Podcasts about kingsberg

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Best podcasts about kingsberg

Latest podcast episodes about kingsberg

Our Womanity Q & A with Dr. Rachel Pope
11. Sex After Children with Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg

Our Womanity Q & A with Dr. Rachel Pope

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 13:21


Amidst the beauty of parenthood, it's common for women to encounter challenges in their intimate lives. The emotional and physical changes that occur after childbirth can affect a woman's perception of herself and her sexuality.We received the question: “Can women become basically asexual after having one or more children?”In the episode, Dr. Rachel Pope is joined by expert Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg to answer it. Dr. Kingsberg is the chief of behavioral medicine at MacDonald Women's Hospital/University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center and a Professor in Reproductive Biology, Psychiatry, and Urology at Case Western Reserve University. They discuss desire, sex drive, and the definition of Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder (HSDD).Featured in this episode: Shifts in desire throughout a person's life The distinction between Asexuality and HSDD Postpartum depression and Psychotherapy Other causes of low desire (This Is Your Brain On Birth Control by Sarah E. Hill)Take the Decreased Sexual Desire Screener (DSDS) Screener here.If you find that the challenges in your sex life persist or are causing significant distress, consider seeking professional help. Sex therapists and counselors specialized in sex can provide valuable guidance and support tailored to your unique situation.Submit your questions on anything and everything women's health-related and we will answer them in one of our episodes.Want more from Our Womanity?Take the Vulva Quiz to see how well you know women's bodies.Looking for practical advice for women in their 60's who want to become sexually active or want to improve their current sex life? Check out Sex in Your Sixties: Who says the fun has to stop? Written by a multidisciplinary group of health professionals who address issues such as pain with sex, low desire for sex, orgasm difficulties, your bladder and sex, same sex partners, vulvar skin conditions, trauma and more.Subscribe to our newsletter here to stay updated and not miss out on new episodes.

Dr. Streicher’s Inside Information: THE Menopause Podcast
8: Episode 8 : When Painful Sex Leads to Problem Relationship s with Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg

Dr. Streicher’s Inside Information: THE Menopause Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 32:36


Women who are dealing with PAINFUL SEX not only need to medically eliminate the cause of the pain, but also need to repair the PSYCHOLOGICAL IMPACT of either avoiding or enduring agonizing sexual activity for months or years. In this episode Dr. Streicher sits down with Sheryl Kingsberg PhD to discuss strategies for couples and individuals to navigate sex when there is pain. She also reveals exciting research in female sexuality. Dr. Kingsberg is a clinical psychologist, a Professor of Reproductive Biology and Psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University and one of the country's foremost experts and researchers in human sexuality.   Dr. Streicher and Dr. Kingsberg will discuss:  WHAT happens to relationships when sex is PAINFUL WHAT is vaginismus and why does it happen? WHY it is sometimes important to temporarily stop having intercourse How to have sex when intercourse is off the table What is SEX THERAPY? The difference between a general therapist and a sex therapist How to have a therapist who specialized  How to TALK to your partner about painful sex Dr. Kingsberg's Research: VIAGRA, TESTOSTERONE, LIBIDO drugs for women More information about treating painful intercourse post menopause can be found in:  Slip Sliding Away: Turning Back the Clock on Your Vagina-A gynecologist's guide to eliminating post-menopause dryness and pain To find a certified sex therapist:  www.AASECT.org  The American Association of Sexuality Educators, Counselors and Therapists  www.SSTARR.org  The Society for Sex Therapist &Research Lauren Streicher, MD is a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, and the medical director of the Northwestern Medicine Center for Sexual Medicine and Menopause. She is a certified menopause practitioner of the North American Menopause Society.  Dr. Streicher is the medical correspondent for Chicago's top-rated news program, the WGNMorningNews, and has been seen on The Today Show, Good Morning America, The Oprah Winfrey Show, CNN, NPR, Dr.Radio,Nightline,Fox and Friends, The Steve Harvey Show, CBS ThisMorning,ABCNewsNow,NBCNightlyNews,20/20, and WorldNewsTonight. She is an expert source for many magazines and serves on the medical advisory board of The Kinsey Institute, Self Magazine and Prevention Magazine. She writes a regular column for The Ethel by AARP and Prevention Magazine.  Subscribe and Follow Dr. Streicher on  DrStreicher.com Instagram @DrStreich Twitter @DrStreicher Facebook  @DrStreicher YouTube  DrStreicherTV Dr. Streicher's Books  Slip Sliding Away: Turning Back the Clock On Your Vagina-A gynecologist's guide to eliminating post-menopause dryness and pain Hot Flash Hell: A Gynecologist's Guide to Turning Down the Heat Sex Rx- Hormones , Health, and Your Best Sex Ever The Essential Guide to Hysterectomy

LeadingShe
It Is a Conspiracy of Silence

LeadingShe

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2022 46:38


Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg is a Clinical Psychologist and Chief of the Division of Behavioral Medicine, Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center. She cites four FSDs, female sexual disorders women could experience during their lifetimes. Dr. Kingsberg says there are gender inequities around the treatment of HSDD, Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder. She says that 10 percent of women have a loss of sexual interest and women can be distressed by this. The medical community does not take this treatment as seriously as men's sexual function issues especially if women are post-menopausal. Great podcast as we openly discuss these taboo subjects as they relate to women's health and happiness. LeadingShe.com Instagram.com/LeadingShe Facebook.com/LeadingShe https://www.linkedin.com/company/leadingshe/

Health Voyagers Podcast Series
#28 - Start the Conversation about Women's Sexual Health ft. Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg & Dr. Rachel Pope

Health Voyagers Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2021 21:59


#28 - Start the Conversation about Women's Sexual Health ft. Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg & Dr. Rachel Pope by Health Voyagers Podcast Series

