Podcast appearances and mentions of Frank H Netter

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Best podcasts about Frank H Netter

Latest podcast episodes about Frank H Netter

Becker’s Healthcare -- Ambulatory Surgery Centers Podcast
Dr Micheal Redler, Orthopedic Surgeon, Connecticut Orthopedics, Visiting Assistant Clinical Professor of Orthopedics, University of Virginia, Dept of Orhto, Assist Clinical Prof, Frank H Netter School of Medicine Quinnipiac University

Becker’s Healthcare -- Ambulatory Surgery Centers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023


This episode recorded live at the 20th Annual Becker's Healthcare Spine, Orthopedic + Pain Management-Driven ASC Conference features Dr Micheal Redler, Orthopedic Surgeon, Connecticut Orthopedics, Visiting Assistant Clinical Professor of Orthopedics, University of Virginia, Dept of Orhto, Assist Clinical Prof, Frank H Netter School of Medicine Quinnipiac University. Here, he discusses his passion for opioid sparing pain management, the top issues he's currently following, what ASCs need to do in order to be successful in the next 2-3 years, and more.

Becker’s Healthcare -- Spine and Orthopedic Podcast
Dr Micheal Redler, Orthopedic Surgeon, Connecticut Orthopedics, Visiting Assistant Clinical Professor of Orthopedics, University of Virginia, Dept of Orhto, Assist Clinical Prof, Frank H Netter School of Medicine Quinnipiac University

Becker’s Healthcare -- Spine and Orthopedic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023


This episode recorded live at the 20th Annual Becker's Healthcare Spine, Orthopedic + Pain Management-Driven ASC Conference features Dr Micheal Redler, Orthopedic Surgeon, Connecticut Orthopedics, Visiting Assistant Clinical Professor of Orthopedics, University of Virginia, Dept of Orhto, Assist Clinical Prof, Frank H Netter School of Medicine Quinnipiac University. Here, he discusses his passion for opioid sparing pain management, the top issues he's currently following, what ASCs need to do in order to be successful in the next 2-3 years, and more.

The Anatomy Nerd Podcast
Medicine's Michelangelo - The Man Behind The Paintings

The Anatomy Nerd Podcast

Play Episode Play 36 sec Highlight Listen Later May 31, 2021 33:59


Francine Mary Netter Roberson is the daughter of Dr. Frank H. Netter and author of his biography, Medicine's Michelangelo: The Life & Art of Frank H. Netter, MD. With some of Dr. Netter's medical illustrations and non-medical paintings–some never before published–she tells his remarkable story. Frank Netter came from humble beginnings as a merchant's son but had early artistic leanings. He attended medical school at the urging of his mother and subsequently had a surgery practice. His first illustrations for pharmaceutical companies were very popular, and his subsequent work influenced so many and secured his legacy as a great medical teacher. Francine gives a contextual and historical basis for Dr. Netter's vanguard work and presents a personal introduction to the man behind the paintings.The book is available at her website https://www.fnettermd.com.Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREEDisclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/theanatomynerdpodcast)

GI Insights
Exploring Telemedicine Amid the Pandemic & Beyond

GI Insights

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2021


Host: Peter Buch, MD, FACG, AGAF, FACP Guest: Andres Nieto, MD The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated the effectiveness of telemedicine, but will this approach still be utilized after the pandemic ends? Dr. Peter Buch is joined by Dr. Andres Nieto, Assistant Professor at Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine, to discuss the role of telemedicine and its future

Hunger in Hamden
Quinnipiac Medical School Volunteers Help Fight Hunger During the Pandemic

Hunger in Hamden

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2021 17:53


In this episode, we’re going to hear how future doctors and staff members at Quinnipiac University's Frank H. Netter, M.D. School of Medicine are learning about the real-life health impacts of hunger and food insecurity, and how they’re helping people in the middle of the pandemic. Hunger in Hamden is a production of the Quinnipiac University Podcast Studio, hosted, reported and produced by Ben Bogardus, a Quinnipiac journalism professor.

