Podcasts about new york hospital

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Best podcasts about new york hospital

Latest podcast episodes about new york hospital

Sense of Soul Podcast
A Jungian Understanding of Transcendent Experiences

Sense of Soul Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 59:54


Today on Sense of Soul podcast we have Dr. Susan Plunket is a New York State licensed clinical psychologist and author, with a private practice in New York City. She received her Ph.D. from The New School for Social Research in 1989. With over thirty years of experience, Dr. Plunket specializes in working with individuals, couples, and families, and has extensive clinical training from Bellevue Hospital, New York Hospital, and The Postgraduate Center for Mental Health. Dr. Plunket's favorite aspect of her work is interpreting dreams using a Jungian approach. She is passionate about exploring the psychological, spiritual, and paranormal realms through her writing. Her first book, When Every Breath Becomes a Prayer, delves into Jungian dream analysis and the numinous experiences that arise from emotional pain. Her subsequent books, Mission from Venus and The Wanderers on Earth, venture into the fantasy worlds of the Fifth and Sixth Dimensions, reflecting her belief in a vast web of consciousness that connects us all. In her latest work, Paranormal Perspectives: A Jungian Understanding of Transcendent Experiences, Dr. Plunket shares her own paranormal experiences, offering a unique blend of psychological insight and spiritual exploration. She has also served on the Board of Trustees of the Jung Foundation and is currently on the Advisory Board of Quadrant, the Journal of the C.G. Jung Foundation for Analytical Psychology. For more information, visit her website at www.susanplunket.com www.senseofsoulpodcast.com

STEM-Talk
Episode 172: Kevin Tracey on neuro-immunology and the treatment of inflammatory diseases

STEM-Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2024 94:18


Few people know as much about inflammation and neuroscience as Dr. Kevin Tracey does. In this episode of STEM-Talk, we learn much from Tracey, who was the first to identify the inflammatory reflex, a physiological mechanism that regulates the body's immune response to injury and invasion. He is a neurosurgeon, a pioneer in bioelectrical medicine and president and CEO of the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y. The conversation in this episode covers a career spent working on “producing tomorrow's cures today” in the treatment of inflammatory diseases, including: How the death of his mother from a brain tumor when Tracey was 5 years old ultimately influenced his scientific journey. How the death of a young patient of his from sepsis further fueled his path, leading him to the insight that “good science begins with hard questions,” as Tracey shared in a TedTalk.  The molecular mechanisms of inflammation and the use of vagus nerve stimulation to treat it. His 1987 discovery of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), which contributed to a new class of drugs for inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. Another discovery that allowed him and his colleagues to merge neuroscience and immunology. His work on “The Inflammatory Reflex”, which emphasized the basic neural pathway that reflexively monitors and adjusts the inflammatory response. A sketch he drew while having lunch, which laid out how treating inflammatory diseases using a bioelectronic device might be possible. What advances in bioelectronic medicine he envisions in the next decade, and much more. [00:03:04] Dawn asks Kevin to tell the story of how he developed an interest in science that evolved into him becoming a neurosurgeon. [00:04:56] Dawn mentions that Kevin was a curious youth and asks if it is true that after getting his first car, Kevin removed the entire engine because he wanted to better understand how to do a valve job. [00:06:33] Ken mentions that after Kevin graduated from high school, he enrolled in Boston College where he earned a bachelor's degree in chemistry. Ken explains that Kevin went to Boston University Medical School for his M.D. and asks Kevin about the transition. [00:08:41] Ken asks if it is true that during Kevin's first year at medical school his classmates had better luck finding him on the golf course than in the classroom. [00:10:42] Dawn asks Kevin about his transition from medical school to the neurological surgery training program at New York Hospital, home of the Cornell University Medical College. [00:13:11] Dawn pivots to talk about sepsis, which kills more than 350,000 people annually. She asks Kevin to discuss his tragic story of treating a patient with sepsis as a young neurosurgeon and how that changed the trajectory of his career. [00:16:38] Ken explains that since the aforementioned incident, Kevin has focused on determining why septic shock occurs. Ken refers to a Ted Talk of Kevin's in which he says, “good science begins with hard questions.” Ken asks Kevin to elaborate on this point. [00:20:49] Dawn mentions that Kevin often describes himself as a brain surgeon who is fascinated by inflammation. Dawn asks Kevin how he responds when people ask him what inflammation is. [00:22:29] Ken follows up by explaining that in 1987 Kevin made progress investigating inflammation with his discovery of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), which contributed to a new class of drugs for inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. Ken asks Kevin to discuss this discovery. [00:25:56] Dawn mentions that in the late ‘90s, Kevin made another discovery that allowed him and his colleagues to merge neuroscience and immunology. Before getting into that discovery, Dawn asks Kevin to explain how humans have simple reflex circuits that harmonize the activity of our organs. She also asks him to talk about Charles Sherrington's Nobel Prize-winning research, which laid the groundwork for contemporary neuroscience by...

Plant-Based Canada Podcast
Episode 83: The Cost of Climate Change with Dr. Neha Pathak

Plant-Based Canada Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2024 58:01


In this episode of the Plant-Based Canada Podcast, we talk to Dr. Neha Pathak. Dr. Pathak is board certified in both internal medicine and lifestyle medicine and works as Chief Physician Editor for Health and Lifestyle Medicine and host of WebMD's Health Discovered podcast. She reports on topics related to lifestyle, climate change, and environmental impacts on health for WebMD and Medscape, and is a regular contributor to Yale Climate Connections.She graduated with a BA in psychology and biology from Harvard University, and received her MD with honours in community service from Cornell University's Weill Medical College. She completed her primary care, internal medicine residency at New York Hospital, Weill Cornell Medical College. She obtained her certificate in climate change and health communication from Yale School of Public Health.She is a member of the American College of Lifestyle Medicine board of directors and Chair of the Global Sustainability Committee. Dr. Pathak is also a lecturer at the Yale School of Public Health, where she facilitates coursework on climate change and health.Through all of her work, she hopes to educate healthcare professionals and the public about the health impacts of climate change and environmental pollution, and the health benefits of climate action. Her research focuses on the intersection of lifestyle medicine and planetary health.Additionally, Dr. Pathak is the Associate Program Director of the Atlanta VA Medical Center's Quality Scholars Program and an Adjunct Assistant Professor of Medicine at Emory University School of Medicine. She is a Primary Care Physician and was a designated women's health provider at the VA, and continues to see patients at a community health center in Georgia.ResourcesHealth Discovered Podcast Instagram Threads Linkedin Yale Climate Connections WebMD Profile Lifestyle Medicine Interventions for Personal and Planetary Health: The Urgent Need for Action ACLM Commitment Statement to Address Climate Change, Health, and EquityBonus PromotionCheck out University of Guelph's online Plant-Based Nutrition Certificate. Each 4-week course will guide you through essential plant-based topics including nutritional benefits, disease prevention, and environmental impacts. You can also customize your learning with unique courses such as Plant-Based Diets for Athletes and Implementing a Plant-Based Diet at Home. As the first university-level plant-based certificate in Canada, you'll explore current research, learn from leading industry experts, and join a community of like-minded people. Use our exclusive discount code PBC2024 to save 10% on all Plant-Based Nutrition Certificate courses. www.uoguel.ph/pbn. Support the Show.

Leadership and the Environment
749: Sven Gierlinger, part 1: Transforming the Culture of a New York Hospital Chain as a Chief Experience Officer

Leadership and the Environment

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2024 63:41


I heard about Sven through the articles below about the cultural change at Northwell, a chain of hospitals around New York City.I recommend reading the Post article before listening to this episode. It may read overly positive about the food, but Sven and I ate just after recording at the hospital the regular food they serve patients. It was incredible. I would never have dreamed food at a hospital could taste so good and look so appealing. I figured American hospitals had just capitulated and converted to doof.From a leadership perspective, I'm most interested in the processes and people behind changing a culture. Serving better food overlaps with the environment in that everyone knows and agrees high-quality food beats low-quality, especially at a hospital, and everyone knows clean air beats polluted air, but we created a culture that makes low quality hospital food and polluted air normal. Sven helped turn around a system and not just any system. Hospitals handle life and death, face heavy regulation, include doctors with special needs, and more things that raise the stakes. He has to deal with people, technology, finances, and everything.He seems to have succeeded. Can Sven be a role model for we who are trying to change global culture?Two articles featuring Sven:Washington Post: Hospital food is a punchline. These chefs are redefining it.Becker's Hospital Review: How one health system rewrote a menu and big cliché Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Chris Voss Show
The Chris Voss Show Podcast – Risa Gold MD, President of Miracle of Help Charity

The Chris Voss Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2023 32:44


Risa Gold MD, President of Miracle of Help Charity miracleofhelp.org Risa Gold MD, DLFAPA is a board-certified Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist in Cold Spring Harbor, NY. She graduated Cum Laude from Harvard, and earned her medical degree from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. Dr. Gold completed a residency in Psychiatry at Payne Whitney Clinic, New York Hospital, Cornell and a Fellowship in Child Adolescence Psychiatry at North Shore University Hospital. After serving as the President of the Greater Long Island Psychiatric Society, Dr. Gold was awarded Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. Dr. Gold has been in private practice since 1987. After her son returned from a medical service outreach trip in Sierra Leone, he alerted her to the pressing need for health care services in these remote and vulnerable villages. Dr. Gold started MOH USA, Inc to raise funds for a community-led project that would comprise a hospital complex and several small businesses to support it. She is married to Dr. Kenneth Gold & has raised four children.