Finding Harmony Podcast
Dena Kingsberg: That's Where The Light Gets In

Finding Harmony Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2021 136:01


"By the practice of the limbs of Yoga, the impurities dwindle away and there dawns the light of wisdom, leading to discriminative discernment." “Dukham evam sarvaam vivekinaha.” For a viveki, a person with discriminative knowledge, everything is painful and also, simultaneously, full and sweet. As epic poet, Leonard Cohen wrote, “Ring the bells that still can ring Forget your perfect offering There is a crack, a crack in everything That's how the light gets in.” When you allow yourself to break and you see your cracks for what they are, you cease to develop the painful pattern of grasping for perfection. In fact, when we embrace those painful cracks, we transform what was painfully imperfect into something supremely beautiful. Truly, if we read just that one sutra of Patanjali, and realize that everything manifests from pain, then there's little more we need to know. Our guest today shares her deep wisdom with us and it's a tremendous honor. Dena Kingsberg has seen things. She is a Viveki to be sure. She can anticipate the worst, while envisioning the best, and clearly discerning the cracks in the facade of those who come to her for teaching. Harmony shares this kind of understanding of the world, and recognizes the same mystic wonder, strength, courage, and discipline that Dena embodies through her teachings. “Yoga Is Not Pretty.” — But we're going to keep persevering anyway, because as Dena reminds us, “No one is going to help you heal yourself.” And if you don't do the work to sort out your citta vriti (thought patterns), samskaras (action patterns), and vasanas (unconscious desires) you're going to live trapped with whatever you get. We are blessed today to share our conversation with Dena about her personal transformation from an awkward child into an artist, poet, and rock-goddess architect. She built her home using her own hands and she's built her life in much the same way. It's challenging to be a deeply introverted person, while also being called to publicly share the sacred wisdom gleaned from time spent inwardly looking. As a popular Australian cartoonist, Leunig, has shared in his poem… Let it go Let it out Let it all unravel Let it free And it shall be A path on which to travel Between this breaking and unraveling, both Dena and Harmony have come to feel that the weight of life is Full and Sweet. Knowing how painful things can be in this world, while honoring each simple blessing, and recognizing the flow of grace in every day life, is a kind of miracle in and of itself… And that's where the light comes in. Because after all, “It's the sameness in each of us that makes us truly special.” - Dena Kingsberg FIND OUT MORE ABOUT DENA: WEBSITE I FACEBOOK I INSTAGRAM - dena.net.au The Finding Harmony Podcast is hosted, edited and produced by Harmony Slater and co-hosted by Russell Case. Your contributions have allowed us to keep our podcast ad and sponsor free. Creating, editing, and producing each episode takes a lot of time. It is a labor of love. And would not be possible without your kind support. Make A Donation - harmonyslater.com Opening and closing music compliments of Nick Evans - To purchase your own copy - Click Here.

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New Books in Science, Technology, and Society
Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia, "Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan" (Stanford UP, 2019)

New Books in Science, Technology, and Society

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 85:47


How did Japanese academics study their "fields" in places like Manchuria and Inner Mongolia in the transwar decades? How did they transform in the postwar, under the US Occupation, and after? Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan (Stanford UP, 2019) is the first monograph on the collective biography of this cohort of professional Japanese intellectuals, or in Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia's words, "the men of one age." Kadia observes that during the transwar decades (1930s-1060s), these "men of one age" jointly embraced a set of unchanging assumptions regarding epistemology that was anchored in the ideal of "objectivity." The scholarship, or gakujutsu, that they aimed to produce were concerned with the quest of universal laws governing human society and the natural world, the use of a comprehensively delineated method to assure rigor in pursuit of "truth," and impartiality. Those who studied the human sciences applied the ideal of "objectivity" to the study of Self and Others in Japanese colonized and occupied lands. Following the lives of these transwar human scientists into the fields, Kadia reveals that these "men of one age," such as Izumi Seiichi, were both creators and creations of imperial epistemology. Kadia points out that although the duration of Japanese imperial control was too short to apply their academic findings to policy in much of the empire, Izumi and his colleagues "enjoyed outsized influence in justifying the empire as a hierarchy of confraternal races ruled for their own benefit by the putatively superior Japanese." The US Occupation in the postwar allowed the continuation of the pursuit of "objective" knowledge for the Japanese human scientists, as well as opening new avenues for them. Kadia argues that "what changed after 1945 were the values understood to constitute objectivity," namely ideals vaunted as characteristically American: democracy, capitalism, and peace.  During the Cold War, Kadia reminds us, the US saw strategic potential in Japan's studies of East Asia and Oceania, and the Japanese academics largely "upheld the convenient fiction of their reluctant cooperation with and quiet opposition to the former government." To rehabilitate Japan's scholarly reputation, the Japanese academics were integrated into a new transnational intellectual community that both reflected and supported US hegemony, although some Japanese academics resisted the subordination of domestic progress to grand strategy.  Daigengna Duoer is a Ph.D. student at the Religious Studies Department, University of California, Santa Barbara. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science-technology-and-society

New Books in Japanese Studies
Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia, "Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan" (Stanford UP, 2019)

New Books in Japanese Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 85:47


How did Japanese academics study their "fields" in places like Manchuria and Inner Mongolia in the transwar decades? How did they transform in the postwar, under the US Occupation, and after? Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan (Stanford UP, 2019) is the first monograph on the collective biography of this cohort of professional Japanese intellectuals, or in Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia's words, "the men of one age." Kadia observes that during the transwar decades (1930s-1060s), these "men of one age" jointly embraced a set of unchanging assumptions regarding epistemology that was anchored in the ideal of "objectivity." The scholarship, or gakujutsu, that they aimed to produce were concerned with the quest of universal laws governing human society and the natural world, the use of a comprehensively delineated method to assure rigor in pursuit of "truth," and impartiality. Those who studied the human sciences applied the ideal of "objectivity" to the study of Self and Others in Japanese colonized and occupied lands. Following the lives of these transwar human scientists into the fields, Kadia reveals that these "men of one age," such as Izumi Seiichi, were both creators and creations of imperial epistemology. Kadia points out that although the duration of Japanese imperial control was too short to apply their academic findings to policy in much of the empire, Izumi and his colleagues "enjoyed outsized influence in justifying the empire as a hierarchy of confraternal races ruled for their own benefit by the putatively superior Japanese." The US Occupation in the postwar allowed the continuation of the pursuit of "objective" knowledge for the Japanese human scientists, as well as opening new avenues for them. Kadia argues that "what changed after 1945 were the values understood to constitute objectivity," namely ideals vaunted as characteristically American: democracy, capitalism, and peace.  During the Cold War, Kadia reminds us, the US saw strategic potential in Japan's studies of East Asia and Oceania, and the Japanese academics largely "upheld the convenient fiction of their reluctant cooperation with and quiet opposition to the former government." To rehabilitate Japan's scholarly reputation, the Japanese academics were integrated into a new transnational intellectual community that both reflected and supported US hegemony, although some Japanese academics resisted the subordination of domestic progress to grand strategy.  Daigengna Duoer is a Ph.D. student at the Religious Studies Department, University of California, Santa Barbara. Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/japanese-studies