Medical Illustration Podcast
Medical Illustration Podcast - Episode 001 - Introduction to the field

Medical Illustration Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2021 18:54


This is an introductory episode to a podcast about the world of medical illustration. My ultimate goal is to have an ongoing series of interviews with creative professionals I have had the pleasure to get to know through my work. Resources: Association of Medical Illustrators FAQ - https://ami.org/medical-illustration/learn-about-medical-illustration Johns Hopkins Art As Applied to Medicine program FAQ - https://medicalart.johnshopkins.edu/the-profession/ UIC Biomedical Visualization program - https://ahs.uic.edu/biomedical-health-information-sciences/admissions-and-programs/ms-in-biomedical-visualization/ Augusta University Medical Illustration program - https://www.augusta.edu/alliedhealth/medicalillustration/ University of Toronto–Mississauga Biomedical Communications program - https://bmc.med.utoronto.ca/ SciArtNOW - https://sciartnow.com/ Medical Illustration on Reddit - https://www.reddit.com/r/medicalillustration/new/ Sawbones podcast - https://player.fm/series/sawbones-a-marital-tour-of-misguided-medicine/sawbones-medical-illustration “Medicine's Michelangelo: The Life & Art of Dr. Frank H Netter” - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GOp59f31HqQ

university art medicine field reddit faq sawbones medical illustration frank h netter
Real talk, Real people
Coping? Wrestling with the present, worrying about the future

Real talk, Real people

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2020 18:08


I think we’re all feeling a little out of it and maybe some mild depression about what has been going on this year. The conversation is about COVID-19 fatigue. Our guests today are Dr. Jeff Dietz and Alex Parkhouse, two assistant professors from Quinnipiac University -- one a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst at the Frank H. Netter School of Medicine and the other, a medical sociologist whose research areas focus on chronic illness stigma, stress and mental health and health literacy.

Art is Everything
Episode 3: Art and Medicine - Medical Illustration

Art is Everything

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2020 52:33


This is the first installment of a multi-part conversation about the intersection of art and medicine. In it, we discuss Van Gogh's ear as it was grown in a lab and displayed in an art gallery. We talk about the prolific work of Dr. Frank H. Netter. We also have a fascinating conversation with Professor Jennifer Fairman of the Department of Art as Applied to Medicine at Johns Hopkins University, and we thoroughly gross out Aaron's brother.

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond
Tensor Fascia Lata and Why Memorization Sucks for Learning Anatomy

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2020 11:03


TFL (aka tensor fasciae latae) isn’t your next order at Starbucks (although that's a pretty great meme if you've ever seen it).  It’s an important muscle of the hip.  But what does it do?  To find out tune in…discover where it starts, where it goes, and what it does in today’s anatomy bite.  Also, Nik shares an embarrassing story about TFL that you may not want to miss, involving a real life example of how straight up memorization of anatomy sucks/doesn't develop your clinical judgment. Contact me on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter:  @nikkidashrae Links to some of resources that may enhance the material in this episode: 5’6” Skeleton Model:  https://amzn.to/2JYTyXt Atlas of Surface Palpation:  https://amzn.to/2yVLV1O Muscles Testing and Function with Posture and Pain, 5th Ed. (Kendall, et al.):  https://amzn.to/2V3135U Atlas of Human Anatomy, 7th Ed. (Frank H. Netter, MD):  https://amzn.to/2K0yFey As an Amazon Associate, your purchase of texts through clicking these links helps to fund this podcast.  Thanks for your support!  :-) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond
Psoas major and Iliacus (aka Iliopsoas) + Psoas Minor