Diary of an Actress with Rachel Bailit
Dr. Tedaldi on Cosmetic Dermatology

Diary of an Actress with Rachel Bailit

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2023 21:53


Dr. Tedaldi, founder of Dermatology Partners, Inc., created the practice with a vision of providing personalized medical and cosmetic dermatology care. A sought-after expert on cosmetic procedures, Dr. Tedaldi helps women and men in the Boston area improve their self-image with minimally invasive techniques.Known for her unique approach to cosmetic dermatology, she believes that the key to achieving outstanding results is through partnering with her patients and patient education.She is a graduate of Harvard University and completed her medical training at Massachusetts General Hospital and New York Hospital's Cornell University Medical Center. She began practicing dermatology in the Boston area in 1986 and was one of the first local dermatologists to practice cosmetic dermatology in a spa setting.Watch the Podcast on YouTube | Read the DiariesHost, Author of Diary of an Actress,. Executive Producer: Rachel BailitEditor, Producer : Max BugrovYouTube: @diaryofanactresspodcastInstagram: diaryofanactresspodcastTikTok: @diaryofanactresspodcastFacebook: diaryofanactress

Health Trip with Jill Foos
Hair Loss and Micronutrient Deficiencies - #56

Health Trip with Jill Foos

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2023 54:59


Micronutrients are the nutrients our body needs in lesser amounts to grow and develop. These include vitamins and minerals, and our body cannot manufacture these, so we must obtain them thru diet and supplementation. There are water-soluble and fat-soluble vitamins, macrominerals, and trace minerals. One of the best ways to look inside your cell to see what your nutrient status is is by taking a micronutrient test. This test tells you if your cells are stable, borderline deficient, or functionally deficient in a wide range of nutrients. You then want to correct these intracellular micronutrient deficiencies so that your cells are optimally working. If you go back to biology class, you remember that the mitochondria inside your cells are the powerhouses of energy produced for your body. Without functioning mitochondria, you don't have optimal energy being produced. Without optimal energy, you won't have healthy hair growth. After all, you don't need hair to survive. The only way to correct these deficiencies is through diet and supplementation.My returning guest today is Dr. Grabowski, a practicing Doctor of Chiropractic. He has over 40 years of clinical nutrition experience, presented over 1500 seminars and lectures on nutrition throughout the United States and in Europe, publishing several articles and a textbook on clinical nutrition. In addition, he is a Registered Dietitian and his dietetic experience includes tenure at some of the leading hospitals in the nation: The New York Hospital, Memorial Sloan-Kettering in New York City (affiliated with Cornell Medical Center), Memorial Care System, and the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.Dr. Grabowski has served on the State of Texas Governor's Childhood Obesity Taskforce and is a member of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, American Chiropractic Association, Texas Chiropractic Association and the Endocrine Society. In addition to his chiropractic practice, he has developed numerous vitamin and mineral formulas for supplement companies. Medical Disclaimer:By listening to this podcast, you agree not to use this podcast as medical advice or for making any lifestyle changes to treat any medical condition in either yourself or others. Consult your own physician for any medical issues that you may be having. This entire disclaimer also applies to any of my guests on my podcast.Schedule a free 30-minute consultation with me and start to discover your unique hair loss plan:https://www.jillfooswellness.com/contactWatch on my Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@jillfooswellness/videosFollow me on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jillfooswellness/Follow me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jillfooswellnessGrab discounts on my favorite biohacking products: https://www.jillfooswellness.com/health-productsI am a distributor of the LaserCap HD+ redlight therapy cap.For pricing and ordering information, contact Jill@jillfooswellness.com

Revolutionize Your Retirement Radio
Geriatrica: A Traveler's Guide with Dorian Mintzer and Dr. Marilyn Heins

Revolutionize Your Retirement Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2023 53:12


Newspaper columnist and beloved pediatrician Dr. Marilyn Heins, MD, has fashioned a pathway through the transformative senior years of life after having entered the octogenarian years herself. Marilyn takes on her role of tour guide through this new terrain with her typical poise and acumen while offering a healthy dose of humor. Approaching the aging journey as a landscape in an unfamiliar country, Marilyn imagines us all to be immigrants in the land of Geriatrica. During the voyage, she visits somewhat familiar yet not-quite-known stops along the way. In this episode, you'll discover:dangers and perils of the journeypreparations for the journeyscams to be attentive ofdownsizing and housing need changesthe importance of simplifying physical and mental health, safety, and finances in GeriatricaAbout Marilyn Heins:Dr. Marilyn Heins graduated from Radcliffe College (now part of Harvard University) and received her MD degree from the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University. She interned in pediatrics at New York Hospital and completed a residency in pediatrics at Babies Hospital in New York. Marilyn served as Director of Pediatrics at Detroit Receiving Hospital and Director of Project RESCAD, a federally funded program to provide comprehensive health services for medically indigent children. She was the associate Dean for Student Affairs at Wayne State University School of Medicine and Vice Dean and Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Arizona College of Medicine.Marilyn was a member of the Editorial Board of the Journal of the American Medical Association, served on the National Board of Medical Examiners, chaired the Committee on Medical Education of the American Hospital Association, and served as the first woman Chair of the Group on Student Affairs of the Association of American Medical Colleges. She has been active in many professional and community organizations focusing on women's and children's health, parenting education, and women's issues.Her special interests in pediatrics include helping parents and teaching health professionals how to help parents. She published 58 scientific papers and is the co-author of Child Care/Parent Care and author of ParenTips for Effective, Enjoyable Parenting and A Traveler's Guide to Geriatrica.Marilyn produced and hosted a weekly call-in radio program called The Parenting Show, which aired on KNST, Tucson's leading talk radio station, for two years. She has written over 1,100 parenting columns for the Arizona Daily Star and continues to write.She met her husband, a veterinarian, Dr. Milton Lipson, while on vacation in Jamaica. They moved to Tucson in 1979. They were married for 47 years until his death in 2007. A friend introduced Marilyn to Dr. Milt Francis, a recent widower, seven years ago. The two have been together ever since. She has a son and a daughter, three grandchildren, two stepsons, and three step-grandsons.Get in touch with Marilyn Heins:Visit Marilyn's website: https://www.a3dimpressions.com/geriatrica-book Buy Marilyn's book: https://revolutionizeretirement.com/heins What to do next: Click to grab our free guide, 10 Key Issues to Consider as You Explore Your Retirement Transition Please leave a review at Apple Podcasts. Join our Revolutionize Your Retirement group on Facebook.

The DotCom Magazine Entrepreneur Spotlight
Risa Gold MD, DLFAPA, President, Miracle of Help, A DotCom Magazine Interview

The DotCom Magazine Entrepreneur Spotlight

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 40:15


About Risa Gold MD and Miracle of Help: Risa Gold MD, DLFAPA is a board-certified Child & Adolescent Psychiatrist in Cold Spring Harbor, NY. She graduated Cum Laude from Harvard, and earned her medical degree from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons. Dr. Gold completed a residency in Psychiatry at Payne Whitney Clinic, New York Hospital, Cornell and a Fellowship in Child Adolescence Psychiatry at North Shore University Hospital. After serving as the President of the Greater Long Island Psychiatric Society, Dr. Gold was awarded Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. Dr. Gold has been in private practice since 1987. After her son returned from a medical service outreach trip in Sierra Leone, he alerted her to the pressing need for health care services in these remote and vulnerable villages. Dr. Gold started MOH USA, Inc to raise funds for a community-led project that would comprise a hospital complex and several small businesses to support it. She is married to Dr. Kenneth Gold & has raised four children. Miracle of Help is a 501(c)(3) charitable nonprofit using a community-led development model to help communities mobilize and design solutions that address their overall social and healthcare needs. Sierra Leone has the second highest infant mortality rate in the world. Inspired by firsthand accounts of the poverty and lack of medical services for pregnant women in eastern Sierra Leone, Miracle of Help (MOH) is helping the community build a Maternal Child Health Post (MCHP), for safe childbirth and pre- and post-natal care. The center is located in the village of Ngolahun, a village of slightly over 2,000 people, with no electricity or running water. Four smaller villages within walking distance (total population 2,000) will also receive services from the MCHP. During our monthly pop-up clinics our doctors have diagnosed some form of malnutrition in 80% of the children they see (see photos). As of the end of May 2022, we established two malnutrition clinics for severe and moderate acute malnutrition for children under the age of five. Our staff was trained by clinicians from Project Peanut Butter & Partners in Health, and both clinics have been certified by the Sierra Leone government. Since the inception of the clinics, twenty-five children have been rescued from malnutrition and their mothers given jobs selling soap to support them. Currently, twenty-seven children are enrolled in the two clinics. The mothers learn how to make Bennimix (provided by MOH), a blend of nutritive food substances to feed their children. Miracle of Help's fundraising efforts to establish a safe birthing center / women's health clinic in Sierra Leone were recognized by Ambassador Dr. Francis Kaikai at the Consulate of Sierra Leone in NY city, December 3, 2018. Ambassador Dr. Francis Kaikai appears in the center of this photo along with the Board of Directors of Miracle of Help.

Sarah Westall - Business Game Changers
Transgender Psyop: Manufactured Industry, Big Money & Failed Ethics w/ Dr. Richard Amerling

Sarah Westall - Business Game Changers

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 49:42


Dr. Richard Amerling, past president of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons and Chief Academic Officer for the Wellness Company, joins the program to discuss the transition of the American medical system from a patient first paradigm to Big Pharma lap dog/patient last paradigm. We discuss the horrific consequences to patients this change has brought. We also discuss the transgender psyop that has been unleashed on the American people to destabilize communities; harming children and young adults while bringing massive money to the medical establishment and big Pharma. He believes that basic medical ethics are no longer being followed. You can learn more about Dr. Richard Amerling and his company at www.twc.health Follow on my Substack at SarahWestall.Substack.com See Important Proven Solutions to Keep Your from getting sick even if you had the mRNA Shot - Dr. Nieusma Protect your IRA and other assets, contact info@MilesFranklin.com - Tell them "Sarah Sent Me" and get the best service and prices in the country. MUSIC CREDITS: "Do You Trust Me" by Michael Vignola, licensed for broad internet media use, including video and audio     See on Bastyon | Bitchute | Odysee | Rumble | Freedom.Social | SarahWestall.TV     Biography of Dr. Richard Amerling Dr. Amerling is a native New Yorker. He graduated Stuyvesant High School, City College of New York, then earned his medical degree at the Catholic University of Louvain in Brussels, Belgium in 1981. He completed his Internship and Residency in Internal Medicine at New York Hospital, Queens in 1986. He is Past-President of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons and serves currently on their Board of Directors. Dr. Amerling's work has been published as chapters in textbooks and in peer-reviewed medical journals. He has published numerous op-Eds and letters on health care economics and politics. From 1990-2016 Dr. Amerling was on staff at the Beth Israel Medical Center (now Mount Sinai Beth Israel). In October 2016, Dr. Amerling accepted a position as Professor at St. George's University School of Medicine in Grenada. From April-August 2020, after SGU went to online teaching, he volunteered as a nephrologist at NYU/Bellevue to help with their acute dialysis program. In July 2021, Dr. Amerling was placed on administrative leave by SGU for non-compliance with their vaccine mandate, and ultimately terminated in January 2022. Dr. Richard Amerling is a founding member and Principal Academic Officer of The Wellness Company.    