New Books in Intellectual History
Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia, "Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan" (Stanford UP, 2019)

New Books in Intellectual History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 85:47


How did Japanese academics study their "fields" in places like Manchuria and Inner Mongolia in the transwar decades? How did they transform in the postwar, under the US Occupation, and after? Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan (Stanford UP, 2019) is the first monograph on the collective biography of this cohort of professional Japanese intellectuals, or in Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia's words, "the men of one age." Kadia observes that during the transwar decades (1930s-1060s), these "men of one age" jointly embraced a set of unchanging assumptions regarding epistemology that was anchored in the ideal of "objectivity." The scholarship, or gakujutsu, that they aimed to produce were concerned with the quest of universal laws governing human society and the natural world, the use of a comprehensively delineated method to assure rigor in pursuit of "truth," and impartiality. Those who studied the human sciences applied the ideal of "objectivity" to the study of Self and Others in Japanese colonized and occupied lands. Following the lives of these transwar human scientists into the fields, Kadia reveals that these "men of one age," such as Izumi Seiichi, were both creators and creations of imperial epistemology. Kadia points out that although the duration of Japanese imperial control was too short to apply their academic findings to policy in much of the empire, Izumi and his colleagues "enjoyed outsized influence in justifying the empire as a hierarchy of confraternal races ruled for their own benefit by the putatively superior Japanese." The US Occupation in the postwar allowed the continuation of the pursuit of "objective" knowledge for the Japanese human scientists, as well as opening new avenues for them. Kadia argues that "what changed after 1945 were the values understood to constitute objectivity," namely ideals vaunted as characteristically American: democracy, capitalism, and peace.  During the Cold War, Kadia reminds us, the US saw strategic potential in Japan's studies of East Asia and Oceania, and the Japanese academics largely "upheld the convenient fiction of their reluctant cooperation with and quiet opposition to the former government." To rehabilitate Japan's scholarly reputation, the Japanese academics were integrated into a new transnational intellectual community that both reflected and supported US hegemony, although some Japanese academics resisted the subordination of domestic progress to grand strategy.  Daigengna Duoer is a Ph.D. student at the Religious Studies Department, University of California, Santa Barbara. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history

New Books in East Asian Studies
Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia, "Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan" (Stanford UP, 2019)

New Books in East Asian Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 85:47


How did Japanese academics study their "fields" in places like Manchuria and Inner Mongolia in the transwar decades? How did they transform in the postwar, under the US Occupation, and after? Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan (Stanford UP, 2019) is the first monograph on the collective biography of this cohort of professional Japanese intellectuals, or in Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia's words, "the men of one age." Kadia observes that during the transwar decades (1930s-1060s), these "men of one age" jointly embraced a set of unchanging assumptions regarding epistemology that was anchored in the ideal of "objectivity." The scholarship, or gakujutsu, that they aimed to produce were concerned with the quest of universal laws governing human society and the natural world, the use of a comprehensively delineated method to assure rigor in pursuit of "truth," and impartiality. Those who studied the human sciences applied the ideal of "objectivity" to the study of Self and Others in Japanese colonized and occupied lands. Following the lives of these transwar human scientists into the fields, Kadia reveals that these "men of one age," such as Izumi Seiichi, were both creators and creations of imperial epistemology. Kadia points out that although the duration of Japanese imperial control was too short to apply their academic findings to policy in much of the empire, Izumi and his colleagues "enjoyed outsized influence in justifying the empire as a hierarchy of confraternal races ruled for their own benefit by the putatively superior Japanese." The US Occupation in the postwar allowed the continuation of the pursuit of "objective" knowledge for the Japanese human scientists, as well as opening new avenues for them. Kadia argues that "what changed after 1945 were the values understood to constitute objectivity," namely ideals vaunted as characteristically American: democracy, capitalism, and peace.  During the Cold War, Kadia reminds us, the US saw strategic potential in Japan's studies of East Asia and Oceania, and the Japanese academics largely "upheld the convenient fiction of their reluctant cooperation with and quiet opposition to the former government." To rehabilitate Japan's scholarly reputation, the Japanese academics were integrated into a new transnational intellectual community that both reflected and supported US hegemony, although some Japanese academics resisted the subordination of domestic progress to grand strategy.  Daigengna Duoer is a Ph.D. student at the Religious Studies Department, University of California, Santa Barbara. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/east-asian-studies

New Books Network
Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia, "Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan" (Stanford UP, 2019)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 85:47