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2020 15:35


Today, we discuss the origins, insertions, innervations, and actions (OIAs) of the Psoas major and Iliacus (aka Iliopsoas), as well as their little buddy, Psoas minor.  These muscles span a big range, from the lumbar spine to the pelvis and femur.  Which ones act on the spine, which ones act on the hip?  To find out tune in…discover where they start, where they go, and what they do in today’s anatomy bite. Contact me on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter:  @nikkidashrae Links to some of resources that may enhance the material in this episode: 5’6” Skeleton Model:  https://amzn.to/2JYTyXt Atlas of Surface Palpation:  https://amzn.to/2yVLV1O Muscles Testing and Function with Posture and Pain, 5th Ed. (Kendall, et al.):  https://amzn.to/2V3135U Atlas of Human Anatomy, 7th Ed. (Frank H. Netter, MD):  https://amzn.to/2K0yFey As an Amazon Associate, your purchase of texts through clicking these links helps to fund this podcast.  Thanks for your support!  :-) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond
Gemellus superior, Gemellus inferior, and Quadratus femoris

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2020 9:18


Today, we discuss the origins, insertions, innervations, and actions (OIAs) of the Gemelli TWINS and their cousin QF (Gemellus superior, Gemellus inferior, and Quadratus femoris).  These muscle are primarily hip rotators.  Find out what else they do in today’s anatomy bite. Contact me on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter:  @nikkidashrae Links to some of resources that may enhance the material in this episode: 5’6” Skeleton Model:  https://amzn.to/2JYTyXt Atlas of Surface Palpation:  https://amzn.to/2yVLV1O Muscles Testing and Function with Posture and Pain, 5th Ed. (Kendall, et al.):  https://amzn.to/2V3135U Atlas of Human Anatomy, 7th Ed. (Frank H. Netter, MD):  https://amzn.to/2K0yFey As an Amazon Associate, your purchase of texts through clicking these links helps to fund this podcast.  Thanks for your support!  :-) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond

Today, we discuss the origins, insertions, innervations, and actions (OIAs) of obturator internus.  This muscle is a rotator of the hip and makes up part of the pelvic floor.  Find out what else it does in today’s anatomy bite. Contact me on Instagram, Facebook, or Twitter:  @nikkidashrae Links to some of resources that may enhance the material in this episode: 5’6” Skeleton Model:  https://amzn.to/2JYTyXt Atlas of Surface Palpation:  https://amzn.to/2yVLV1O Muscles Testing and Function with Posture and Pain, 5th Ed. (Kendall, et al.):  https://amzn.to/2V3135U Atlas of Human Anatomy, 7th Ed. (Frank H. Netter, MD):  https://amzn.to/2K0yFey As an Amazon Associate, your purchase of texts through clicking these links helps to fund this podcast.  Thanks for your support!  :-) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond

Ahh, piriformis. You little stinker. Yoga teachers, fitness instructors, and trainers love to blame for this guy for so much… piriformis syndrome, for starters.  Today, we discuss the origins, insertions, innervations, and actions (OIAs) of this pyramid-shaped muscle.  Is pigeon pose going to cure all your piriformis ailments?  Let’s take a looksy. Contact me on Instagram/Twitter/Facebook:  @nikkidashrae Links to some of resources that may enhance the material in this episode: 5’6” Skeleton Model:  https://amzn.to/2JYTyXt Atlas of Surface Palpation:  https://amzn.to/2yVLV1O Muscles Testing and Function with Posture and Pain, 5th Ed. (Kendall, et al.):  https://amzn.to/2V3135U Atlas of Human Anatomy, 7th Ed. (Frank H. Netter, MD:  https://amzn.to/2K0yFey As an Amazon Associate, your purchase of texts through clicking these links helps to fund this podcast.  Thanks for your support!  :-) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Anatomy Bites for PT Students and Beyond

