Podcasts about mccombe

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Best podcasts about mccombe

Latest podcast episodes about mccombe

The Crux of it
Hinsh is god, that's the pod!

The Crux of it

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 52:27


The podcast episode where we completely get carried away but after so many lows in the recent history of York City Football Club, why shouldn't we. Our panel for this show is Jim Calverley from the supporters trust, regular sharp shooter Mark Debnam and special guest, Steve Ovenden aka the original Yorkie the Lion. Topical discussion points include the potential and predictions for the remainder of the season, is this the meanest centre back partnership since Lowe and McCombe, are there really no weak links in the squad?

Continuum Audio
Neurologic Manifestations of Rheumatologic Disorders With Dr. Jennifer McCombe

Continuum Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 25:14


Basic knowledge of the common CNS manifestations of rheumatologic diseases and sarcoidosis is important. In the context of many systemic inflammatory diseases, CNS disease may be a presenting feature or occur without systemic manifestations of the disease, making familiarity with these diseases even more important. In this episode, Kait Nevel, MD speaks with Jennifer A. McCombe, MD, author of the article “Neurologic Manifestations of Rheumatologic Disorders,” in the Continuum® August 2024 Autoimmune Neurology issue. Dr. Nevel is a Continuum® Audio interviewer and a neurologist and neuro-oncologist at Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis, Indiana. Dr. McCombe is an associate professor in the Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine at the University of Alberta, Edmonton in Alberta, Canada. Additional Resources Read the article: Neurologic Manifestations of Rheumatologic Disorders Subscribe to Continuum: shop.lww.com/Continuum Earn CME (available only to AAN members): continpub.com/AudioCME Continuum® Aloud (verbatim audio-book style recordings of articles available only to Continuum® subscribers): continpub.com/Aloud More about the American Academy of Neurology: aan.com Social Media facebook.com/continuumcme @ContinuumAAN Host: @headacheMD Guest: @Div_Dubey Transcript Full episode transcript available here Dr Jones: This is Dr Lyell Jones, Editor-in-Chief of Continuum, the premier topic-based neurology clinical review and CME journal from the American Academy of Neurology.  Thank you for joining us on Continuum Audio, which features conversations with Continuum's guest editors and authors who are the leading experts in their fields. Subscribers to the Continuum journal can read the full article or listen to verbatim recordings of the article and have access to exclusive interviews not featured on the podcast. Please visit the link in the episode notes for more information on the article, subscribing to the journal, and how to get CME.   Dr Nevel: Hello. This is Dr Kait Nevel. Today, I'm interviewing Dr Jennifer McCombe about her article on neurosarcoidosis and neurologic involvement of rheumatological disorders, which appears in the August 2024 Continuum issue on autoimmune neurology. Welcome to the podcast, and I would love to have you introduce yourself to the audience.   Dr McCombe: Well, thank you, and thank you for having me. As you said, my name is Jen McCombe. I'm a neurologist in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, where I spend kind of a third of my time in teaching roles (I coordinate the undergraduate block for our medical school there), I spend about a third of my time in a neuroinflammatory clinic in Edmonton, Alberta, and then about a third of my time doing clinical research.   Dr Nevel: Wonderful. Well, thank you so much for being here today and for chatting with me about your article on this topic.   Dr McCombe: Thank you for having me.   Dr Nevel: To start off, can you share with the listeners a little bit about your career path?   Dr McCombe: Absolutely. Yeah. So, I've had, uh, a bit of a circuitous career path. I did my medical school in Queens (which is in Eastern Canada, in Kingston, Ontario) and then went back to Edmonton, Alberta, for my residency (in Canada, we have a five-year residency program, so a little bit different than the US), but finished my residency and then did a master's degree in Public Health at Johns Hopkins while completing clinical research in HIV, actually, and did this thing we call the Clinical Scholar Training Program – so, kind of like a fellowship, but a little bit more, you know, research and academic-based. So, when I first started, I was focused more on neuroinfectious diseases, and that's kind of what my career path looked like at the time - but, actually, shortly after I finished my residency program, I also had my first child, and he, unfortunately, developed opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome, and at the time (this was in 2010), it was a rather rare condition, so, I ended up finding myself having to become a bit of a neuroinflammatory disease specialist at the same time. So, at that point, I transitioned into working in the neuroinflammatory clinic with some mentorship but was getting all of the kind of weird and wonderful referrals and diagnostic dilemmas from my colleagues who recognized I kind of developed some expertise, and so decided (actually, mid-career) to take a sabbatical, and in 2021, completed a fellowship in autoimmune neurology at the Mayo Clinic. So, I finished that quite recently and then went back, and now I'm feeling much more, I guess, confident, too. Sometimes, you wonder about, you know, the choices you're making. I recognize most of the conditions I'm dealing with don't have, in fact, any evidence for their treatment, and that was confirmed when I went to the Mayo Clinic and found that, really, it was just trying to gain an understanding of the disease process to make a rational choice to medications and treatments. So, now, I'm back and kind of trying to focus a little bit more on some clinical research in that area since I've kind of solidified that expertise.   Dr Nevel: Wow. Well, thank you for sharing with us your career path and how, you know, unexpected life events kind of changed your interests or molded your interests (changed kind of the things that you became expert in, you know), and being fluid in your career path and willing to kind of take a break and reassess and get additional training. That's really inspiring to, I think, to me, and probably to a lot of listeners, that you can always, you know, develop more expertise in the more niche area or additional area no matter where you are in your stage of life or career path.   Dr McCombe: Yeah.   