How did Japanese academics study their "fields" in places like Manchuria and Inner Mongolia in the transwar decades? How did they transform in the postwar, under the US Occupation, and after? Into the Field: Human Scientists of Transwar Japan (Stanford UP, 2019) is the first monograph on the collective biography of this cohort of professional Japanese intellectuals, or in Miriam L. Kingsberg Kadia's words, "the men of one age." Kadia observes that during the transwar decades (1930s-1060s), these "men of one age" jointly embraced a set of unchanging assumptions regarding epistemology that was anchored in the ideal of "objectivity." The scholarship, or gakujutsu, that they aimed to produce were concerned with the quest of universal laws governing human society and the natural world, the use of a comprehensively delineated method to assure rigor in pursuit of "truth," and impartiality. Those who studied the human sciences applied the ideal of "objectivity" to the study of Self and Others in Japanese colonized and occupied lands. Following the lives of these transwar human scientists into the fields, Kadia reveals that these "men of one age," such as Izumi Seiichi, were both creators and creations of imperial epistemology. Kadia points out that although the duration of Japanese imperial control was too short to apply their academic findings to policy in much of the empire, Izumi and his colleagues "enjoyed outsized influence in justifying the empire as a hierarchy of confraternal races ruled for their own benefit by the putatively superior Japanese." The US Occupation in the postwar allowed the continuation of the pursuit of "objective" knowledge for the Japanese human scientists, as well as opening new avenues for them. Kadia argues that "what changed after 1945 were the values understood to constitute objectivity," namely ideals vaunted as characteristically American: democracy, capitalism, and peace.  During the Cold War, Kadia reminds us, the US saw strategic potential in Japan's studies of East Asia and Oceania, and the Japanese academics largely "upheld the convenient fiction of their reluctant cooperation with and quiet opposition to the former government." To rehabilitate Japan's scholarly reputation, the Japanese academics were integrated into a new transnational intellectual community that both reflected and supported US hegemony, although some Japanese academics resisted the subordination of domestic progress to grand strategy.  Daigengna Duoer is a Ph.D. student at the Religious Studies Department, University of California, Santa Barbara. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

Keen on Yoga Podcast
#37 - Keen on Yoga Podcast with Dena Kingsberg

Keen on Yoga Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2021 71:51


Dena Kingsberg has been studying and practicing traditional Ashtanga yoga for over 30 years.  She is a devoted long-term student of the late Sri K. Pattabhi Jois and is among the most respected and senior practitioners and teachers in the world. Dena has a disciplined, yet lyrical style of teaching. Her holistic approach looks beyond external form to inspire a passion for self-discovery and reflection.  She lives with her husband Jack, in the forest in the hinterland, beyond Byron Bay Australia in a stone and recycled timber home that they built with their own hands, over a few decades. Her ashtanga journey began at the age of 21 while she was spending from three to six months of each year in Mysore.  Transformation through the practice was her primary focus. Dena went from primary to intermediate, then all of advanced A with Guruji adding asanas one by one of advanced B until it was completed.  By this time she was the age of 33. Her practice took about 4 ½ hours. After 15 years practice she was blessed with the birth of her first child, Zoli and three years later followed by her brother Izac. Dena believes that the quality of breath relates to quality of life and that to breathe in leads to inspiration, creativity, illumination and awakening.  And that the development of breath capacity and control not only enhances respiratory function but sits at the heart of emotional well being and spiritual connectivity. Chanting is another important element to Dena, one which she has cultivated as a means to connect with divinity beyond and within as a spiritual practice unto itself.  Dena remains committed, deeply inspired and continuously amazed by the vast healing potential of Ashtanga as a life changing practice. She feels that yoga does not promise a life without hardship, sorrow, or pain, but it gives us tools to keep the mind steady through success and failure.

Ashtanga Dispatch Podcast
Yoga Podcast Ep. 54 || Dena Kingsberg

Ashtanga Dispatch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2020 45:23


Today we welcome a very special guest - a woman we hold dear as teacher, mentor, and most especially friend - Dena Kingsberg. Dena has been a devoted student of Ashtanga Yoga for over three decades. Her time spent as a practitioner is evident through her integrative and holistic teaching style. But her devotion and grace are never more apparent than when she closes her eyes, starts to softly hum, and begins to chant. From her homestead in the magical semi-tropics of Goonengerry, Australia - Dena joined us over Zoom. Which is a big change for Dena, who has in the past, purposely separated herself from the digital world, preferring more intimate, in-person encounters. Which of course, for many of us, hasn't been possible for most of 2020. And so Dena has begun exploring ways she might support those feeling isolated and alone. One way is this podcast. And another, an 8-week online chanting workshop that launches this month. You can find details on this as well as learn more about Dena, by visiting her website: www.dena.net.au The Ashtanga Dispatch Podcast is hosted, edited and produced by Peg Mulqueen and Meghan Powell. Music is by Mark Pilley www.arksong.net As always, thank you for listening and supporting. During these difficult times, we are here to support you. Please visit www.ashtangadispatch.com to learn more.

Overland Gamer The Podcast
Board Game Spotlight - Kingsburg from Fantasy Flight Games

Overland Gamer The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2020 11:09


Kingsberg from Fantasy Flight Games Players: 2-5 Playing Time: 90 min (BGG) Age: 13 + Designer: Andrea Chiarvesio and Luca lennaco Publisher: Fantasy Flight Games Game or Developer Games - https://www.fantasyflightgames.com/en/index/ Board Game Geek - https://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/27162/kingsburg Follow Overland Gamer https://www.facebook.com/groups/OverlandGamer on Facebook and let us know what you think. You can also find us on the interwebs at www.overlandgamer.com Thanks for listening to this week's episode. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/overlandgamer/support

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Ashtanga Dispatch Podcast
Uncharted Waters - with Dena Kingsberg

Ashtanga Dispatch Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2020 2:12


During these challenging times, we are here to support you. And so every Monday morning, we will try and bring you a message of hope and comfort - perhaps a meditation, a chant, or inspiring words - like this morning's with Dena Kingsberg. Dena's words were recorded (on an iPhone) during one of her last practice mornings before the shala temporarily closed due to the pandemic. We hope you continue to take quiet moments for yourself, staying well and keeping faith during through these uncharted waters. And if you need us, we are here for you. Visit ashtangadispatch.com