The littlest of the glutes still deserves its day to shine.  Gluteus minimus gets the spotlight today.  Learn about the deepest of the glute muscles, including origins, insertions, innervations, and actions (the OIAs).  Play this recording to supplement your learning in your anatomy class or to simply nerd out on the wee glute. Contact me on Instagram/Twitter/Facebook:  @nikkidashrae Links to some of resources that may enhance the material in this episode: 5’6” Skeleton Model:  https://amzn.to/2JYTyXt Atlas of Surface Palpation:  https://amzn.to/2yVLV1O Muscles Testing and Function with Posture and Pain, 5th Ed. (Kendall, et al.):  https://amzn.to/2V3135U Atlas of Human Anatomy, 7th Ed. (Frank H. Netter, MD:  https://amzn.to/2K0yFey As an Amazon Associate, your purchase of texts through clicking these links helps to fund this podcast.  Thanks for your support!  :-) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians
Carrie Dubeau, MS-4 - Surgery

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2020 35:01 Transcription Available


Join me for this final episode of Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians! In this episode, I will share my story, drawing on many of the ideas and concepts that we've learned throughout this journey. I am a fourth year medical student at Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine, and I hope to pursue surgical residency. Thank you all for being a part of this podcast journey: for listening, sharing stories, and walking this path with me!

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians
Kelly Crusio, PhD - Immunology and Microbiology

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2020 34:36


Help me welcome Dr. Kelly Crusio! Dr. Crusio is an Assistant Professor of Medical Sciences at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University. She completed her BS in Molecular Biology at Fairfield University, and received her PhD in Immunology and Microbiology from Georgetown University. She has spent time studying viruses, leukemias, and molecular mechanisms of disease. Her research been focused on translational and posttranslational modifications and mutations, in particular those that lead to leukemia. As a faculty member at Quinnipiac University, she has the joy of teaching immunology and microbiology to medical students while continuing to study her research interests in the lab.

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians
Jennifer Rockfeld, MD - Internal Medicine

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2020 34:56 Transcription Available


Help me welcome Dr. Jennifer Rockfeld. Dr. Rockfeld practices Internal Medicine in Guilford, Connecticut at Northeast Medical Group. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Medical Sciences at Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine, where she serves as Assistant Course Director of Clinical Arts and Sciences. In doing so she participates in continued development of the clinical skills course, acts as a clinical-skills preceptor, and teaches in the Medical Student Home program, welcoming first and second year medical students to her outpatient office each week. She earned her MD at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and completed her residency and chief residency in Internal Medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Dr. Rockfeld is interested in medical education, the practice of lifestyle medicine, and physician well-being.

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians
Traci Marquis-Eydman, MD - Family Medicine

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2020 37:28 Transcription Available


Help me welcome Dr. Traci Marquis-Eydman! Dr. Marquis is a Family Physician currently practicing in the urgent care setting, as well as a faculty member at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University. She serves as Director of the Medical Student Home program, Director of the Longitudinal Integrated Clerkship, and Director of Fourth Year electives in Rural Emergency Medicine, Rural Primary Care (Maine), and Healthcare for Individuals with Developmental Disabilities. She attended medical school at Dartmouth Medical School and completed her training in Family Medicine in St Louis, MO. She then went on to practice as a full-time family-practice physician in ambulatory care. She is accomplished in leadership and promotion of patient-centered communication with a passion for improving patient experience. Her current roles at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine develop her interest in compassionate and patient-centered education. Dr. Marquis, thank you for joining us on Essential Wisdom, welcome to the show!

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians
Christine Van Cott, MD - Hepatopancreaticobiliary Surgery

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2020 38:17 Transcription Available


Help me welcome Dr. Christine Van Cott. Dr. Van Cott practices General Surgery and Hepatopancreaticobiliary (HPB) Surgery at Saint Vincent’s Medical Center in Bridgeport, CT, where she is the chief of general surgery and director of acute care trauma services. She is a mom to two boys and has been married for 16 years. She is the Surgical Clerkship Director and a Professor of Surgery at the Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine. Dr. Van Cott earned her MD at State University of New York at Buffalo and completed General Surgery residency at Hospital of St. Raphael, New Haven, CT. She went on to complete a fellowship in HPB Surgery at Auckland City Hospital, New Zealand. Dr. Van Cott leads the Netter SOM Surgery Interest Group with great success. Having served as a faculty mentor for this group since its creation, she has helped gather volumes of medical students throughout the four years of school for panels, networking events, volunteer projects, and shadowing opportunities. She is dedicated to helping medical students achieve what they are passionate about, and assists in providing opportunities for mentorship to students beginning on day-one.