Dr Nevel: So, can you tell us a little bit more about - you know, you shared with us kind of autoimmune inflammatory disorders and how you became interested in that, neurosarcoidosis, specifically (you know the article focuses on that), and what's your background in neurosarcoidosis, how you became interested in that specifically and in neurologic manifestations of rheumatologic disorders?   Dr McCombe: I started in our neuroinflammatory clinic over a decade ago, and, you know, at the time, a lot of the expertise in any of these neuroinflammatory disorders was quite spread out over the country, and so, as I kind to alluded to before, often some of the more complicated patients where there wasn't necessarily clear-cut evidence or even, you know, a fellowship path to get there, I would end up getting referrals for - and so, I developed quite a cohort of patients with central nervous system primarily, but other types of neuroinflammatory and autoimmune neurologic diseases, and part of that cohort was a rather large (and still growing) group of patients with neurosarcoidosis. And so, I kind of developed some practical expertise, although, as you can see in the article (and as I'm sure you all know), the approach to the treatment is extremely variable. One of the most telling things is when we were at the Mayo Clinic, one of my co-fellows actually pulled all of the neurologists in neuroinflammation at all of the Mayo Clinic sites and asked them, you know, what is your treatment approach to a patient with neurosarcoidosis, and I think got twelve completely different responses as to the medications chosen and the length of time for the tapers and things like that. So, you know, it is very much a part of neurologic disease treatment that we still really don't have great evidence for, and although we do have some kind of rational choices that we can make based on other types of evidence, so -   Dr Nevel: Yeah.   Dr McCombe: And I enjoy working with patients with these types of diseases where we can kind of work together to come up with a treatment plan that makes sense for them and also makes sense based on whatever evidence we do have at this time.   Dr Nevel: Yeah. So, moving on to the article a little bit, knowing that this is a area of neurology where there's a lot of, you know, maybe personal expertise and experience but not a ton of data or evidence to necessarily guide our standardization to our treatments and approach, what do you think is the most important clinical takeaway from your article for our listeners?   Dr McCombe: Well, I mentioned before I coordinate the neuro block for our undergraduate program here, so I've developed over the years (I've been doing that for a number of years) a curriculum that's all based on, kind of, that approach to - and I like to do it that way because it's very practical. I like the students to be able to basically take their class notes and then go to the emergency department on their first shift as a clerk and, you know, use their approach to headache that I've developed for them to kind of take a clinical history and examine a patient with that sort of problem. And so, similar to that, I tried to do an approach to, you know, a couple of the more common presentations that would make you think of a rheumatologic condition or neurosarcoidosis in looking at the approach to CNS vasculitis and the approach to, uh, pachymeningitis - and these are difficult differentials for lots of neurologists, because it really relies on a lot of medicine knowledge, and we graduate from our residencies slightly more confident in our medicine knowledge, because we get a lot of that in our residencies. But as neurologists, as we go through our careers, we get much more confident in our areas of specialty, and at least for myself and many of my colleagues, much less confident in other things like general medicine. And so, it's difficult, because you have to face your areas of potentially less confident knowledge and really think about that in the differential - and so, I think, you know, I put those two big “approach to” sections in there, because they're the most relevant for the conditions that I was covering. But, I think also what I would say to a learner or a more experienced neurologist who might be reading the article, kind of pick out the little things that you might add to your own kind of approach to - you know, when you see that person with an ataxia, remember that Sjogren syndrome is one of the things you might consider that could be a treatable cause, or you want to see a sensory neuronopathy, don't just think paraneoplastic – again, Sjogren syndrome. So, kind of pick out those little pearls and add them to your approach to that patient that we all see, and I think that would be my biggest takeaway.   Dr Nevel: Yeah. Thank you. So, kind of like, keep this information from the article in mind so that you keep rheumatologic disorders in mind as a possibility when you're approaching a patient with whatever neurologic symptoms they're presenting with. So, what do you think is challenging? You kind of already mentioned a little bit, you know, just that it stretches us maybe into the medicine arena and so maybe stretches our medical knowledge, especially as we become more subspecialized or focused in neurology - but what is challenging about identifying, diagnosing neurologic symptoms as being related or due to an underlying rheumatologic disorder?   Dr McCombe: Absolutely. Yeah. Well, as you said, you know, it forces us to kind of face that medicine stuff that we might not be as comfortable with, but I think what else is challenging is that, sometimes, those medical clues aren't there. For the rheumatologic disorders for the most part, they are. Sjogren's is potentially a little bit different in that, potentially, the symptoms are less obvious or a little bit more subtle. But, in particular, with neurosarcoidosis, there's a distinct proportion of the patients that won't, in fact, have any systemic complications of their underlying disease, and so, you have to think about it even when the clues aren't there. That's why you have to add it to those kind of differential diagnoses where it might be considered, because those systemic clues that we all rely on when we do our review of systems and we ask about rashes and joint pain and lung issues, and these sorts of things may not be there - and so, you still have to think about it even when it might be completely isolated to the central nervous system.   Dr Nevel: What is our understanding of why some patients with rheumatologic disorders develop neurologic involvement? Do we have an understanding? Do we know why some patients do and some patients don't? I know that's, you know, kind of, uh - that's a tough question, but that was something that I thought of as I was reading your article, like, why does this happen to some people?   