Advances in Women's Health
Having the Talk: Painful Sex Due to Menopause

Advances in Women's Health

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019


Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Guest: Brooke M. Faught, DNP, WHNP-BC,NCMP, IF Guest: Risa Kagan, MD, FACOG, CCD, NCMP Guest: James A. Simon, MD, CCD, NCMP, IF, FACOG An average of 37.5 million menopausal women in the US between the ages of 45 and 64 experience symptoms such as hot flashes and joint pain, but there are other symptoms that we rarely talk about: symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. Featuring a patient and a panel of experts, this discussion reviews strategies that can be used to help patients feel comfortable in bringing up their struggles with menopause along with how we can help relieve women from their pain. ©2019 NP-INR-US-00214 09/19

md menopause dnp rmd ccd painful sex ncmp reachmd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg focus on women's and men’s health medical industry feature women's health fridays™ advances in women's health sexmed women’s health update sheryl a kingsberg
Medical Industry Feature
Having the Talk: Painful Sex Due to Menopause

Medical Industry Feature

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019


Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Guest: Brooke M. Faught, DNP, WHNP-BC,NCMP, IF Guest: Risa Kagan, MD, FACOG, CCD, NCMP Guest: James A. Simon, MD, CCD, NCMP, IF, FACOG An average of 37.5 million menopausal women in the US between the ages of 45 and 64 experience symptoms such as hot flashes and joint pain, but there are other symptoms that we rarely talk about: symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. Featuring a patient and a panel of experts, this discussion reviews strategies that can be used to help patients feel comfortable in bringing up their struggles with menopause along with how we can help relieve women from their pain. ©2019 NP-INR-US-00214 09/19

md menopause dnp rmd ccd painful sex ncmp reachmd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg focus on women's and men’s health medical industry feature women's health fridays™ advances in women's health sexmed women’s health update sheryl a kingsberg
Focus on Women's and Men’s Health
Having the Talk: Painful Sex Due to Menopause

Focus on Women's and Men’s Health

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019


Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Guest: Brooke M. Faught, DNP, WHNP-BC,NCMP, IF Guest: Risa Kagan, MD, FACOG, CCD, NCMP Guest: James A. Simon, MD, CCD, NCMP, IF, FACOG An average of 37.5 million menopausal women in the US between the ages of 45 and 64 experience symptoms such as hot flashes and joint pain, but there are other symptoms that we rarely talk about: symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. Featuring a patient and a panel of experts, this discussion reviews strategies that can be used to help patients feel comfortable in bringing up their struggles with menopause along with how we can help relieve women from their pain. ©2019 NP-INR-US-00214 09/19

md menopause dnp rmd ccd painful sex ncmp reachmd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg focus on women's and men’s health medical industry feature women's health fridays™ advances in women's health sexmed women’s health update sheryl a kingsberg
SexMed
Having the Talk: Painful Sex Due to Menopause

SexMed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019


Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Guest: Brooke M. Faught, DNP, WHNP-BC,NCMP, IF Guest: Risa Kagan, MD, FACOG, CCD, NCMP Guest: James A. Simon, MD, CCD, NCMP, IF, FACOG An average of 37.5 million menopausal women in the US between the ages of 45 and 64 experience symptoms such as hot flashes and joint pain, but there are other symptoms that we rarely talk about: symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. Featuring a patient and a panel of experts, this discussion reviews strategies that can be used to help patients feel comfortable in bringing up their struggles with menopause along with how we can help relieve women from their pain. ©2019 NP-INR-US-00214 09/19

md menopause dnp rmd ccd painful sex ncmp reachmd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg focus on women's and men’s health medical industry feature women's health fridays™ advances in women's health sexmed women’s health update sheryl a kingsberg
Women’s Health Update
Having the Talk: Painful Sex Due to Menopause

Women’s Health Update

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019


Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Guest: Brooke M. Faught, DNP, WHNP-BC,NCMP, IF Guest: Risa Kagan, MD, FACOG, CCD, NCMP Guest: James A. Simon, MD, CCD, NCMP, IF, FACOG An average of 37.5 million menopausal women in the US between the ages of 45 and 64 experience symptoms such as hot flashes and joint pain, but there are other symptoms that we rarely talk about: symptoms like vaginal dryness and dyspareunia. Featuring a patient and a panel of experts, this discussion reviews strategies that can be used to help patients feel comfortable in bringing up their struggles with menopause along with how we can help relieve women from their pain. ©2019 NP-INR-US-00214 09/19

md menopause dnp rmd ccd painful sex ncmp reachmd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg focus on women's and men’s health medical industry feature women's health fridays™ advances in women's health sexmed women’s health update sheryl a kingsberg
Talk! with Audrey
Modernizing Menopause

Talk! with Audrey

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2019 7:44


One third of a woman’s life may be spent in menopause, yet few people talk about it. Silence around menopause can make women feel invisible, but it’s time to have this new era of voices heard. Lets change that by having a frank conversation to remove the stigma and empower the current and next generation of women to continue to be seen and heard as they experience menopause. My guests are Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg, PhD, chief of the division of behavioral medicine at MacDonald Women's Hospital/University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center and Shirley Weir, Founder of Menopausechicks dot com and author of Cracking Open the Perimenopause Conversation with your Doctor.    

Talk! with Audrey
Modernizing Menopause

Talk! with Audrey

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2019 7:44


One third of a woman’s life may be spent in menopause, yet few people talk about it. Silence around menopause can make women feel invisible, but it’s time to have this new era of voices heard. Lets change that by having a frank conversation to remove the stigma and empower the current and next generation of women to continue to be seen and heard as they experience menopause. My guests are Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg, PhD, chief of the division of behavioral medicine at MacDonald Women's Hospital/University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center and Shirley Weir, Founder of Menopausechicks dot com and author of Cracking Open the Perimenopause Conversation with your Doctor.    

