频! 好礼二:实用英语口语纸质书籍免费包邮到家!好礼三:笨笨口语《十年精选英语学习资料》全集。一口流利的英语=1整套真正有效的课程(独特学习方法+发音+词汇+连略读+句型+英语思维+结构变换+情景对话)目前,国内疫情基本呈现出好转趋势,而国外疫情形势却愈发牵动人心。我记得半个月前,意大利当时的确诊人数是2000+,没想到几天过去,这个数字飚到了7400+,到今天已经到47000+,而全球就已经有6个西方国家确诊人数突破了10000+,但是意大利很多地方乃至整个西方国家还是不戴口罩,某些西方国家的人甚至用充满恶意的眼光看待戴口罩的人,当真是不撞南墙不回头,不见棺材不落泪啊!我们真的为他们感到着急啊!这么严重的疫情来了,为什么西方人还是不戴口罩呢? 1、在西方传统的观念中,对于一般人而言,只有病人才会戴口罩。在他们认为,如果某个人戴了口罩,很可能意味着他携带病毒,因此会被歧视或攻击,英国和德国都发生了中国留学生因戴口罩出门被攻击的事件。所以他们的逻辑就是,有病才戴,没病不戴——如果你有病就不该戴着口罩出来——如果你没病戴口罩就是制造恐慌,让别人以为你有病……我真想反驳他们神逻辑的一句是:你怎么知道自己有没有病?你们检测试剂很少,而且很贵,平民一般检测不到!!所以你根本不知道谁有病!我们中国人的逻辑是:我不知道自己或者别人有没有病——但是我戴口罩可以尽量防止我传播病毒出去或者别人传播给我——只要人人戴口罩就可以阻止病毒传播——所以人人戴口罩。2、WHO和西方政府都在宣传“口罩无用论”,这也是欧美人不戴口罩的关键原因。WHO和西方各国政府指出:“没有证据证明口罩对普通人有防护作用,只有得病的人才需要戴口罩。”政府都说不用戴口罩啦!那我干嘛要戴呀!而且又买不到,我戴了就是有病!所以关键问题就在西方政府!不是欧美人的问题,你看在中国的欧美人敢不戴口罩吗?不戴不能出门,否则直接拘留!2003年,当SARS病毒在全球扩散时,世界卫生组织传染病部门的戴维·海曼认为,用戴口罩的方法来阻止感染很有限。芝加哥大学医学中心感染控制医学主任艾米莉·兰登(Emily Landon),在接受采访时表示口罩在日常使用中不是个好选择。类似这样的文献很多因此,很多欧美人有根深蒂固的想法。认为必要时才戴口罩,有些错误用法会导致更严重地传播,勤加洗手才更关键。世卫组织也曾在发布的《口罩使用指南》中提到,戴口罩的情况适用于那些照顾疑似或确诊感染病例的医护人员,咳嗽、打喷嚏的患者。并且,口罩配合频繁用含酒精的洗手液、肥皂洗手才会有效。因此,很多媒体都在宣传“口罩无用论”,这也是欧美人不戴口罩的重要原因。并且,在大部分欧美人看来,疯狂购买口罩反而会导致医护人员的口罩供应不足。所以他们一般都不会去囤口罩,宁愿去多囤点卫生纸。3、法国、德国、意大利奥地利等多个国家存在公共场合“禁蒙面法规”,这也是一个不容忽略的因素。反蒙面法在一定程度上也适用于佩戴口罩,因为遮蔽住了脸部。比如奥地利,只有医护人员和有医疗需求的病人,才可以戴口罩。其它人,无论是奥国公民还是外国人,在公众场所戴上口罩都会触犯法律,违者将会被处150欧元,并且,生病出行必须佩戴还需要医生开具证明。又比如法国,去年法国议会还升级了《禁蒙面法》,任何人无正当理由在公共场地及周边地点蒙面,即可被罚款1.5万欧元(折合约11万7千人民币)及处一年监禁。综上所述,以上就能很好的解释为啥西方人不戴口罩的原因!那么我们今天就来顺便学习一下关于口罩的英语吧!“口罩” 统称为 mask,这个词同时还有面具,面膜等含义。目前,官方推荐的防护口罩是 N95 口罩,外科医用口罩和医用护理口罩。01 N95 口罩N95 口罩 → N95 mask / respirator respirator /ˈrespəreɪtər/ n. 口罩;呼吸器;防毒面具“Mask”表示较为通用的口罩含义,而“respirator”就是严格意义上的医用或有其他防护功效的口罩了。N95型口罩是NIOSH(美国国家职业安全卫生研究所,National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health)认证的一种颗粒物防护口罩。“N”来自于Not resistant to oil,意为“不耐油”,表示口罩适用于吸附非油性微粒。这种口罩滤料对非油性颗粒物(如粉尘、酸雾、漆雾、微生物等)的过滤效率达到95%,因此称为N95口罩。02外科医用口罩和医用护理口罩外科医用口罩 → surgical masksurgical /ˈsɜːdʒɪkl/ adj. 外科的;手术上的;外科手术式的医用护理口罩 → medical maskmedical /ˈmedɪkl/ adj. 医学的; 医药的这类口罩大多都为一次性disposable,不需要清洗,使用也比较方便。目前专家推荐的普通大众使用这两种口罩就可以。N95口罩更加适用于医务人员。
Chadi welcomes back Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, to provide updates on issues of state-funded COVID-19 testing and laboratory resources, management considerations for immuno-compromised patients in oncology clinics, importance of social distancing and isolation to limit the strain on local health systems, and more.
Emily Landon, MD, executive medical director of infection prevention and control, University of Chicago, breaks down current exposure risk and mortality rates of COVID-19, preventative steps to avoid exposure, and promising therapies on the horizon.