Dr McCombe: Absolutely. I mean, I think, potentially, it's a little bit more clear for some of them, like rheumatoid arthritis, because, typically, if you develop a CNS complication of this, it's, in fact, just because you've had the disease for a very long time, and often, it's uncontrolled, and so you think about the disease “spreading” now to the central nervous system - but for other conditions, like neurosarcoidosis, it is much less clear, and even if you look at the epidemiologic patterns for that, it makes it even more muddied in that in some populations, it appears that they develop more central nervous system disease, whereas in others, less. And so, why that is the case and why certain individuals might develop this complication of these diseases I think is yet to be seen.   Dr Nevel: Yeah, that's always the crux of things if we can figure out the why, then maybe we could prevent it, right?   Dr McCombe: Million-dollar question always.   Dr Nevel: Always. So, what do you find the most intriguing about neurologic involvement of rheumatologic disorders?   Dr McCombe: Well, I think one of the things that, really, I mean, for neurosarcoidosis in particular, so many patients do so well, and that's what I really like about it. You know, you see patients who present with an incredible burden of disease radiologically, and yet, don't look nearly as sick as they should when they're sitting in front of you. And then, you start them on therapies and some of them do so well, and even those with relatively devastating deficits, or moderate disease who do have neurologic symptoms, have a remarkable improvement in their neurologic symptoms with treatment. And so, that's always something that's quite rewarding when you get to see these patients in follow-up, and they're generally quite thankful because they're doing so well. And it's different from many of the neurologic diseases that we treat. I mean, in autoimmune neurology, we're lucky because we do have a number of diseases that are quite treatable and patients can have wonderful outcomes. But, you know, it's always scary when we see patients with devastating neurologic signs and it's great to see improvement with treatment. And so, that really draws me to it.   Dr Nevel: Yeah, absolutely. That's really rewarding when you're able to help somebody get better in such a profound way.   Dr McCombe: Mm hmm.   Dr Nevel: What is one common misconception about neurologic manifestations of rheumatologic disorders? Or what do you think is not well understood by treating clinicians?   Dr McCombe: I think probably one of the things I see the most is, sometimes, an undertreatment of the patient. And so, I see patients who, you know, other clinicians may have seen and have made the diagnosis, and perhaps it's a lack of confidence in the diagnosis and so they kind of want somebody else with a subspecialty to kind of confirm the diagnosis, but that treatment hasn't been initiated despite pathological confirmation on biopsy of another tissue. And these patients, like I alluded to before, they do well, but you need to treat them and you need to treat them adequately, and when their symptoms are quite impairing, you need to treat them adequately now. And so I think, sometimes, that delay in starting a second-line therapy and relying on steroids for too long - those sorts of things can really expose a patient to a lot of different side effects and to a lot of different complications that they may not have had, too. So, that's why I spent some time focusing on the treatment, because I think just gaining a little bit of comfort with some of these more common second-line medications is a good thing, because starting those early, I think, makes sense because you can really save the patient a lot. And then, the other thing, too, is that when you're using steroids, think about all of the systemic things that you're causing - think about the increased risk of infection and the fact that you need to prophylax for certain infections, think about bone health, think about protecting the lining of someone's stomach - so not only kind of thinking about your disease in isolation and what you need to do for treatment, but that you need to ensure that you're appropriately prescribing the patient all of the things they need to do to protect themselves during these times.   Dr Nevel: Yeah. I think that's so important. And I'm glad that you brought that up, because I think, unfortunately, many of us have seen a patient who ended up having PJP pneumonia (or something like that) because they weren't put on antibiotic coverage for prolonged steroid use or, you know, bone health - all of that is really important to think about. So, this may be entering a territory where there's no, you know, great evidence, but you mentioned, you know, starting kind of that maintenance or second-line agent - when do you decide to do that in patients? And maybe we can focus (since it gets a little broad), but, you know, in a patient with neurosarcoidosis, let's say - when you're starting the steroids, when do you decide, okay, this person is also going to need a maintenance therapy? Is that something that you do at the beginning when you're starting the steroids, or is that something that you think about later on depending on how their course goes?   Dr McCombe: Yeah. In my practice, I do it at the outset - again, because I'm quite focused on, you know, as soon as I get them on it, getting people off steroids - and so I start essentially almost all of my patients on it unless there's some other contraindication or complication to their disease. And because I deal with central nervous system complications in the vast majority of my patients, I'm starting a TNF-a inhibitor as well as methotrexate, and that's because I see a lot of patients with cord disease and significant brain disease, and so I want to treat them kind of more aggressively from the outset. And so, typically, they'll be on steroids, um, a TNF-a inhibitor, as well as methotrexate, and then I just back off, actually, as they do well. And so, I try to taper the steroids quite quickly over the course of just a number of weeks, or kind of two to three months at most. I maintain the TNF-a inhibitor, and then in some patients, depending on how they're doing, I might eventually stop the methotrexate. Some patients tolerate it so well that we don't for a number of months - other patients want to try to minimize their medications as quick as they can. So, that's my personal practice. In the province where I live, we don't have to worry about access to these medications, and so I understand that that might be an issue in some centers where people practice and have different access and different funding. Of course, I live in a country where we have universal healthcare, and in our province, I have very good access to these medications and they're funded from my patients regardless of socioeconomic status, and so I have the luxury of making these choices and I understand that other people might not, but that's my personal practice and I find it works quite well in the vast majority of patients.   