Student Loan Planner
Dr. Zachary Kingsberg on starting your own practice

Student Loan Planner

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2019 35:43


Dr. Zachary Kingsberg is a dentist who, after graduating from the very expensive Nova Southeastern University, is now running his own dental practice startup in Dallas alongside his wife. In this episode, see how Zach began his startup journey, how he handled his student loans and the advice he’d give for an up-and-coming dentists on starting your own practice. In today’s episode, you'll find out: Zach’s journey into dental school How his associateship period played out How he and his wife prepared themselves to become startup practice owners How Zach went about acquiring patients The process of getting funding from a bank for a dental startup How demographics played into how Zach started his practice The issues he ran into trying to secure a mortgage Zach’s advice for refinancing student loans and getting a mortgage What he learned about running a dental practice in the first year How he handled marketing for his practice How running a bread-and-butter clinic has kept costs low Why Zach’s practice focuses on simple dentistry over cosmetics How income-driven repayment could have helped Zach’s loan applications His long-term goals for his practice Zach’s experience with hiring (and firing) employees The advice he’d give to a dentist associate considering a startup The importance of being willing to work hard as a new dentist Full show notes at: http://studentloanplanner.com/32

In the Ladies' Room with Dr. Donnica
61: Sheryl Kingsberg -- The Anxiety Epidemic in American Women

In the Ladies' Room with Dr. Donnica

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2018 55:54


All you have to do is watch the news for an hour on any given day & you’ll see why It’s no surprise a new study reveals 96% of American women are suffering from anxiety. Interestingly, 87 percent of the women surveyed have already gone through menopause or are currently perimenopausal, and 80 percent believe that menopause can cause anxiety.  And this is what we’re going to talk about with our guest today, Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg.

Focus on Women's and Men’s Health
Opening the Door to Discussing Dyspareunia with Your Patients

Focus on Women's and Men’s Health

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2017


Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg demonstrates counseling strategies clinicians can use with their patient when discussing dyspareunia in post-menopausal women. Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg is Chief of the Division of Behavioral Medicine in the Department of OB/GYN at University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center and Professor of Reproductive Biology and Psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in Cleveland, Ohio.

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Dentistry Uncensored with Howard Farran
818 The Disillusioned Dentist with Dr. Zachary Kingsberg : Dentistry Uncensored with Howard Farran

Dentistry Uncensored with Howard Farran

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 21, 2017 64:03


Dr. Kingsberg graduated from Nova Southeastern University in sunny South Florida in 2015 and has been practicing dentistry in Dallas, Texas since graduation. Dr. Kingsberg or Dr. Z is host of a new podcast called The Disillusioned Dentist. The disillusioned dentist podcast is designed for new grads, current dental students and pre-dental students with the focus of getting young grads out of student debt and into practice ownership as soon as possible! Dr. Z is a new father and is currently opening up a scratch start practice with his wife (who is also a dentist) next month.

Love Bites
Episode 40: What's UP (or down) With Our Libido? We ask Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg

Love Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2016 36:21


It happens. One day, our bodies are crying “I NEED SEX!” with such force that we can barely think of anything else. The next, we couldn’t get in on if our top-of-the-list celebrity was standing in front of us in nothing but their knickers and a smile. What is up with that? On today’s show, we spill on some personal wins, with Ben being in a relationship and Jacqueline deciding to extend her social media / dating app cleanse for another 50 days. Then we’re joined by Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg, who spells out why some of us (cough, Jacqueline) get really frisky in the hotter summer months, why lack of libido can affect any of us at any time, and how we can start a conversation with our doctors about what we’re thinking and feeling regarding a drastic change in sex drive.

depression sex libido sex drive appetites love bites kingsberg jacqueline raposo ben rosenblatt
Focus on Women's and Men’s Health
Flibanserin 101: Benefits vs Risks for Women with Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder

Focus on Women's and Men’s Health

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2015


Host: Michael Krychman, MD Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Flibanserin's approval by the FDA for women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), touted by the press as the "Pink Viagra," created an enormous amount of media hype across the nation. But the facts on this drug's mechanism of action, intended benefits, adverse effects, and efficacy borne in clinical trials have gone largely under the radar. Joining Dr. Michael Krychman to discuss the rise of flibanserin and its key takeaways for clinicians is Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg, Chief of the Division of Behavioral Medicine in the Department of OB/GYN and Professor in the Departments of Reproductive Biology and Psychiatry at Case Medical Center University Hospitals in Cleveland, Ohio.

women professor ohio benefits chief cleveland fda risks psychiatry ob gyn departments rmd behavioral medicine reachmd reproductive biology hsdd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg hypoactive sexual desire disorder focus on women's and men’s health flibanserin women's health fridays™ pink viagra sexmed sheryl a kingsberg
SexMed
Flibanserin 101: Benefits vs Risks for Women with Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder

SexMed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2015


Host: Michael Krychman, MD Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Flibanserin's approval by the FDA for women with hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD), touted by the press as the "Pink Viagra," created an enormous amount of media hype across the nation. But the facts on this drug's mechanism of action, intended benefits, adverse effects, and efficacy borne in clinical trials have gone largely under the radar. Joining Dr. Michael Krychman to discuss the rise of flibanserin and its key takeaways for clinicians is Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg, Chief of the Division of Behavioral Medicine in the Department of OB/GYN and Professor in the Departments of Reproductive Biology and Psychiatry at Case Medical Center University Hospitals in Cleveland, Ohio.

women professor ohio benefits chief cleveland fda risks psychiatry ob gyn departments rmd behavioral medicine reachmd reproductive biology hsdd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg hypoactive sexual desire disorder focus on women's and men’s health flibanserin women's health fridays™ pink viagra sexmed sheryl a kingsberg
Clinician's Roundtable
Hypoactive Sexual Desire Disorder: The Impact on the Midlife Woman

Clinician's Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 22, 2015


Host: Prathima Setty, MD Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Hypoactive sexual desire disorder (HSDD) is the most prevalent sexual disorder for women of all ages, but it is also one of the most difficult to address. Clinicians need to understand the implications and address the concerns of their patients. Host Dr. Prathima Setty discusses this topic with Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD, Chief, Division of Behavioral Medicine, Department of Obstetrics/Gynecology, University Hospitals Case Medical Center, and Professor, Departments of Reproductive Biology and Psychiatry, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH. About NAMS The interview was conducted live at The North American Menopause Society (NAMS) 2014 meeting. Founded in 1989, NAMS is North America's leading nonprofit organization dedicated to promoting the health and quality of life of all women during midlife and beyond through an understanding of menopause and healthy aging. Its multidisciplinary membership of 2,000 leaders in the field-including clinical and basic science experts from medicine, nursing, sociology, psychology, nutrition, anthropology, epidemiology, pharmacy, and education-makes NAMS uniquely qualified to serve as the definitive resource for health professionals and the public for accurate, unbiased information about menopause and healthy aging. To learn more about NAMS, visit www.menopause.org.