Becker’s Healthcare - Clinical Leadership Podcast
New York Hospital Performs Dual Transplant with 250-Person Team; Abortion Pill Rulings: What Happens Next

Becker’s Healthcare - Clinical Leadership Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 4:04


Living to 100 Club
Ready for a Breakthrough in Home Medical Equipment? Learn about Boom Home Medical

Living to 100 Club

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 41:22


This Living to 100 Club podcast introduces us to Boom Home Medical, and its founders, Dr. Valerie Ulene and Byrdie Lifson Pompan. Boom Home Medical is all about reinventing the inconvenient and unattractive home medical equipment, like bedside urinals. Their urinal, called Loona, is ergonomically-shaped, and easy to grip with a soft silicone mouth that fits against the female anatomy. The founders, Valerie and Byrdie, are focused on bringing products that bring dignity to self-care. They aim to design products that fit into a contemporary home and lifestyle. Tune in for this spirited episode about bringing home medical equipment into the 21st century, with style, design, and elegance. Mini Bios Dr. Valerie Ulene is a specialist in General Preventive Medicine and Public Health. She has a passion for advocating and empowering people to seek the quality medical care they deserve. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Byrdie Lifson Pompan to help individuals with serious medical conditions navigate the complexities surrounding diagnosis and treatment. Prior to that, Dr. Ulene authored a monthly health column for the Los Angeles Times. This column ran for over a decade, served as an editor of the educational patient page in the peer-reviewed journal, Preventive Medicine, and co-authored several consumer books on health. Dr. Ulene attended Princeton University and received her medical degree from Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. She also earned a master's degree at Columbia Mailman School of Public Health. She completed her residency training at New York Hospital. In her spare time, you can find Dr. Ulene at the gym lifting weights and enjoying outdoor activities with her husband and three grown children. Byrdie Lifson Pompan has had a long career in client service and advocacy. For 20 years, she was an agent and partner at Creative Artists Agency (CAA)—the world's leading entertainment and sports agency. Through a deeply personal journey, she grew passionate about the issues surrounding patients' needs and health care quality. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Dr. Valerie Ulene. Their goal is to improve the health care experience and outcomes for clients with complex medical conditions. A native of Los Angeles, Lifson Pompan received her BA in Sociology from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She has a Masters in Healthcare Leadership from Brown University, May 2016. Lifson Pompan stays active by running and hiking with her husband and enjoys quality time with her two sons. For Our Listeners Website: Boom Home Medical Article in Fast Company Business Magazine: Home medical equipment is about to get a big design upgrade See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Living to 100 Club
Ready for a Breakthrough in Home Medical Equipment? Learn about Boom Home Medical

Living to 100 Club

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 41:22


This Living to 100 Club podcast introduces us to Boom Home Medical, and its founders, Dr. Valerie Ulene and Byrdie Lifson Pompan. Boom Home Medical is all about reinventing the inconvenient and unattractive home medical equipment, like bedside urinals. Their urinal, called Loona, is ergonomically-shaped, and easy to grip with a soft silicone mouth that fits against the female anatomy. The founders, Valerie and Byrdie, are focused on bringing products that bring dignity to self-care. They aim to design products that fit into a contemporary home and lifestyle. Tune in for this spirited episode about bringing home medical equipment into the 21st century, with style, design, and elegance. Mini Bios Dr. Valerie Ulene is a specialist in General Preventive Medicine and Public Health. She has a passion for advocating and empowering people to seek the quality medical care they deserve. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Byrdie Lifson Pompan to help individuals with serious medical conditions navigate the complexities surrounding diagnosis and treatment. Prior to that, Dr. Ulene authored a monthly health column for the Los Angeles Times. This column ran for over a decade, served as an editor of the educational patient page in the peer-reviewed journal, Preventive Medicine, and co-authored several consumer books on health.  Dr. Ulene attended Princeton University and received her medical degree from Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. She also earned a master's degree at Columbia Mailman School of Public Health. She completed her residency training at New York Hospital. In her spare time, you can find Dr. Ulene at the gym lifting weights and enjoying outdoor activities with her husband and three grown children. Byrdie Lifson Pompan has had a long career in client service and advocacy. For 20 years, she was an agent and partner at Creative Artists Agency (CAA)—the world's leading entertainment and sports agency. Through a deeply personal journey, she grew passionate about the issues surrounding patients' needs and health care quality. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Dr. Valerie Ulene. Their goal is to improve the health care experience and outcomes for clients with complex medical conditions.  A native of Los Angeles, Lifson Pompan received her BA in Sociology from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She has a Masters in Healthcare Leadership from Brown University, May 2016. Lifson Pompan stays active by running and hiking with her husband and enjoys quality time with her two sons.  For Our Listeners Website: Boom Home Medical Article in Fast Company Business Magazine: Home medical equipment is about to get a big design upgrade

Living to 100 Club
Ready for a Breakthrough in Home Medical Equipment? Learn about Boom Home Medical

Living to 100 Club

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 32:08


This Living to 100 Club podcast introduces us to Boom Home Medical, and its founders, Dr. Valerie Ulene and Byrdie Lifson Pompan. Boom Home Medical is all about reinventing the inconvenient and unattractive home medical equipment, like bedside urinals. Their urinal, called Loona, is ergonomically-shaped, and easy to grip with a soft silicone mouth that fits against the female anatomy. The founders, Valerie and Byrdie, are focused on bringing products that bring dignity to self-care. They aim to design products that fit into a contemporary home and lifestyle. Tune in for this spirited episode about bringing home medical equipment into the 21st century, with style, design, and elegance. Mini Bios Dr. Valerie Ulene is a specialist in General Preventive Medicine and Public Health. She has a passion for advocating and empowering people to seek the quality medical care they deserve. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Byrdie Lifson Pompan to help individuals with serious medical conditions navigate the complexities surrounding diagnosis and treatment. Prior to that, Dr. Ulene authored a monthly health column for the Los Angeles Times. This column ran for over a decade, served as an editor of the educational patient page in the peer-reviewed journal, Preventive Medicine, and co-authored several consumer books on health. Dr. Ulene attended Princeton University and received her medical degree from Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. She also earned a master's degree at Columbia Mailman School of Public Health. She completed her residency training at New York Hospital. In her spare time, you can find Dr. Ulene at the gym lifting weights and enjoying outdoor activities with her husband and three grown children. Byrdie Lifson Pompan has had a long career in client service and advocacy. For 20 years, she was an agent and partner at Creative Artists Agency (CAA)—the world's leading entertainment and sports agency. Through a deeply personal journey, she grew passionate about the issues surrounding patients' needs and health care quality. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Dr. Valerie Ulene. Their goal is to improve the health care experience and outcomes for clients with complex medical conditions. A native of Los Angeles, Lifson Pompan received her BA in Sociology from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She has a Masters in Healthcare Leadership from Brown University, May 2016. Lifson Pompan stays active by running and hiking with her husband and enjoys quality time with her two sons. For Our Listeners Website: Boom Home Medical Article in Fast Company Business Magazine: Home medical equipment is about to get a big design upgrade See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Living to 100 Club
Ready for a Breakthrough in Home Medical Equipment? Learn about Boom Home Medical

Living to 100 Club

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 41:22


This Living to 100 Club podcast introduces us to Boom Home Medical, and its founders, Dr. Valerie Ulene and Byrdie Lifson Pompan. Boom Home Medical is all about reinventing the inconvenient and unattractive home medical equipment, like bedside urinals. Their urinal, called Loona, is ergonomically-shaped, and easy to grip with a soft silicone mouth that fits against the female anatomy. The founders, Valerie and Byrdie, are focused on bringing products that bring dignity to self-care. They aim to design products that fit into a contemporary home and lifestyle. Tune in for this spirited episode about bringing home medical equipment into the 21st century, with style, design, and elegance. Mini Bios Dr. Valerie Ulene is a specialist in General Preventive Medicine and Public Health. She has a passion for advocating and empowering people to seek the quality medical care they deserve. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Byrdie Lifson Pompan to help individuals with serious medical conditions navigate the complexities surrounding diagnosis and treatment. Prior to that, Dr. Ulene authored a monthly health column for the Los Angeles Times. This column ran for over a decade, served as an editor of the educational patient page in the peer-reviewed journal, Preventive Medicine, and co-authored several consumer books on health.  Dr. Ulene attended Princeton University and received her medical degree from Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. She also earned a master's degree at Columbia Mailman School of Public Health. She completed her residency training at New York Hospital. In her spare time, you can find Dr. Ulene at the gym lifting weights and enjoying outdoor activities with her husband and three grown children. Byrdie Lifson Pompan has had a long career in client service and advocacy. For 20 years, she was an agent and partner at Creative Artists Agency (CAA)—the world's leading entertainment and sports agency. Through a deeply personal journey, she grew passionate about the issues surrounding patients' needs and health care quality. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Dr. Valerie Ulene. Their goal is to improve the health care experience and outcomes for clients with complex medical conditions.  A native of Los Angeles, Lifson Pompan received her BA in Sociology from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She has a Masters in Healthcare Leadership from Brown University, May 2016. Lifson Pompan stays active by running and hiking with her husband and enjoys quality time with her two sons.  For Our Listeners Website: Boom Home Medical Article in Fast Company Business Magazine: Home medical equipment is about to get a big design upgrade

The DIGA Podcast
#39: An Introduction to What Medical Students Should Know About Dermatoethics w/ Dr. Jane Grant-Kels

The DIGA Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2023 37:06


What is dermatoethics? What should aspiring dermatologists know about it? In this Episode, we talk with Dr. Jane Grant-Kels, MD. She majored in Psychology at Smith College and received her MD degree from Cornell University Medical College. She went on to pursue pediatric and dermatology residency training at Cornell's New York Hospital. She also completed a dermatopathology fellowship at New York University with Dr. A. Bernard Ackerman. She serves on numerous editorial boards for dermatology journals, including the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology, for which she is Deputy Editor. Dr. Grant-Kels shares her wisdom on dermatoethics, cutaneous oncology, dermatology training, and more. We hope you enjoy! Host: Grace Hobayan Contact Dr. Grant-Kels: grant@uchc.edu Music: District Four by Kevin MacLeod Link: https://incompetech.filmmusic.io/song/3662-district-four License: https://filmmusic.io/standard-license --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/derminterest/message