Dr Nevel: Yeah. And you bring up a really good point that, you know, access to some of these medications for patients with CNS manifestations of sarcoidosis, neurosarcoidosis, sometimes can be challenging to treating the patient with medications that you feel like would be best for them. But that's wonderful that you don't have those access issues where you live. How long do you typically continue the TNF-a inhibitor in patients, since you mentioned, you know, tapering off the steroids, tapering off the methotrexate, potentially depending on patient tolerance and course. What's your approach to the TNF-a inhibitor?   Dr McCombe: Yeah, so, of course I follow them clinically, and then radiologically as well, and it's really satisfying if you can see the resolution of their symptoms as well as resolution of the abnormalities and the MRI, so I let that guide me a little bit. But, in most patients, I keep them on therapy for about one to two years, and then at that point, see if I can cease it in some patients. And I, again, continue to follow them radiologically and clinically after I cease it so that I can ensure that I'm catching their disease more quickly if it does come back and then can just reinitiate therapy, but in lots of patients you're able to stop the medication and they have persisting, kind of, disease freedom after that, and so they don't need to be on anything.   Dr Nevel: Yeah, great. And I'm almost hesitant to focus so much on neurosarcoidosis. (It was the rheumatologic manifestation that you talked about the most in your article.) I'm going to put in a plug for everybody to read your article so that they can read about neurologic manifestations of rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren's, lupus, Behcet's - many more things. But focusing on neurosarcoidosis, it can be difficult in my experience to definitively diagnose, and people who have neurosarcoidosis particularly, and people who don't seem to have any systemic manifestations or, you know, imaging findings consistent with sarcoidosis - can you share your approach with us? And you outlined this in your article nicely, too, but your personal approach to patients with suspected neurosarcoidosis, and how you make that clinical decision to treat somebody with possible neurosarcoidosis, somebody who maybe you're not able to get pathologic evidence on?   Dr McCombe: Absolutely. Yeah, those ones are difficult. And, you know, whenever possible (as I mentioned in my article), I think pathological evidence of a diagnosis is important, because then when you find yourself a year down the road and a treatment path and you have uncertainty, it's much more difficult to consider continuing medications that can have quite a number of side effects when you're not absolutely certain about that diagnosis. But, in some patients, you know, I've had patients who might have nondiagnostic biopsies (if you attempt to do a biopsy), or they have disease in a site that really just isn't amenable to biopsy, or they have some other reason they can't have a biopsy. So, how I approach that is that, you know, if you think about possible neurosarcoidosis similar to any other nondiagnosed, you know, blow out-like lesion (for lack of a better term) in the CNS, if it's steroid-responsive, I think that kind of going down a path of treating it as a steroid-responsive lesion is kind of the approach that I take - so the diagnosis in the chart might be possible neurosarcoidosis, but in the back of my mind, I'm just thinking of kind of a steroid-responsive nondiagnostic or idiopathic lesion. So, I then follow that up typically with something like methotrexate (so, a more broader- spectrum immunosuppressant-type medication), and if the methotrexate is able to maintain the response that the steroids initiated, then eventually get them off the steroids. And so, you know, if I think about my patients that I've treated in the past, if they have a diagnosis of possible neurosarcoidosis, I probably don't start a TNF-a inhibitor as quickly in them, because in the back of my mind, I'm always wondering what type of inflammatory lesion this is, but that steroid responsiveness really helps me decide to start a second-line or maintenance therapy and then, typically, in those patients, as I mentioned, I'll start something like methotrexate a little bit more soon.   Dr Nevel: Yeah, great. Thanks for sharing that with us. So, what do you think comes next in this field? What excites you? Where do you think our next kind of development or understanding or breakthrough, whether it's diagnostic or treatment-wise?   Dr McCombe: I think, in the field, you know, any immunologic diseases, we've been really gaining a much better understanding of pathophysiology, and that's honestly what excites me the most, when you can know precisely what part of the immune system is at play here (whether it's, you know, complement-mediated or antibody-mediated) and then being able to then rationally choose medications based on a really clear understanding of the disease is something that I think is kind of novel in a way. For so many years, we would use kind of big broad-spectrum immunosuppression - even in multiple sclerosis, still, we use medications that, historically, we've found to be helpful - but we don't have a great understanding sometimes of why the medicines work. So, kind of going at it from the other way, where we're actually determining what is the exact pathophysiology of disease and then making a rational approach to a therapy, or choosing a therapy based on that, I think is what excites me the most, and I think we'll gain a better understanding of even a broader swath of diseases and be able to make those choices more often. That's what I like about this field.   Dr Nevel: Great. Well, thank you so much for sharing that - and looking forward to the future in this area of neurology. And thanks so much for talking with me today and sharing your story and your expertise and knowledge.   Dr McCombe: Well, thank you for having me. It's been fun.   Dr Nevel: And I encourage all the listeners to read your article. Again, today, I've been interviewing Dr Jennifer McCombe, whose article on neurosarcoidosis and neurologic involvement of rheumatologic disorders appears in the most recent issue of Continuum on autoimmune neurology. Be sure to check out Continuum Audio episodes from this and other issues, and thank you to our listeners for joining today.   Dr Monteith: This is Dr Teshamae Monteith, Associate Editor of Continuum Audio. If you've enjoyed this episode, you'll love the journal, which is full of in-depth and clinically relevant information important for neurology practitioners. Use this link in the episode notes to learn more and subscribe. AAN members, you can get CME for listening to this interview by completing the evaluation at Continpub.com/AudioCME. Thank you for listening to Continuum Audio.