professor phd north america chief cleveland founded psychiatry clinicians departments case western reserve university rmd behavioral medicine obstetrics gynecology nams reachmd reproductive biology midlife woman hsdd ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg clinician's roundtable hypoactive sexual desire disorder north american menopause society nams sheryl a kingsberg
2013-2014 School of Law Lecture Series
Posthumous Motherhood? Brain Death and Pregnancy

2013-2014 School of Law Lecture Series

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2014 50:24


March 3, 2014 Sponsor The Elena and Miles Zaremski Law-Medicine Forum Speakers Kavita Shah Arora, MD, MBE Mark P. Aulisio, PhD Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD

New Books in History
Miriam Kingsberg, “Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History” (University of California Press, 2013)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2014 67:15


Miriam Kingsberg‘s fascinating new book offers both a political and social history of modern Japan and a global history of narcotics in the modern world. Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History (University of California Press, 2013) locates the emergence of a series of three “moral crusades” against narcotics that each accompanied a perceived crisis in collective values and political legitimacy in nineteenth and twentieth century Japan. In the first moral crisis after the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-5, opium became a symbol of difference between Japan and an “Other” epitomized by Qing China, as Japan sought to “leave Asia” and “enter” the West. Here, Kingsberg traces a series of attempts to regulate drug use in Taiwan in the wake of Japan’s transformation into a formal empire. Between the end of WWI and Japan’s defeat in WWII, Japan saw its second moral crisis as it navigated the most protracted and intense moral crusade against narcotics in its history. The central chapters of Kingsberg’s book trace this second crisis, paying special attention to Japanese colonial rule in Korea and in the Kwantung Leased Territory (KLT) in southern Manchuria as Korea became the “global capital of morphine” and the KLT port handled “the second-highest volume of banned drugs in the world.” The third moral crisis brings us to the end of Moral Nation and the thick of the “hiropon age” of the 1950s, when methamphetamine production and usage skyrocketed in postwar Japan and the nation saw its first full-fledged domestic drug plight. Kingsberg locates a changing cast of “moral entrepreneurs” who motivated these three crises, shedding light on the formative roles of merchants and mass society in this chapter of global narcotic history. It is a wonderful, meticulously researched book that contributes significantly to the histories of Japan, of drugs, and of global politics. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

japan west japanese korea taiwan wwii wwi narcotics california press university of california global history manchuria klt sino japanese war qing china history university kingsberg miriam kingsberg moral nation modern japan kwantung leased territory klt moral nation
New Books in Public Policy
Miriam Kingsberg, “Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History” (University of California Press, 2013)

New Books in Public Policy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2014 67:15


Miriam Kingsberg‘s fascinating new book offers both a political and social history of modern Japan and a global history of narcotics in the modern world. Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History (University of California Press, 2013) locates the emergence of a series of three “moral crusades” against narcotics that each accompanied a perceived crisis in collective values and political legitimacy in nineteenth and twentieth century Japan. In the first moral crisis after the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-5, opium became a symbol of difference between Japan and an “Other” epitomized by Qing China, as Japan sought to “leave Asia” and “enter” the West. Here, Kingsberg traces a series of attempts to regulate drug use in Taiwan in the wake of Japan’s transformation into a formal empire. Between the end of WWI and Japan’s defeat in WWII, Japan saw its second moral crisis as it navigated the most protracted and intense moral crusade against narcotics in its history. The central chapters of Kingsberg’s book trace this second crisis, paying special attention to Japanese colonial rule in Korea and in the Kwantung Leased Territory (KLT) in southern Manchuria as Korea became the “global capital of morphine” and the KLT port handled “the second-highest volume of banned drugs in the world.” The third moral crisis brings us to the end of Moral Nation and the thick of the “hiropon age” of the 1950s, when methamphetamine production and usage skyrocketed in postwar Japan and the nation saw its first full-fledged domestic drug plight. Kingsberg locates a changing cast of “moral entrepreneurs” who motivated these three crises, shedding light on the formative roles of merchants and mass society in this chapter of global narcotic history. It is a wonderful, meticulously researched book that contributes significantly to the histories of Japan, of drugs, and of global politics. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

japan west japanese korea taiwan wwii wwi narcotics california press university of california global history manchuria klt sino japanese war qing china history university kingsberg miriam kingsberg moral nation modern japan kwantung leased territory klt moral nation
New Books in Drugs, Addiction and Recovery
Miriam Kingsberg, “Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History” (University of California Press, 2013)

New Books in Drugs, Addiction and Recovery

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2014 67:15


Miriam Kingsberg‘s fascinating new book offers both a political and social history of modern Japan and a global history of narcotics in the modern world. Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History (University of California Press, 2013) locates the emergence of a series of three “moral crusades” against narcotics that each accompanied a perceived crisis in collective values and political legitimacy in nineteenth and twentieth century Japan. In the first moral crisis after the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-5, opium became a symbol of difference between Japan and an “Other” epitomized by Qing China, as Japan sought to “leave Asia” and “enter” the West. Here, Kingsberg traces a series of attempts to regulate drug use in Taiwan in the wake of Japan's transformation into a formal empire. Between the end of WWI and Japan's defeat in WWII, Japan saw its second moral crisis as it navigated the most protracted and intense moral crusade against narcotics in its history. The central chapters of Kingsberg's book trace this second crisis, paying special attention to Japanese colonial rule in Korea and in the Kwantung Leased Territory (KLT) in southern Manchuria as Korea became the “global capital of morphine” and the KLT port handled “the second-highest volume of banned drugs in the world.” The third moral crisis brings us to the end of Moral Nation and the thick of the “hiropon age” of the 1950s, when methamphetamine production and usage skyrocketed in postwar Japan and the nation saw its first full-fledged domestic drug plight. Kingsberg locates a changing cast of “moral entrepreneurs” who motivated these three crises, shedding light on the formative roles of merchants and mass society in this chapter of global narcotic history. It is a wonderful, meticulously researched book that contributes significantly to the histories of Japan, of drugs, and of global politics. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/drugs-addiction-and-recovery

japan west japanese korea taiwan wwii wwi narcotics california press university of california global history manchuria klt sino japanese war qing china history university kingsberg miriam kingsberg moral nation modern japan kwantung leased territory klt moral nation
New Books Network
Miriam Kingsberg, “Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History” (University of California Press, 2013)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2014 67:15