The Flipping 50 Show
Caregiving Made Easier | Support for Challenging Times

The Flipping 50 Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2023 33:01


Caregiving is anything but easy. Even if it's a labor of love. For many midlife women this is just a chaotic time. Midlife, midlife hormones, midlife career, midlife relationship changes, and aging parents or other loved ones. Maybe a sick or injured child or spouse.  What can you do to take care of your own health when you are consumed by caregiving? We're diving into it here. When you know sleep and exercise are important where does that come? How is it modified during these moments?  My guests have solutions.  My Guests: Dr. Valerie Ulene is a specialist in General Preventive Medicine and Public Health with a passion for advocating and empowering people to seek the quality medical care they deserve. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Byrdie Lifson Pompan to help individuals with serious medical conditions navigate the complexities surrounding diagnosis and treatment. Prior to that, Dr. Ulene authored a monthly health column for the Los Angeles Times that ran for over a decade, served as an editor of the educational patient page in the peer-reviewed journal, Preventive Medicine, and co-authored several consumer books on health. Dr. Ulene attended Princeton University and received her medical degree from Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons. She also earned a master's degree at Columbia Mailman School of Public Health and completed her residency training at New York Hospital. Byrdie Lifson Pompan has had a long career in client service and advocacy. For 20 years, she was an agent and partner at Creative Artists Agency (CAA)—the world's leading entertainment and sports agency. Through a deeply personal journey, she grew passionate about the issues surrounding patients' needs and health care quality. In 2013 she co-founded Clear Health Advisors alongside Dr. Valerie Ulene to improve the health care experience and outcomes for clients with complex medical conditions. A native of Los Angeles, Lifson Pompan received her BA in Sociology from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). She has a Masters in Healthcare Leadership from Brown University, May 2016. They came together in a very unique way: Byrdie's face became partially paralyzed and many doctors misdiagnosed her. It turns out it was actually a brain tumor. At that point, she was connected to Dr. Valerie. Ultimately, Byrdie's misdiagnosis, along with other misdiagnoses in her family, was the impetus to the start of Boom Home Medical. Questions We Answer in This Episode: What are some tools that would ease the stress for caregivers and patients?  What emotions occur during this kind of midlife chaos?  Stress reduction for Caregivers..what can you do to take care of your own health when you are consumed by caregiving I hope this episode of caregiving made easier has found you at the right time, or will be something you heard no accidents, so that you have a resource for a friend.  Connect with Byrdie and Valerie: https://boomhomemedical.com/ Byrdie and Valerie on Social: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/boomhomemedical Other Episodes You Might Like: What is Medical Gaslighting and What Do You Do About It? https://www.flippingfifty.com/medical-gaslighting/ Chronic Symptoms that Won't Resolve? Can't Get A Diagnosis? https://www.flippingfifty.com/chronic-symptoms/ Women's Health Mismanagement: When You Can't Fire Yourself: https://www.flippingfifty.com/manage-health/

Relationshipstuff101
Nurse slams baby inside of New York hospital.

Relationshipstuff101

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 15:07


Friday February 24th a story was released about a nurse who slammed a newborn baby face first in the nursery. There's not much development on the story, but I do have something to say about incidents that have occurred like this one in the past.

Weight and Healthcare
The Validation and Frustration of Stunkard et al.

Weight and Healthcare

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2023 7:42


This is the Weight and Healthcare newsletter! If you like what you are reading, please consider subscribing and/or sharing!Stunkard et al.'s 1959 study “The Results of Treatment for Ob*sity: A Review of the Literature and Report of a Series” is one of the earliest studies that really sought to determine the success of weight loss interventions. As someone who works full-time pointing out that weight loss interventions almost never succeed at creating significant, long-term weight loss and often do harm, every time I read this study it is a combination of validating and incredibly frustrating.Content note: this post will include discussion of calories and weight loss so please make sure to take care of yourself. Let's dig in:They begin by saying: “The current widespread concern with weight reduction rests on at least two assumptions: first, that weight-reduction programs are effective, second, that they are harmless.”They continue “Recent studies indicate that such programs may be far from harmless. This report documents their ineffectiveness.”Again, it's validating to see that they were explaining this in 1952, but incredibly frustrating that the only thing that has changed since then is that the weight loss industry profits have grown exponentially, and the interventions have become more dangerous and more expensive.The study looks at weight loss success/failure in two ways. First, a review of the weight loss literature for the previous 30 years, and second, an examination of the outcomes of the treatment of 100 consecutive higher-weight patients at New York Hospital's Nutrition Clinic.Literature ReviewHere they use a phrase that I say or write some version of pretty much daily. “Hundreds of papers on treatment for ob*sity* have been published in the past 30 years. Most, however, do not give figures on the outcome of treatment, and of those that do, most report them in such a way as to obscure the outcome of treatment in individual patients.” They point out the following issues:* Reporting the number of patients and total pounds lost without specifying how much/the average that each patient lost* Short-duration studies* Reporting as a percentage rather than a number of pounds* The exclusion of those who dropped out or were “uncooperative” who the authors explain likely represent intervention failure and comprise an “impressive part” of the study samplesThey point out that “if papers with these shortcomings are omitted, the vast literature on treatment for ob*sity shrinks to just eight reports.”I'll point out that these are still incredibly common occurrences in weight loss research. That, to me, indicates that those doing the research aren't interested in creating good research, but are interested in creating research to prop up the failed weight-loss paradigm. Anyway, back to Stunkard et al.The eight studies had subject groups ranging from 48-314.  Of the eight studies, interventions ranged from “self-selected diet,” to starvation diets (from 600 to 1,000 calories per day), to amphetamines.Four of the studies had more people lose less than 10 pounds than those who lost 10 or more pounds. Only one had a majority lose more than 20 pounds.  Overall, only 25% of people were able to lose 20lbs and only 5% where able to lose 40lb short-term (and remember that research since 1959 has repeatedly shown that about 95% of this small group will regain all of the weight within five years.)Study of 100 patientsMoving on to their study of 100 patients. Here they point out that the health of “most subjects” was good, suggesting that they were referred for “treatment” solely to manipulate their body size. They were prescribed diets of 800 to 1,500 calories (all below, and some far below, the caloric intake for the Minnesota Starvation Experiment.)They characterize the results of these 100 people as “even poorer than those reported in the literature.” Of the 100 patients, 39 dropped out after the first visit, 28 never returned to any clinic in the hospital (suggesting that the intervention lowered their overall healthcare engagement, which the authors refer to as “a rupture of at least two therapeutic relationships” since patients only come to the Nutrition Clinic by referral from another clinic in the hospital.) Only 12 managed to lose more than 20lbs and only one of those was able to lose more than 40lbs.In terms of maintenance of weight loss, they found that, of the 12 who lost at least 20 pounds only 6 had maintained at least a 20 pound loss a year later, a number that dwindled to 2 people after two years. Moreover, 4 had already regained all of the weight they lost at two years, the others had already regained significant amounts of weight. Of the two “successes,” at two years the man who had the greatest weight change (-51lbs) reported that the diet had been “associated with mounting tension which culminated in what was diagnosed as an acute schizophrenic reaction” requiring a four-month hospitalization and treatment with tranquilizers. He regained 35 pounds before follow-up stopped.While they were still coming from a “body-size-as-disease” model, a lot of the discussion section of this study is, to speak colloquially, fire!  They point out that the idea of higher weight as unhealthy and weight loss as health supporting had grown “in recent years” resulting in doctors and patients considering weight loss as a therapeutic intervention. They also explain that “lay institutions, notably the magazines for women, has seized upon this growing interest in weight reduction and has helped to magnify it to the proportions of a national neurosis.” They further insist that “The medical profession…must accept some responsibility.” They characterize the pervasive blaming of patients by their physicians for not losing weight by saying “Rarely have physicians so readily surrendered a part of their domain to moralizing, indifference, and despair.”They go on to say that “the naïve optimism of the medical profession about treatment for ob*sity has been widely accepted by the lay public.”And even though they cling to the body-size-as-disease and weight loss as “treatment” model, they admit that “perhaps” some higher-weight people should not undertake weight loss interventions.One thing that I've had happen to me (and seen happen to others) is that when we talk about the failure rate of weight loss interventions, someone will claim that it's “just that one study from the 1950's” so this is first a reminder that this study actually looked at 30 years of research, and that these findings have been consistently replicated through today.  So, as I said, it is validating to see that others reached the same conclusions that those of us doing work around weight science still are, but it's also incredibly frustrating that it is 64 years later (94 considering that they looked at data since 1929) and researchers are still pulling the same fail-your-freshman-research-methods-class nonsense, and the medical profession is still operating from the same combination of naïve optimism and patient blaming about interventions that have been utter failures since the 1920's.Fat people deserve better. We deserve a weight-neutral paradigm that focuses on supporting us in the bodies we have rather than risking our lives and quality of life in failed attempts to shrink us. And we deserve more than that - we deserve medical science and healthcare systems that do the work to then move from a weight-neutral to a truly weight-inclusive paradigm.Did you find this post helpful? You can subscribe for free to get future posts delivered direct to your inbox, or choose a paid subscription to support the newsletter and get special benefits! Click the Subscribe button below for details:Liked this piece? Share this piece:More research and resources:https://haeshealthsheets.com/resources/*Note on language: I use “fat” as a neutral descriptor as used by the fat activist community, I use “ob*se” and “overw*ight” to acknowledge that these are terms that were created to medicalize and pathologize fat bodies, with roots in racism and specifically anti-Blackness. Please read Sabrina Strings Fearing the Black Body – the Racial Origins of Fat Phobia and Da'Shaun Harrison Belly of the Beast: The Politics of Anti-Fatness as Anti-Blackness for more on this. Get full access to Weight and Healthcare at weightandhealthcare.substack.com/subscribe

Becker’s Healthcare -- Spine and Orthopedic Podcast
New York Hospital to Pay $25M for Stake in Orthopedic ASC + 2 Leadership Moves at Hospital for Special Surgery

Becker’s Healthcare -- Spine and Orthopedic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2023 1:38


The Majority Report with Sam Seder
2978 - New York Hospital Tries To Screw Its Workers w/ Drs. Noa Nessim & Libby Wetterer