Creativity For Sale with Radim Malinic
Honest reflections on creativity and social media success - Robert McCombe

Creativity For Sale with Radim Malinic

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later May 13, 2024 54:25 Transcription Available


"You give it to someone else, they'll have a different opinion. And someone else will have a different opinion, and say that's amazing. Then you send it to someone else and be like, well, this is crap. I'm never going to hire you."~Radim Malinic delves into the mind of Robert McCombe, a rising creative force whose Instagram presence has garnered over 150,000 followers, providing a calming respite amidst the digital chaos. With candor and vulnerability, McCombe shares his journey, shedding light on the pressures, triumphs, and challenges that come with navigating the ever-evolving creative landscape.~McCombe's journey began with a simple desire to showcase his work, but as his following grew, so did the opportunities and responsibilities. From the temptation of sponsored posts to the constant pressure of maintaining a consistent presence, McCombe's experience offers a raw and honest glimpse into the realities of building a brand in the digital age. His passion for learning and experimenting shines through, as he discusses his forays into photography, video creation, and product development, all while balancing the demands of a day job as a graphic designer.McCombe's transparency about the pressures and uncertainties of social media successHis commitment to authenticity and creating value for his audienceThe delicate balance between creative freedom and financial opportunitiesThe importance of community and collaboration in the creative industryThe ever-present fear of algorithms changing and platforms disappearingCreativity For Sale: How to start and grow a life-changing creative career and business by Radim Malinic - Out now. Paperback and Kindlehttps://amzn.to/4biTwFcFree audiobook (with Audible trial)https://geni.us/8r2eSAQSigned Bookshttps://novemberuniverse.co.uk

Maple City Sermons
Colossians 2:1-5 Pastor Andrew McCombe

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 48:16


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Small Caps
Pioneer Lithium (ASX: PLN) lists on ASX with plans to hunt for lithium in Canada (w/ Clinton Booth)