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians
Lindsey Scierka, MD, MPH - Internal Medicine

Essential Wisdom: Inspiring Future Female Physicians

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2019 26:19 Transcription Available


Dr. Scierka is a second year internal medicine resident at Yale New Haven Hospital in the Yale Primary Care Program. She’s received her MD in 2017 from Frank H. Netter MD School of Medicine at Quinnipiac University and MPH in Health Policy and Management at New York Medical College in 2013. She has been an accomplished clinical research manager and project coordinator, with experience in cardiac electrophysiology clinical outcomes studies. Her interests include preventative cardiology and improving cardiovascular outcomes at the primary care level. Dr. Scierka lives in New Haven, CT with her fiancé Kamil and pup Lola. I am so excited to start off our show with this interview. Dr. Scierka has been a major mentor and friend to me since my first year at Quinnipiac University, and she is an absolute joy and gift to have on the show.

YogiTriathlete Podcast
Ytp - Alex Buell, Plant-Based Athlete on the Power of Getting Still & Practicing Neutrality

YogiTriathlete Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2016 55:06


This week Alex and I pick up where we left off in Part I with the will he or won't he be attending medical school question left on the table. Lucky for the future of the world, he's already started classes at the Frank H. Netter MD Medical School through Quinnipiac University in Connecticut. He explains that this massive undertaking originally made it feel like the other things he loves, like teaching yoga would have to fall away and that feeling was putting everything into question. The fact is, the decisions that we make in life to follow dreams and pursue big goals may tip the scales to one side for a while but it doesn't mean we have to give up what we love. Making time everyday, even if its feeding a thought about what you love, can keep it alive in all senses. It's important to remember that everything counts, every thought indulged, every action, every direction we shift, it all counts. Nothing goes unaccounted for in this life. Like a true YogiTriathlete, Alex finds his answers by getting quiet but it's not just getting quiet, he explains, it's getting still that allows him the view into his mind and thought processes. From this he is able to pull his truth and answers to his life's burning questions. This was his process to clarity in making the final decision to move forward and take on the beast of making his aspirations in the field of medicine come true. As athletes who meditate we've heard many times from many people that their sport is their meditation, that getting active is what clears their mind and helps them find peace. We agree that it can be an effective means to wash off the day and feel better, endorphins alone will brighten up any day, but it can also be a way to hide behind our sport while pushing away things for another time. This unfortunately only invites that energy to fester and when it resurfaces it will surely be greater. I share a training experience that perfectly encapsulates this theme of pushing down for another time. Moving meditation or sitting meditation? The question remains which is going to help us more when our sport is taken away. Will we still be able to engage in that mind clearing, peace inducing meditation when the activity is no longer? Or will our world fall apart because we relied too heavily on our sport to help us find peace. We go on to chat about the ever so convincing mind, the voice upstairs that most people spend their entire life answering and acting on its beckon call. These folks don't see the tendencies of the mind because they are always in their thinking mind but when we are in the witness state, at Alex describes it, we are able to see the craziness of the thoughts. I love how Eckhart Tolle describes the craziness of the mind. He says that the only difference between us and the crazy person on the street yelling out a million different things that don't make any sense is that they are verbalizing it and we are not. The monkey mind makes servants out of their hosts and without training the mind, without taking time out to see the tendencies of the mind we will inevitably become the servant. As athletes if we are the servants to our minds then we will have no defenses in the face of adversity during our training, racing and life in general. Learning how to sit in sensation either mental or physical while finding neutrality is the ultimate athletic training and what will allow us to rise above when all else falls around us.