The Majority Report with Sam Seder

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 62:08


Sam hosts Drs. Noa Nessim & Libby Wetterer, 3rd year family medicine resident physicians and members of the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIR) who, in affiliation with the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), are a part of organizing efforts at the Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx. First, Sam runs through updates on NYC's crackdown on not abusing homeless people, Hakeem Jeffries coming out on top for Democratic minority leader, and more, before diving into Rep. Mary Peltola's pitch-perfect response to her party's (Democrats) undermining of Rail labor, centering the needs of workers over the minimal profit of an already booming industry. Then, Drs. Nessim and Wetterer join as they dive right into Montefiore Medical Center's sudden divestment from the Bronx communities that they have served for ages, shutting down clinics left and right while shifting funding towards regions served by private insurance agencies, before moving to the relationship between Montefiore Medical Center and its employees, walking through the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and social unrest on spurring organizing among residents and interns, and how Montefiore took advantage of the COVID squeeze on the healthcare industry by keeping their demands of doing more with less even as the pandemic eased. Next, they dive into the driving desire of a new moral compass behind the healthcare industry, exploring the networks of Doctors' and Nurses' unions across the US, and the impact that successfully unionizing Montefiore Medical Center would have, before wrapping up the interview by tackling McKinsey consultants' role in spurring this disinvestment from their communities and exploring the best actions for the general public to take moving forwards. Sam also dives deeper into the horrendous mainstream coverage of the labor bargaining between freight rail workers and their employers, with all of the emphasis going to the impact these workers would have on our economy, and none of it on why companies with record-breaking profits are actively sacrificing it. And in the Fun Half: Sam watches Charlie Kirk grapple with Kari Lake's defeat as he once again fails to do the one thing he was hired to do (turn the youths conservative), David from Washington speculates on the recent missiles that fell in Poland, and Adam from LA explores how deep the GOP has poisoned the well of discourse around LGBTQ+ people. John from Cleveland discusses Jon Stewart's interviews and why liberals lend credence to credentials, and Sam dives deep into Stephen Crowder's incredibly cold open as he tiptoes through addressing the Kanye discourse while still pleasing his white supremacist followers. Sam also talks with Hannah about coverage of the Tigray War and the difficulty of speaking without expertise, plus, your calls and IMs! Read more about the organizing efforts at Montefiore: https://jacobin.com/2022/11/montefiore-medical-center-residents-doctors-union Contact Dr. Phillip Ozuah, head of Montefiore Medical Center, to recognize the Montefiore union! 111 E 210th St, The Bronx, NY 10467 Call your Congressmembers to urge them to vote for paid sick leave for railway workers! (202) 224-3121 Become a member at JoinTheMajorityReport.com: https://fans.fm/majority/join Subscribe to the ESVN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/esvnshow Subscribe to the AMQuickie newsletter here: https://am-quickie.ghost.io/ Join the Majority Report Discord! http://majoritydiscord.com/ Get all your MR merch at our store: https://shop.majorityreportradio.com/ Get the free Majority Report App!: http://majority.fm/app Check out today's sponsors: Henson Shaving: Go to https://hensonshaving.com/majority  and use code MAJORITY for a free 100-pack of blades! Follow the Majority Report crew on Twitter: @SamSeder @EmmaVigeland @MattBinder @MattLech @BF1nn @BradKAlsop Check out Matt's show, Left Reckoning, on Youtube, and subscribe on Patreon! https://www.patreon.com/leftreckoning Subscribe to Discourse Blog, a newsletter and website for progressive essays and related fun partly run by AM Quickie writer Jack Crosbie. https://discourseblog.com/ Check out Ava Raiza's music here! https://avaraiza.bandcamp.com/ The Majority Report with Sam Seder - https://majorityreportradio.com/

Becker’s Healthcare -- Spine and Orthopedic Podcast
Dr. Michael Bisogno 1st to use surgical robot at New York hospital and 2 Pittsburgh orthopedic networks open sports medicine facility

Becker’s Healthcare -- Spine and Orthopedic Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2022 1:52


Deep Lore
Was Sunny Sheu killed for exposing corruption?

Deep Lore

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2022 31:01


Sunny Sheu, who lived in Flushing, Queens, found out in the year 2000 that his house had been sold without his knowledge as part of a scam. He was able to fight back and get the thieves arrested, but the Mortgage Company wouldn't give him the house back. He took them to court, where, at least according to Sunny, Judge Golia didn't give him a chance to prove that he had been scammed. Sunny was tired of not getting justice after 10 years, so he looked into the Judge's financial disclosures and found some problems. After he told them, he worried that his life might be in danger. Then, on June 26, 2010, a Queens man named Sunny Sheu was found badly hurt on a quiet street in College Point, NY. He was taken to New York Hospital of Queens, where he died soon after. His death is still not clear. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/deeploretv/support

The Ortho Show
Hosted by Dr. Scott Sigman – “Dr. Amar Ranawat”

The Ortho Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 28:41


This episode is brought to you Thompson Surgical, who are celebrating over 55 years as a leader in exposure and the original manufacturer of the table-mounted retractor. This episode is also brought to you by TrackableMed. Check out TrackableMed to help you grow your new patient base. Dr. Amar Ranawat is an orthopedic surgeon at HSS specializing in total hip and total knee replacement, revision total hip and total knee replacement, and periprosthetic fractures. Born in New York City, he received his medical degree from Weill Cornell Medical College in 1996 before completing an internship at The New York Hospital and a residency at Hospital for Special Surgery. In 2002, he completed his fellowship training in adult reconstruction under the direction of his father Dr. Chitranjan S. Ranawat. We hear about his family influence in becoming an orthopedic surgeon, including his brother who is also an orthopedic surgeon. Topics include:-How the 9/11 attacks led him to join the Navy and their Marine unit. Dr. Ranawat received the Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal in 2007 for performing emergency limb saving surgery on a Marine during exercises in Tan Tan, Morocco -We hear about the importance of resident education, fellow education and research at HSS and how he also balances being President of the Eastern Orthopaedic Association. -Dr. Ranawat discusses his passion for family and traditions in hunting and fishing. Find out more about Dr. Amar Ranawat here.

The Incubator
#081 - [NeoHeart Special] - Dr. Gil Wernovsky MD - Experiences from a life in a pediatric cardiology

The Incubator

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2022 40:05


Dr. Wernovsky is a senior consultant in pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Critical Care at Children National Hospital, having joined the faculty in 2018. He attended Brandeis University, receiving a BS degree in 1978 in anthropology and music. He attended Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, receiving his M.D. in 1982. He completed a pediatric residency at New York Hospital (now known as Weill Cornell Medical Center) in 1985, and his pediatric cardiology fellowship at Boston Children's Hospital in 1988, with a focus on cardiac intensive care. He was appointed the Associate Director of the Cardiac ICU through 1995.At Children's National Hospital, he is also a member of the NeuroCardiac Critical Care Team, and is a Professor of Pediatrics at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.Regarding research, he was a study physician in the landmark Boston Circulatory Arrest Study from 1987-1992, and was the Principal Investigator of the international PRIMACORP study from 2002-2003, at the time the largest multicenter trial in pediatric cardiac intensive care. He has edited six textbooks and 13 periodicals, and has published nearly 300 peer-reviewed manuscripts, book chapters and reviews. He has an H-index of 91 and his work has been cited over 25,000 times.He is a founding member of:Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Society (1996)International Society of Pediatric Mechanical Circulatory Support(2009)World Society for Pediatric and Congenital Cardiac Surgery (2010)Cardiac Neurodevelopmental Outcome Collaborative (2016)Congenital Heart Academy (2020) – which presented over 100 webinars free of charge in 2020-2021 during the Coronavirus Pandemic, to over 26,000 attendees in over 115 countries.He was awarded the prestigious Newburger-Bellinger Award in 2015, for his lifetime contributions to the field of Neurodevelopment in children with heart disease. In 2021, Dr. Wernovsky was awarded the 2021 Maria Serratto Master Educator Award by the Section on Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery of the American Academy of Pediatrics. Find out more about Gil and this episode at: www.the-incubator.org______________________________________________________________________________________As always, feel free to send us questions, comments or suggestions to our email: nicupodcast@gmail.com. You can also contact the show through instagram or twitter, @nicupodcast. Or contact Ben and Daphna directly via their twitter profiles: @drnicu and @doctordaphnamd. enjoy!This podcast is proudly sponsored by Chiesi.

Beauty and the Biz
Practices in LA and Austin. How? (Ep.163)

Beauty and the Biz

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2022 62:43


Hello, and welcome to Beauty and the Biz where we talk about the business and marketing side of plastic surgery and how Sheila Barbarino, MD has practices in LA and Austin. I'm your host, Catherine Maley, author of Your Aesthetic Practice – What your patients are saying, as well as consultant to plastic surgeons, to get them more patients and more profits. Now, today's episode is called “Practices in LA and Austin. How? - with Sheila Barbarino, MD". When life throws you a curve ball, you have the choice to duck, run away or figure it out. That's what Sheila Barbarino, MD did. She figured it out. Dr. Barbarino, a cosmetic surgeon of the face and body has a thriving practice in LA with celebrity clientele, lots of PR media opportunities and a great reputation as the go-to source for expert techniques for injectables, laser and aesthetic devices. All was well until she experienced a pull to set up another practice in Austin, TX (you have to listen in to find out).    This week's Beauty and the Biz Podcast is my interview with Dr. Barbarino describing her journey from LA to Austin to worldwide lecturer, innovator and industry thought leader.  It's quite a ride! Visit Dr. Barbarino's Website  

Health Trip with Jill Foos
Micronutrient Deficiencies and Personalized Supplementation - #25

Health Trip with Jill Foos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2022 64:38