Small Caps

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2023 14:03


Pioneer Lithium (ASX: PLN) chief executive officer Clinton Booth joins Small Caps to discuss the company's ASX listing following a $5 million initial public offering. The funds will be used to support the company's hunt for high-value battery metals discoveries in Canada. Led by a highly-regarded and experienced team, Pioneer Lithium holds sizeable lithium prospective tenements in Ontario and Quebec. The company's initial exploration focus will be on the Root Lake project in the Red Lake lithium district of Ontario where previous exploration has already confirmed the presence of high-grade spodumene mineralisation. The Ontario tenements are well located between two known lithium deposits held by Green Technology Metals (ASX: GT1) – the Root Bay deposit which is estimated to contain 8.1 million tonnes of mineralisation at 1.32% lithium oxide and the McCombe deposit with has an estimated 4.5 million tonnes at 1.01% lithium oxide. The company aims to begin its maiden drilling program at Root Lake in October. Leading the company's growth plans is a team of industry veterans with a record of success in finding lithium in Canada and who have completed a combined 50,000m plus of drilling in the nation. Executive chairman Robert Martin brings more than 25 years of experience to his role including being a key leader at Critical Resources (ASX: CRR) with a market cap of around $80 million and Battery Age Minerals (ASX: BM8), which has a $30 million market cap. Mr Booth's background includes over 20 years of experience in the mining and energy sectors, including experience in lithium exploration, development and operations across hard rock and brine deposits. He has previously held senior positions at Fortescue Future Industries, Galaxy Resources (now Allkem (ASX: AKE)) and Sundance Resources. Article:https://smallcaps.com.au/pioneer-lithium-launches-ipo-fund-exploration-plans-canada/ For more information on Pioneer Lithium:https://smallcaps.com.au/stocks/asx-pln/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Behind the Art Inspiration podcast
Karin McCombe Jones- International Online Art Collective Chain Reaction Project

Behind the Art Inspiration podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 18:15


Welcome to the Behind the Art Inspiration Podcast, where we delve into the creative processes and stories of 14 artists around the world. In these episodes, we go behind the scenes with artists who are part of the International Online Art Collective, learning about their inspiration, challenges, and techniques while collaborating on our Chain Reaction Project. Beginning with one single piece, each piece of art informs the next, provoking a chain reaction of other artworks - until we will have created a total of 100 works,  assembled into one big multi-media installation! In this episode, we have the pleasure of interviewing artist Karin McCombe Jones, who hails from Wales and now resides in NZ. Through our conversation with Karin, we'll gain insights into her creative process and the inspirations that drive her work. I am your host, Caroline Karp, and I am excited to bring you this episode from my Clearwater, FL studio. So, sit back, relax, and join us as we go behind the art and discover the fascinating world of Karin's art. Want to see more?  1️⃣ Follow the hashtags

Proactive - Interviews for investors
Green Technology Metals says it's ‘game on' following Root Bay resource

Proactive - Interviews for investors

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 3:23


Green Technology Metals Ltd (ASX:GT1) CEO Luke Cox speaks with Proactive after reporting a major upgrade to the mineral resource estimate (MRE) at its 100%-owned Root Project in Ontario, Canada, to 12.6 million tonnes at 1.21% lithium oxide (Li2O) and 62 parts per million tantalum oxide. The increase follows a maiden inferred MRE for the Root Bay deposit of 8.1 million tonnes at 1.32% Li20. This adds to the 4.5 million tonnes at 1.01% Li2O resource from McCombe, another deposit within the Root Project. #ProactiveInvestors #GreenTechnologyMetals #ASX #BatteryMetals #lithium #invest #investing #investment #investor #stockmarket #stocks #stock #stockmarketnews

The Upper Hand: Chuck & Chris Talk Hand Surgery
Unsolved Problems in Hand Surgery: JHS European based discussion on Kienbocks and CMC Instability

The Upper Hand: Chuck & Chris Talk Hand Surgery

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2023 32:43 Transcription Available


Season 4, Episode 12.  Chuck and Chris welcome two amazing guests: Mireia Esplugas from Barcelona, Spain and David McCombe from Melbourne, Australia.  Our guests join us to discuss the March 2023 special issue of JHS European, Unsolved problems in hand surgery.  David McCombe was the guest editor of this special journal.  We chose two articles to discuss with our guests.  Tham and McCombe authored "Trapeziometacarpal joint arthritis in the young patient" and Salva-Coll, Esplugas, Carreno, and Lluch- Bergada authored "Kienbovks disease: preventing disease progression in early- stage disease."  We enjoyed this collaborative effort between The Upper Hand Podcast, Journal of Hand Surgery European, the British Society for Surgery of the Hand, and FESSHSubscribe to our newsletter:  https://bit.ly/3iHGFpDSee www.practicelink.com/theupperhand for more information from our partner on job search and career opportunities. Please complete NEW Survey: bit.ly/3X0Gq89As always, thanks to @iampetermartin for the amazing introduction and conclusion music.Complete podcast catalog at theupperhandpodcast.wustl.edu.  