Miriam Kingsberg‘s fascinating new book offers both a political and social history of modern Japan and a global history of narcotics in the modern world. Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History (University of California Press, 2013) locates the emergence of a series of three “moral crusades” against narcotics that each accompanied a perceived crisis in collective values and political legitimacy in nineteenth and twentieth century Japan. In the first moral crisis after the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-5, opium became a symbol of difference between Japan and an “Other” epitomized by Qing China, as Japan sought to “leave Asia” and “enter” the West. Here, Kingsberg traces a series of attempts to regulate drug use in Taiwan in the wake of Japan’s transformation into a formal empire. Between the end of WWI and Japan’s defeat in WWII, Japan saw its second moral crisis as it navigated the most protracted and intense moral crusade against narcotics in its history. The central chapters of Kingsberg’s book trace this second crisis, paying special attention to Japanese colonial rule in Korea and in the Kwantung Leased Territory (KLT) in southern Manchuria as Korea became the “global capital of morphine” and the KLT port handled “the second-highest volume of banned drugs in the world.” The third moral crisis brings us to the end of Moral Nation and the thick of the “hiropon age” of the 1950s, when methamphetamine production and usage skyrocketed in postwar Japan and the nation saw its first full-fledged domestic drug plight. Kingsberg locates a changing cast of “moral entrepreneurs” who motivated these three crises, shedding light on the formative roles of merchants and mass society in this chapter of global narcotic history. It is a wonderful, meticulously researched book that contributes significantly to the histories of Japan, of drugs, and of global politics. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

japan west japanese korea taiwan wwii wwi narcotics california press university of california global history manchuria klt sino japanese war qing china history university kingsberg miriam kingsberg moral nation modern japan kwantung leased territory klt moral nation
New Books in World Affairs
Miriam Kingsberg, “Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History” (University of California Press, 2013)

New Books in World Affairs

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2014 67:15


Miriam Kingsberg‘s fascinating new book offers both a political and social history of modern Japan and a global history of narcotics in the modern world. Moral Nation: Modern Japan and Narcotics in Global History (University of California Press, 2013) locates the emergence of a series of three “moral crusades” against narcotics that each accompanied a perceived crisis in collective values and political legitimacy in nineteenth and twentieth century Japan. In the first moral crisis after the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-5, opium became a symbol of difference between Japan and an “Other” epitomized by Qing China, as Japan sought to “leave Asia” and “enter” the West. Here, Kingsberg traces a series of attempts to regulate drug use in Taiwan in the wake of Japan’s transformation into a formal empire. Between the end of WWI and Japan’s defeat in WWII, Japan saw its second moral crisis as it navigated the most protracted and intense moral crusade against narcotics in its history. The central chapters of Kingsberg’s book trace this second crisis, paying special attention to Japanese colonial rule in Korea and in the Kwantung Leased Territory (KLT) in southern Manchuria as Korea became the “global capital of morphine” and the KLT port handled “the second-highest volume of banned drugs in the world.” The third moral crisis brings us to the end of Moral Nation and the thick of the “hiropon age” of the 1950s, when methamphetamine production and usage skyrocketed in postwar Japan and the nation saw its first full-fledged domestic drug plight. Kingsberg locates a changing cast of “moral entrepreneurs” who motivated these three crises, shedding light on the formative roles of merchants and mass society in this chapter of global narcotic history. It is a wonderful, meticulously researched book that contributes significantly to the histories of Japan, of drugs, and of global politics. Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

japan west japanese korea taiwan wwii wwi narcotics california press university of california global history manchuria klt sino japanese war qing china history university kingsberg miriam kingsberg moral nation modern japan kwantung leased territory klt moral nation
SexMed
Sexual Pain Disorders: Etiology and Therapy

SexMed

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2010


Guest: Sheryl A. Kingsberg, PhD Host: Maureen Whelihan, MD Pain is one of the most significant barriers to pleasurable sex— and very common, affecting 15 to 25 percent of women at some point during their lifetime. Dyspareunia and vaginismus are two of the most common pain disorders. What are the signs and symptoms, and what are the questions you can ask your patients in order to assess whether they're having pain and what type? Dr. Sheryl Kingsberg, chief of the division of behavioral medicine in the department of OB/GYN at Case Medical Center University Hospitals in Cleveland, Ohio, joins host Dr. Maureen Whelihan to talk about treating dyspareunia and vaginismus through medication, behavioral therapy and pelvic floor physical therapy.

ohio therapy cleveland disorders ob gyn pain management rmd etiology reachmd general medicine and primary care dyspareunia sexual pain ob/gyn and women's health kingsberg sexmed sheryl a kingsberg
Sex Ed For Sex Med
Why and how to discuss sexual health with all patients

Sex Ed For Sex Med

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 29:03


In this inaugural Podcast of Sex Ed for Sex Med we will be interviewing Dr Sheryl Kingsberg, an international expert in sexual medicine. We will discuss “why is it important to bring up sexual health history with every patient”. She will explain how to accomplish this even with minimal skills in sexual medicine. She will discuss the steps outlined in a “process of care” consensus by the International Society for the Study of women sexual health. She will also discuss categories of sexual dysfunction as well as their evaluation and management.Show notes and articles discussed can be found here: https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1vpBDiJR4AAOilfLPaetblk_ZIMeW6fq5?usp=sharingTo schedule a virtual appointment with Dr. Kingsberg call 216-844-5086.To comment or inquire about today's discussion go to: ohiosexualhealthcollaborative@gmail.com