Micronutrient deficiencies are a growing public health concern. In 2019, Cambridge University published a paper concerning micronutrient deficiencies. We've known for a long time that iron, iodine, and vitamin A deficiencies have been a long-term global concern, and now they are reporting that vitamin D, B12, and riboflavin (B2) are added to that list. Micronutrient deficiencies lead to poor health outcomes, and increased healthcare costs. Most people are taking supplements completely wrong. Taking too much, taking not enough, taking supplements that your body doesn't need and how they interact with pharmaceuticals and food is revealed in this episode. Dr. Ron Grabowski is the founder and director of the Houston Sports Rehabilitation and Nutrition Center. He is a practicing Doctor of Chiropractic in Houston, Texas and has over 40 years of clinical nutrition experience, presented over 1500 seminars and lectures on nutrition throughout the United States and in Europe, publishing several articles and a textbook on clinical nutrition.He received his Bachelor of Science degree in Nutrition from North Dakota State University, and went on to be awarded his Doctor of Chiropractic degree 1989, and became a professor and postgraduate diplomate lecturer. In addition, he's a Registered Dietitian and his dietetic experience includes tenure at some of the leading hospitals in the nation: The New York Hospital, Memorial Sloan-Kettering in New York City, Memorial Care System, and the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.Dr. Grabowski has served on the State of Texas Governor's Childhood Obesity Taskforce and is a member of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, American Chiropractic Association, Texas Chiropractic Association and the Endocrine Society. In addition to his chiropractic practice, he's developed numerous vitamin and mineral formulas for supplement companies. Professional athletes, including Olympians, seek his expertise in nutrition consultation.His research interests include nutritional support of the athlete and the use of supplements in clinical practice for the prevention and management of chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, autoimmune, musculoskeletal conditions, fibromyalgia, and gastrointestinal disorders.You can find Dr. Grabowski here:website: https://hsrnc.net/Look for his newest website at: www.ovationnutrition.com

Health Trip with Jill Foos
Micronutrient Deficiencies and Personalized Supplementation

Health Trip with Jill Foos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2022 64:38


Micronutrient deficiencies are a growing public health concern. In 2019, Cambridge University published a paper concerning micronutrient deficiencies. We've known for a long time that iron, iodine, and vitamin A deficiencies have been a long-term global concern, and now they are reporting that vitamin D, B12, and riboflavin (B2) are added to that list. Micronutrient deficiencies lead to poor health outcomes, and increased healthcare costs. Most people are taking supplements completely wrong. Taking too much, taking not enough, taking supplements that your body doesn't need and how they interact with pharmaceuticals and food is revealed in this episode. Dr. Ron Grabowski is the founder and director of the Houston Sports Rehabilitation and Nutrition Center. He is a practicing Doctor of Chiropractic in Houston, Texas and has over 40 years of clinical nutrition experience, presented over 1500 seminars and lectures on nutrition throughout the United States and in Europe, publishing several articles and a textbook on clinical nutrition.He received his Bachelor of Science degree in Nutrition from North Dakota State University, and went on to be awarded his Doctor of Chiropractic degree 1989, and became a professor and postgraduate diplomate lecturer. In addition, he's a Registered Dietitian and his dietetic experience includes tenure at some of the leading hospitals in the nation: The New York Hospital, Memorial Sloan-Kettering in New York City, Memorial Care System, and the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas.Dr. Grabowski has served on the State of Texas Governor's Childhood Obesity Taskforce and is a member of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, American Chiropractic Association, Texas Chiropractic Association and the Endocrine Society. In addition to his chiropractic practice, he's developed numerous vitamin and mineral formulas for supplement companies. Professional athletes, including Olympians, seek his expertise in nutrition consultation.His research interests include nutritional support of the athlete and the use of supplements in clinical practice for the prevention and management of chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, autoimmune, musculoskeletal conditions, fibromyalgia, and gastrointestinal disorders.You can find Dr. Grabowski here:website: https://hsrnc.net/Look for his newest website at: www.ovationnutrition.com

The New York Mystery Machine
Episode 34: "Grave Robbers and The Doctor Riots of 1788"

The New York Mystery Machine

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 48:51


This episode is an odd and awful look at the world of medicine in the 18th Century. Because there were no ways to secure deceased bodies for scientific study and research, med students at Columbia College and New York Hospital went to cemeteries and robbed the graves of the poor, immigrants, and free and enslaved African Americans. The result of these heinous acts? A two day riot that saw New Yorkers rage against the school, hospital, students, and doctors. Available wherever you get your podcasts. Be sure to Subscribe, Rate, & Review on iTunes! Support the show by becoming a sponsor on our Patreon: www.Patreon.com/NYMysteryMachine Don't forget to follow us on all the socials: Instagram: @NYMysteryMachineTwitter: @NYMysteriesFacebook: @NYMysteryMachine THANK YOU TO OUR SPONSORS BARKBOX: Use the link www.barkbox.com/NYMysteryMachine to get a Free Extra Month of BarkBox (valued at $35) when you sign up for multi-length plans. HUNT A KILLER: Receive 20% off your first Hunt a Killer subscription box at www.HuntAKiller.com with the code NYMYSTERYMACHINE at checkout!

The Mindful Experiment Podcast
EP#349 - Diving Deep on the Truth on COVID

The Mindful Experiment Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2022 65:08


In this week's special interview, I had the pleasure to discuss and dive deep into COVID with American Frontline doctor, Dr. Richard Amerling.   Dr. Amerling brings a wealth of knowledge on this topic and we discuss all aspects of COVID, treatments for COVID, the vaccine, the risks vs the benefit, standard of care for those who end up being hospitalized for COVID and so much more. This information is not what you normally hear on mainstream media and based upon popular demand from our Mindful Experiment community, this was a topic that came up strongly to be discussed and I am very glad and honored to have Dr. Amerling on the show.   Share with your loved ones...  There is a lot of truth in this episode...   Who is Dr. Richard Amerling? Dr. Amerling is a native New Yorker. He graduated from Stuyvesant High School, earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the City College of New York, and a medical degree at the Catholic University of Louvain in Brussels, Belgium.   Dr. Amerling completed his Internship and Residency in Internal Medicine at New York Hospital, Queens in Flushing, N.Y., and a Nephrology Fellowship at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.  From1990-2016, Dr. Amerling was on staff at the Beth Israel Medical Center (now Mount Sinai Beth Israel). There he developed the peritoneal dialysis program and a program for continuous renal replacement therapy in the ICU setting.    He served as Director of Outpatient Dialysis from 1995-2012.   In October 2016, Dr. Amerling accepted a position as Professor at St. George's   University School of Medicine and taught there until July 2021.   Dr. Amerling is board certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine for Internal Medicine and Nephrology. He is Past-President of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons.    He is on the editorial board of Blood Purification.   Dr. Amerling has presented at numerous medical conferences, both nationally and internationally. Dr. Amerling's work has been published as chapters in textbooks and in peer-reviewed medical journals.   He is currently Associate Medical Director of America's Frontline Doctors.   How to Help and Connect… American Frontline Doctors - www.AFLDS.org Frontline Critical Care Contortion - www.Covid19CriticalCare.com Association of American Physicians and Surgeons - www.aapsonline.org/ Truth for Health Foundation - www.truthforhealth.org/   Contact Local Rep: https://www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative   --------------------------------------------------------   Connect with Dr. Vic... Website: www.EmpowerYourReality.com Facebook: www.Facebook.com/drvicmanzo Instagram: www.Instagram.com/drvicmanzo LinkedIn: www.LinkedIn.com/in/drmanzo   Check out my books: https://amzn.to/3gzr9XT   About Dr. Vic... I'm Dr. Vic Manzo Jr., a Business Mindset Coach, Self-Mastery Expert, Influential Author, Inspirational Speaker, and the host and creator of The Mindful Experiment Podcast and The Mindful Chiropractor Podcast.   I teach entrepreneurs and Chiropractors how to DOUBLE their profits while working less and leading a SOUL-FILLED Life...   If you want to create this in your life for 2022, CLICK HERE or visit: TinyUrl.com/LevelUpWithDrVic