Backyard Stories
Episode Fifty Five - Jack McCombe

Backyard Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2023 13:20


Journal entries of love in four stages. This episode was recorded live at the Brunswick Artists Bar, on the 30th of January 2023. The theme was LIGHT. © Long Story Short Broadcasting

Namastir The Podcast
Richard Bernstein & John McCombe

Namastir The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 27, 2022 54:55


Richard Bernstein and John McCombe discuss leaving successful careers to seek out greater success together at Richard Bernstein Advisors.  www.rbadvisors.comWe discuss topics such as:Learning from failure to achieve greater things.Having mentors along the way and returning the favor to future generationsMotivating team members to achieve by giving them autonomyLetting go of set expectations and recognizing opportunity as it presents itselfImportance of hiring to minimize your weaknessesStaying in your lane

Hawke's Bay Scientists On Air
Hawke's Bay Scientists On Air-25-07-2022 - Lynne talks to Georgia McCombe - Project leader at East Coast LAB-

Hawke's Bay Scientists On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2022 25:37


Scientists from the HB Branch of the Royal Society of NZ, speak about their work

The Fix
Preserving Craftsmanship w/ Patrick McCombe of Fine Homebuilding Magazine

The Fix

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 24:04


Our latest guest Patrick McCombe is truly a jack of all trades. He's spent the past 17+ years refining his remodeling skills, championing the trades and writing about residential construction on behalf of several well-known trade publications. He currently holds the title of Senior Editor at Fine Homebuilding Magazine and hosts the publication's fan-favorite podcast. His authentic approach to writing and producing content stems from his dedication to “keeping the craft alive.” Patrick places a thoughtful emphasis on quality and craftsmanship in all of his articles, arming readers with the highest quality of technical advice.    Stay tuned as Patrick details how his greatest passions collided to form the career of his dreams.    Guest: Patrick McCombe – Senior Editor, Fine Homebuilding Magazine Connect with Patrick: pmccombe@taunton.com Related Resources: Fine Homebuilding Magazine's https://www.finehomebuilding.com/ (Website), https://www.instagram.com/finehomebuilding/?hl=en (Instagram) & https://www.finehomebuilding.com/blog/fine-homebuilding-podcast (Podcast) Questions or Feedback:  thefix@oatey.com

Kultur heute Beiträge - Deutschlandfunk
Dem 2. Weltkrieg ähnlich: Ausstellung von Life-Fotograf Leonard McCombe

Kultur heute Beiträge - Deutschlandfunk

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2022 5:18


Passenheim, Antjewww.deutschlandfunk.de, Kultur heuteDirekter Link zur Audiodatei

Sessions From Studio A
Sessions from Studio A - Johnathon McCombe

Sessions From Studio A

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2021 52:00


Sessions from Studio A - Johnathon McCombe (August 26, 2021)

mccombe
3 Peaps In A PodCast
Robins Reunited - Alex Russell and Jamie McCombe

3 Peaps In A PodCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2021 139:15


In this episode of Robins Reunited, Patch is joined by Alex Russell (Aggy) and Jamie McCombe (Boom) as we take a walk down memory lane and focus on the our promotion to the Championship in the 2006-07 season.  A season in which Jamie was named Player of the Season scoring some very important last gasp goals and Alex getting goals, assists and the all important last goal of the season that clinched promotion!

The Fine Homebuilding Podcast
#330: Anniversary Edition Interview: Patrick McCombe

The Fine Homebuilding Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2021 62:02


As part of FHB’s 40th Anniversary, listener Jonathan asks regular podcast host Patrick McCombe what it’s like behind the scenes at FHB, and what’s right and wrong with American home building and remodeling.

Ale and the Vale - A Port Vale Podcast!

Well, no manager emergency pod to do, so we're releasing our special sit-down with 'Boom Boom' John McCombe this week! We chat about life before Vale as well as time with Vale, a unique description he has for Popey's teeth, a story about his dog and Doddsy, and what he's up to nowadays! Sponsored by Johny’s Micro Pub. Enjoy a socially distanced pint on St John’s Square in Burslem! Inplayman (https://www.inplayman.com/) - Daily Football Betting Tips & Stats Drink & Gamble Responsibly! Follow us on twitter @aleandvalepod - Feedback welcome!

BJA Education Podcasts
Consent and capacity: issues for paediatric anaesthesia

BJA Education Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2020 40:56


Riaz Aziz talks to Dr McCombe and Bogod about the legal aspect of paediatric consent. We explore important legal cases that have shaped the landscape in paediatric consent. We also touch on the key issues with Gillick competence and how this impacts on our practice as anaesthetist.

ZK Live with Zach Kenney
ZK Live With Spencer McCombe of Cordtsen Design Architecture - Episode 36

ZK Live with Zach Kenney

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2020 108:11


On today's episode Zach and his guest, Spencer McCombe, take a deep dive into the world of architecture and share some valuable info on the importance of character, work ethic, optimism, and relationships in the working world.

Solving Healthcare with Dr. Kwadwo Kyeremanteng
Unwanted Lessons From Having a Child with Cancer. How Dr. Jennifer McCombe is Solving Healthcare.

Solving Healthcare with Dr. Kwadwo Kyeremanteng

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2019 48:13


Sign up today: http://betterhelp.com/solvinghealthcareand use Discount code “solvinghealthcare"Donate to Stollery Childrens Hospital Foundation here:https://secure.stollerykids.com/?fbclid=IwAR23RgcacJAR_S6f4hKfxiDRt9OsTDwT8UGFab_qMIONLwqCqoJwX0757oQResource Optimization Network website: www.resourceoptimizationnetwork.com/Follow us on twitter: @KwadcastLike our Facebook page:https://www.facebook.com/kwadcast/Please send your comments/feedback to kwadcast99@gmail.comPicture is courtesy of vision2visual

TCRG TO CEO RADIO
Episode 34: Boys Roundtable with Ryan McCombe TCRG & Christian Cairone TCRG Part 1

TCRG TO CEO RADIO

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2019 38:33


We are so excited to bring our first boys roundtable to the podcast! Today I'm joined by two of my fellow TCRGs and friends, Ryan and Christian, to discuss how to get more boys dancing, staying in dancing, and how to support their dance journey as they progress. We'll bring you Part 2 next week where we discuss being a male teacher in 2019. You can find both Ryan and Christian in our Facebook group as well as on Instagram: Ryan - @drumsrshibby Christian - @cairone1220 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Courtney Jay TCRG here, host of TCRG to CEO Radio, the podcast for Irish dance teachers, studio owners, and aspiring teachers/studio owners who want to learn teaching and business skills to succeed in their careers, impact more students, and raise the glass ceiling of their success! I am the owner and director of Scoil Rince Luimni based in Connecticut, USA and am passionate about teaching, entrepreneurship, and mentoring others. TCRG to CEO Radio hopes to bring Irish dance professionals together, provide actionable tips and strategies you can easily implement, and share our stories & struggles to better our understanding of the realities of teaching and business ownership. SUBSCRIBE TO THE SHOW! FIND US ONLINE: WWW.COURTNEYJAYTCRG.COM/PODCAST.HTML FOLLOW ON INSTAGRAM: @COURTNEYJAY_TCRG FACEBOOK GROUP: WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/GROUPS/TCRGTOCEO

Maverick Mentality
Thomas McCombe Story

Maverick Mentality

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2019 26:36


Brief timeline of my journey in business thus far

mccombe
Maple City Sermons
Christianity 101 - Lesson 14 - Ecclesiology Pt.2

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2018 42:36


Maple City Sermons
Christianity 101 - Lesson 13 - Ecclesiology Pt.1

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2018 43:11


Maple City Sermons
Christianity 101 - Lesson 4 - Doctrine of God, Pt. 2

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2017 43:14


Maple City Sermons
Christianity 101 - Lesson 3 - Doctrine of God, Pt 1

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2017 41:23


Support the show (http://www.maplecitybaptistchurch.com)

Maple City Sermons
1 Kings 1:1-40 "Good, Good Father"

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2017 43:40


Support the show (http://www.maplecitybaptistchurch.com)

G&E The Podcast: Golf & Entrepreneurship
Ep. 11: Andrew McCombe Changes Lives Through Golf with Search 4 Scratch

G&E The Podcast: Golf & Entrepreneurship

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2017 23:13


Andrew McCombe is a serial entrepreneur. Founder of Search 4 Scratch, Golf University, and Golf Getaway, Andrew picked up golf seven years ago and has not looked back since. Immediately, Andrew was fascinated by the game. Having a very entrepreneurial mindset, he thought to himself how can I get paid to play golf. Andrew visualized what that would look like and created his first business in golf, Golf Getaway TV. From here, Andrew created Golf University and eventually Search 4 Scratch and the program and documentary that goes along with it. The Search 4 Scratch documentary is a fantastic concept. Give six amateur golfers the ability to practice and live like a pro for four months. Andrew gives them the life of a professional athlete. They have a world class coach in Larry Montague, a sports psychologist, and Andrew with his background as a mindset coach. Check out the podcast to get a first-hand look inside the mind of an eternal optimist. Andrew has a very gifted mindset towards entrepreneurship, and it was a pleasure to have him share it with me.

Maple City Sermons
1 Kings 11:1-13 "The Demise of a Wise King"

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2017 49:47


Support the show (http://www.maplecitybaptistchurch.com)

Maple City Sermons
Guest - 2 Corinthians 10:1-6 "Obedience in the Fight"

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2015 18:44


Maple City Sermons
GUEST SPEAKER: Andrew McCombe "Godliness + Contentment" 1 Timothy 6:6-10

Maple City Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2015 17:23


Contentment is hard to find in a world that tells you no matter what you have, you always need more and bigger and better. However, Paul's instructions to Timothy are very enlightening as to how believer's ought to view their possessions. Support the show (http://www.maplecitybaptistchurch.com)

Learning at City Conference 2012
Learning at City Conference 2012

Learning at City Conference 2012

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2012


Short animation to introduce the conference.