The Gary Null Show
The Gary Null Show - 01.26.22

The Gary Null Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2022 62:48


New study calls into question the importance of meat eating in shaping our evolution George Washington University, Jan. 24, 2022  Quintessential human traits such as large brains first appear in Homo erectus nearly 2 million years ago. This evolutionary transition towards human-like traits is often linked to a major dietary shift involving greater meat consumption. A new study published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, however, calls into question the primacy of meat eating in early human evolution. While the archaeological evidence for meat eating increases dramatically after the appearance of Homo erectus, the study authors argue that this increase can largely be explained by greater research attention on this time period, effectively skewing the evidence in favor of the “meat made us human” hypothesis. Barr and his colleagues compiled published data from nine major research areas in eastern Africa, including 59 site levels dating between 2.6 and 1.2 million years ago. They used several metrics to track hominin carnivory: the number of zooarchaeological sites preserving animal bones that have cut marks made by stone tools, the total count of animal bones with cut marks across sites, and the number of separately reported stratigraphic levels. The researchers found that, when accounting for variation in sampling effort over time, there is no sustained increase in the relative amount of evidence for carnivory after the appearance of H. erectus.    New study shows aged garlic extract can reduce dangerous plaque buildup in arteries UCLA Medical Center, January 21, 2022   The supplement Aged Garlic Extract can reverse the buildup of deadly plaque in arteries and help prevent the progression of heart disease, according to a new study scheduled for publication in the Journal of Nutrition.   The research, conducted at LA BioMed, found a reduction in the amount of low-attenuation plaque, or "soft plaque," in the arteries of patients with metabolic syndrome who took Aged Garlic Extract. Metabolic syndrome is characterized by obesity, hypertension and other cardiac risk factors.   Following evaluation, the participants were given either a placebo or a dose of 2,400 milligrams of Aged Garlic Extract every day. A follow-up screening conducted a year after the initial screening found those who had taken Aged Garlic Extract had slowed total plaque accumulation by 80%, reduced soft plaque and demonstrated regression (less plaque on follow-up) for low-attenuation plaque.       Eating More Plants May Keep Dementia From Flourishing University of Barcelona (Spain), January 14, 2022   A recently published 12-year cohort study out of the University of Barcelona suggests that following a plant-based diet may help reduce the risk of cognitive decline and dementia in older age. Of the 800 participants, all aged 65 and up, those who consumed polyphenol-rich foods such as fruits and vegetables, as well as mushrooms, cocoa, coffee and red wine, had a lower risk of dementia compared to those who avoided these "superfoods." According to the study's authors, these findings shed light on the relationship between the body's metabolism, the gut's microbiome (which includes trillions of microorganisms) and cognitive impairment. "Studying this relationship is essential to develop preventive and therapeutic strategies that help take care of our cognitive health," the authors stated in the Molecular Nutrition & Food Research Journal.   Supplement urolithin A appears to boost muscle, mitochondria health University of Washington School of Medicine, January 22, 2022 An oral supplement intended to stimulate a natural body process appears to promote muscle endurance and mitochondrial health in humans. New research suggests that the supplement, urolithin A, may help improve or prolong muscle activity in people who are aging or who have diseases that make exercise difficult.  Urolithin A is a byproduct of a person's gut bacteria and a diet comprising polyphenols found in pomegranates, berries and nuts. Because diet, age, genetics and disease affect the makeup of the gut microbiome, people produce urolithin A at variable rates. The compound also is produced and sold by dietary supplement companies. Supplemental urolithin A has been shown in animal tests and molecular studies of humans to stimulate mitophagy, a process that Marcinek explained as “mitochondrial quality control.” “Even though we did not observe an effect of the supplement in whole body function (via six-minute measure and ATP production),” Marcinek said, “these results are still exciting because they demonstrate that just taking a supplement for a short duration actually improved muscle endurance. Fatigue resistance got better in the absence of exercise.”The study's funder, Amazentis, of Lausanne, Switzerland, manufactures the urolithin A supplement used in the trial.   Step Up: walking may reduce Type 2 Diabetes risk for adults 65 and older University of California at San Diego, January 22, 2022 Walking regularly and at greater intensity may help prevent Type 2 diabetes among 70 and 80 year olds, according to one of the first studies measuring steps and pace among this population. The more steps a person takes, and the more intense, the lower their risk for developing diabetes, report researchers in a study published in Diabetes Care. “A key figure from our study is that for every 1,000 steps per day, our results showed a 6% lower diabetes risk in this population. What that means is, if the average older adult were to take 2,000 more steps every day in addition to what they were already doing, they might expect a 12% reduction in diabetes risk,” said first author Alexis C. Garduno, a third-year student in the University of California San Diego and San Diego State University joint doctoral program in public health.     Fish oil, vitamin B12 supplementation associated with lower plasma homocystein Zhejiang University (China), January 25 2022    The Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition published the finding of researchers at Zhejiang University in Hangzhou, China of a reduction in plasma homocysteine levels following supplementation with vitamin B12 and/or fish oil.    "No study has reported the effect of vitamin B12 in combination with fish oil on plasma homocysteine, ferritin, CRP and other cardiovascular disease risk factors in Chinese," announce Duo Li and colleagues in their introduction to the article.    Thirty men and women were randomly assigned to receive 1000 micrograms (mcg) vitamin B12, 2 grams fish oil, or 2 grams fish oil plus 1000 mcg vitamin B12. Plasma vitamin B12, lipids, ferritin (a biomarker of iron status), C-reactive protein (CRP), total homocysteine and other factors were measured before treatment and after four and eight weeks of supplementation.    Among those who received fish oil alone or fish oil plus vitamin B12, triglycerides, CRP and ferritin significantly decreased after four and eight weeks of supplementation. Homocysteine was lowered by 22% in the vitamin B12 group, 19% in the fish oil group and 39% among those who received both supplements for eight weeks.       VIDEO   Nicole Sirotek (founder of America's Frontline Nurses) shares what she saw on the front lines Speaking at congressional hearing moderated by Sen Ron Johnson on Monday January 24 https://rumble.com/vt837j-registered-nurse-nicole-sirotek-shares-what-she-saw-on-the-front-lines-in-n.html   US Report Reveals 22 Years of Effort and Fluoridation Failed to Improve Oral Health New York -- January 24, 2022  Despite increases in public water fluoridation, dental visits, sealants, fluoride varnish applications, and significant financial, training, and program investments, oral health hasn't improved in 22 years, according to a National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) Oral Health in America Report (December 2021), reports the New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation, Inc. (NYSCOF). “America's shockingly poor dental system, poverty and poor diets are to blame,” says attorney Paul Beeber, NYSCOF President.  Millions of Americans can't access dental care, while 70% of US children and adolescents are fluoride-overdosed, afflicted with fluorosis (permanently discolored teeth).   For example, the NIDCR reports: The military continues to face challenges in meeting recruitment goals and military readiness because of oral health-related issues. Untreated cavities among the poor remain twice that of non-poor. Disparities persist by race/ethnicity status. Primary tooth decay increased in boys aged 6-11 and didn't change in adolescents' and adults' permanent teeth. Untreated decay in permanent teeth shows no progress.  In ages 2-11, decayed tooth surfaces increased with a greater impact on boys   Four out of 5 Americans aged 6 years and older experience cavities, irrespective of poverty or race/ethnicity status.   40% of children have eroded teeth.       China Builds 27 Empty New York Cities Epoch Times, January 20, 2022 As of 2016, China's empty apartment units could house New York City 27 times over. With that in mind, how could you afford to pay the construction mortgages on 70 million apartment units with no residents deeded to you by the evil genie? A challenging question. You would have to do some fast talking with the Chinese banks of the sort Trump managed with New York banks decades ago during the S&L crisis. Your only hope of avoiding being sucked into a black hole of debt defaults would be to hire some creative scoundrels disguised as accountants to help you persuade the banks to lend you additional billions (or more probably, trillions) to postpone the day of reckoning. Note that the extent to which you could succeed would only worsen the ultimate malinvestment problem. Your assets would not be enhanced in any way by being encumbered with additional debt. They would just become more costly. That is at least a $36.4 trillion question. Maybe a $45.9 trillion, or possibly even a $116.6 trillion question. The correct answer depends on China's actual debt level. Forbes reports the estimate of Professor Victor Shih of the University of California San Diego. Shih believes that Chinese official debt figures have proven woefully inadequate. In 2017, Shih put total Chinese debt at 328 percent of GDP (reported at $14 trillion), therefore $45.9 trillion. According to Shih, “total interest payments from June 2016 to June 2017 exceeded the incremental increase in nominal GDP by roughly 8 trillion RMB.” A collapse of China's asset bubble lies ahead. I doubt any Chinese tycoons are strolling the streets of Shanghai with their girlfriends, making jokes about street people being a trillion yuan richer than they are. That underscores a problem when the government of a country enlarges debt to magnitudes beyond the scale of assets held by even the wealthiest persons. That makes it all the more unlikely that mortgaged assets can be redeemed from hock while encumbered by anything like their current level of debt.   IMF sees cost of COVID pandemic rising beyond $12.5 trillion estimate  IMF/OECD News 21/01/2022   The International Monetary Fund expects to raise its forecast that the COVID-19 pandemic will cost the global economy $12.5 trillion through 2024, the head of the global lender said on Thursday. IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told an event hosted by the Financial Times that supply chain disruptions, inflation and tighter monetary policy were “throwing cold water on the recovery everywhere.” She said huge gaps in COVID-19 vaccine rates and the overall widening divergence between rich and poor caused by the pandemic, along with learning losses and increased gender impacts, would cause more protests, tensions and insecurity.     Review of the Emerging Evidence Demonstrating the Efficacy of Ivermectin in the Prophylaxis and Treatment of COVID-19 Kory, Pierre MD, Marik, Paul E. MD American Journal of Therapeutics: May Jun 2021 - Volume 28 - Issue 3  Therapeutic Advances:  A large majority of randomized and observational controlled trials of ivermectin are reporting repeated, large magnitude improvements in clinical outcomes. Numerous prophylaxis trials demonstrate that regular ivermectin use leads to large reductions in transmission. Multiple, large “natural experiments” occurred in regions that initiated “ivermectin distribution” campaigns followed by tight, reproducible, temporally associated decreases in case counts and case fatality rates compared with nearby regions without such campaigns. Conclusions:  Meta-analyses based on 18 randomized controlled treatment trials of ivermectin in COVID-19 have found large, statistically significant reductions in mortality, time to clinical recovery, and time to viral clearance. Furthermore, results from numerous controlled prophylaxis trials report significantly reduced risks of contracting COVID-19 with the regular use of ivermectin. Finally, the many examples of ivermectin distribution campaigns leading to rapid population-wide decreases in morbidity and mortality indicate that an oral agent effective in all phases of COVID-19 has been identified.     The media blackout on Fauci's damning emails They suggest something nefarious was up on the lab leak theory yet the press has refused to notice SPECTATOR WORLD, January 17, 2022  Last week saw another batch of emails drop from Anthony Fauci, and another media blackout as to their contents. The strategy by the press in cases like this has been pretty straightforward: ignore the story, wait for right-leaning media or Republicans to pick it up, then frame any attacks on the subject as tainted by partisanship. Last week, when confronted once again by Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, Fauci responded with more hyperbole and ad hominem. The media, meanwhile, framed the exchanges as “Rand Paul Attacks!” and “Anthony Fauci defends!” They refused to look at the information in the emails that Paul was asking about, refused to ask questions about them, refused to even report on them. They are interested in the bloodsport, not the truth. The reason for that is simple: the truth is becoming very problematic for the man who once conflated himself with science itself. The only reporting done on the emails by the New York Times, for instance, was a video clip from the Associated Press regarding the exchange with Senator Paul. What has not been covered with any sort of journalistic enthusiasm is the topic of the emails themselves, the most damning yet, which suggest that Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins, the former head of the NIH, purposefully downplayed the possibility of a lab leak in Wuhan, China, at the start of the pandemic because it might have damaged “international harmony” in the scientific community.   Alberta Canada Inadvertently Published (and Quickly Deleted) Health Data Exposing that More Than Half of Vaccinated Deaths Have Been Counted as Unvaccinated Gateway Pundit 23 January 2022 In yet another absolute bombshell revelation the government of Alberta, Canada exposed itself this week when it accidentally published damning evidence that exposes how the public health authorities have been manipulating the Covid-19 statistics. After seemingly realizing what it had just done, the corrupt Canadian province quickly scrambled to delete the incriminating data off their website, but, thanks to internet sleuths like Twitter user Metatron – and his substack post, we have the receipts. According to its latest Covid-19 update, the Alberta Government admitted to following the fraudulent standard that was in use by vaccine manufacturers during clinical trials – which is to ignore the adverse outcomes, including Covid infection, hospitalizations, and deaths, for fourteen days after vaccine administration – no matter how many doses they have had. But instead of just ignoring the cases like the vaccine manufacturers, the corrupt Alberta government has been lumping them in with the unvaxxed. In other words, anyone who was infected – was hospitalized – or even died, in the two weeks following their first, second, or even THIRD dose would be recorded as an unvaccinated case. And now, thanks to the now-deleted data, we can tell exactly how many cases have been fraudulently manipulated by inadvertently including the time from dose to infection for each of the events – and as it turns out, over half of the vaccinated deaths were added to the unvaccinated. Almost 56% of ‘recorded' Covid-related deaths among the vaccinated occurred within 14 days of vaccination – and almost 90% within 45 days, which is noteworthy because that is what's claimed to be the timeframe of the vaccine's effectiveness. As for hospitalizations, the numbers aren't that much better. Almost half of the severe cases among the vaccinated happened within the two-week window, meaning they were tallied as unvaccinated in the official record. 80% of which occurred within the first 45 days post-vaccination.   COVID testing firm piled unprocessed swabs in trash bags, billed feds $113M ARS TECHNICA  1/20/2022,  Federal and state investigations into a large national chain of COVID-19 testing sites have turned up tests that were never labeled with patients' names, tests piled into trash bags stored for long periods at room temperature, tests that were never processed, and test results that were clearly fake. Behind the testing sites are two Illinois-based companies: Center for COVID Control (CCC) and Doctors Clinical Laboratory, Inc., which is said to carry out COVID PCR testing for CCC. The two companies share the same address, though CCC is owned by Chicago-area couple Akbar Syed and Aleya Siyaj, while the clinical company is owned by Mohammed Shujauddin. Together, the companies claim to provide rapid and PCR testing for COVID-19, with fast turnaround times and no appointments necessary. So far, they have collected more than 400,000 samples from over 300 locations across the US. And they have billed the federal government over $113 million for running many of those tests. The companies are currently under investigation by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), as well as multiple states. On Wednesday, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison filed a lawsuit alleging numerous counts of deceptive or fraudulent practices by the pair. According to federal inspections reported by NBC News, CCC employees didn't even label some samples with patients' names. Inspection documents from federal investigators noted that "51 out of 51 patient specimen tubes contained in the box [they examined] were blank.”     Two Studies: COVID-19 Vaccines Trigger Autoimmune Graves' Disease  Sharyl Attkisson, The Vaccine Reaction, July 26, 2021   A recent published medical report out of Mexico details two cases of healthy, female health care workers who got COVID-19 vaccines and, three days later, developed “thyroid hyperactivity, suppressed thyroid-stimulating hormone, and elevated antithyroid antibodies.” They were both diagnosed with vaccine-induced Graves' disease. According to the authors who wrote up the cases, “autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by [vaccine] adjuvants  (ASIA), described for the first time a decade ago, is triggered by several adjuvants (a substance that enhances the antigen-specific immune response) and includes the following conditions: Gulf War syndrome, siliconosis, macrophagic myofasciitis syndrome, and postvaccination phenomena.” According to a summary, “Vaccines have been shown to trigger an immune response that leads to a broad spectrum of autoimmune diseases, including autoimmune thyroid disease. Our patients met the diagnostic criteria for ASIA [autoimmune/inflammatory syndrome induced by adjuvants]; they were exposed to an adjuvant (vaccine), and they developed clinical manifestations of thyroid hyperfunction within a few days, with the appearance of antithyroid antibodies, despite being healthy before vaccination.” The scientists write, “In addition, the spike glycoprotein of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccine shares a genetic similarity with a large heptapeptide human protein, so this is an additional factor that can trigger autoimmune disease (AID) after vaccination due to molecular mimicry.”     Antibodies from original strain COVID-19 infection don't bind to variants University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign People infected with the original strain of the virus that causes COVID-19 early in the pandemic produced a consistent antibody response, making two main groups of antibodies to bind to the spike protein on the virus's outer surface. However, those antibodies don't bind well to newer variants, a new study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign found. The researchers mined published papers about COVID-19 patients for data about the sequence of the antibodies they produced. They focused on antibodies against the spike protein, the part of the virus that binds to receptors on human cells to infect them. The spike protein is the target of most vaccines. They found that many antibody sequences converged into two main groups, indicating a consistent human immune response to the virus, said graduate student Timothy Tan, the first author of the study. Even though this antibody response is very common with the original strain, it doesn't really interact with variants," Wu said. "That, of course, raises the concern of the virus evolving to escape the body's main antibody response. Some antibodies should still be effective—the body makes antibodies to many parts of the virus, not only the spike protein—but the particular groups of antibodies that we saw in this study will not be as effective."atients who have been infected with variants, understanding the difference in the immune response is one of the directions that we would like to pursue."   Why shoplifting is soaring across the US — and will only get worse NEW YORK POST. January 22, 2022   Retail crime has been rising throughout the US for the past five years, with organized criminal rings targeting stores everywhere from Woonsocket (Rhode Island) to Greensboro (North Carolina) to Grafton (Wisconsin). The National Retail Federation reported that store losses mounted from $453,940 per $1 billion in sales in 2015 to $719,458 in 2020.  The biggest increase over that period happened not during the pandemic but in 2019, when total losses from shoplifting surged to $61 billion, up from $50 billion the previous year. The COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 and early 2021 moderated losses, largely because stores were closed or had curtailed operating hours. Now that retailing has resumed, crime has spiked again. Shoplifting no longer fits its traditional mold as a nonviolent crime perpetrated mostly by teens or substance-abusing adults. Nearly two-thirds of the retailers surveyed by the National Retail Federation said that violence associated with store thefts has risen, led by organized gangs that resell the goods they steal. Like retailers, top law-enforcement officials place some of the blame for the crime surge on a widespread lessening of penalties for shoplifting.  California's recent headline-making “flash mob” shoplifting sprees have brought widespread attention to Proposition 47 — a 2014 state ballot initiative, supported by a range of left-leaning and libertarian groups, which, among other things, boosted the felony threshold for shoplifting from $450 of merchandise to $950. Soon after it passed, retailers in California began reporting a sharp uptick in retail theft, often in plain view of helpless store personnel and distressed customers.  What has received far less attention, however, is the fact that California's Prop. 47 was not an outlier among states. In the past 10 years, nearly half of all states have boosted their thresholds for retail felony theft. Thirty-eight states now don't consider shoplifting a felony unless $1,000 or more of merchandise gets stolen. A 2020 National Retail Federation report on organized retail crime found that two-thirds of retailers in states that had raised their felony shoplifting minimums reported growing retail theft.   The Significance of the Nuremberg Code: The Universal Right of Informed Consent to Medical Interventions By Alliance for Human Research Protection Global Research, September 20, 2021 The universal right of Informed Consent to medical interventions has been recognized in US law since at least 1914. That year, the New York Court of Appeals established the right to informed consent to medical intervention in a case involving non-consensual surgery. Schloendorff v. Society of New York Hospital 105 N.E. 92, 93 N.Y. (1914) Justice Benjamin Cardozo articulated the court's reasoning:   Every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body; and a surgeon who performs an operation without his patient's consent commits an assault for which he is liable in damages.” The 1947 Nuremberg Code is the most important legal document in the history of medical research ethics. It established 10 foundational principles of ethical clinical research. The first and foremost principle is unequivocal: “The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential”. It prohibits research to be conducted on human beings without the informed consent of the individual. The first US Supreme Court decision in which the Nuremberg Code was invoked was in 1987.  The plaintiff was a Sergeant in the US Army who sought compensation — having been a victim in a covert CIA-sponsored, LSD mind-control experiment. In 1994, the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments was tasked with investigating and documenting the scope of unethical US government human radiation experiments. The (ACHRE) Report(1995) includes CIA mind-control experiments and devotes two chapters to the Nuremberg Code, and describes the growing influence that the Nuremberg Doctors Trial and the Nuremberg Code had on the American medical establishment. In 2001, the Maryland Court of Appeal explicitly cited the Nuremberg Code as a source of legally enforceable ethical standardsin the case against the Kennedy Krieger Institute. The case involved a government lead abatement experiment that exposed inner city Black toddlers to lead paint. The purpose was to record the damaging effects of lead. The parents were not informed about the purpose or the risks.  The case involved Pfizer which conducted an unapproved, trial of its experimental antibiotic, Trovan on children in Nigeria. The court found Pfizer guilty. Rabi Abdullahi, et al. v. Pfizer, Inc., 562 F.3d (2d Cir. 2009) “Among the nonconsensual experiments that the tribunal cited as a basis for their convictions were the testing of drugs for immunization against malaria, epidemic jaundice, typhus, smallpox and cholera. Seven of the convicted doctors were sentenced to death and the remaining eight were sentenced to varying terms of imprisonment. The American tribunal's conclusion that action that contravened the Code's first principle constituted a crime against humanity is a lucid indication of the international legal significance of the prohibition on nonconsensual medical experimentation.” Telford Taylor explained,“Nuernberg was based on enduring [legal] principles and not on temporary political expedients, and this fundamental point is apparent from the reaffirmation of the Nuernberg principles in Control Council Law No. 10, and their application and refinement in the 12 judgments rendered under that law during the 3-year period, 1947 to 1949.”   On March 7th an Israeli citizens group filed a a petition to the International Criminal Court charging the Israeli Government with violating the Nuremberg Code with its mandatory Vaccination policy Anshe Ha-Emet (People of the Truth) a fellowship, composed of Israeli doctors, lawyers and citizens, filed a complaint against the government national “medical experiment” without the informed consent of the citizens. Attorneys Ruth Makhachovsky and Aryeh Suchowolski filed the complaint stating: “When the heads of the Ministry of Health as well as the prime minister presented the vaccine in Israel and began the vaccination of Israeli residents, the vaccinated were not advised, that, in practice, they are taking part in a medical experiment and that their consent is required for this under the Nuremberg Code”.

The Gary Null Show
The Gary Null Show - 01.25.22

The Gary Null Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2022 59:28


Broccoli compound induces cell death, offers research path for cancer treatment    Hiroshima University (Japan), January 24, 2022 Broccoli may contain advantages beyond nutrition. A molecule found in broccoli, cabbage and more digests down into DIM, a compound with brighter benefits than the name implies, such as inducing cell death in breast, prostate and colon cancer. Now, researchers are beginning to understand the mechanism underpinning this molecular behavior — information that could help elucidate future anti-cancer treatments. In a report published oin PLOS One, Hiroshima University researchers summarize their finding that DIM, or 3,3'-Diindolylmethane, also triggers controlled whole-cell death and recycling of cellular components.   (NEXT)   Late-life exercise shows rejuvenating effects on cellular level University of Arkansas, January 24, 2022   For people who hate exercising, here comes some more bad news: it may also keep you younger. Not just looking younger, but actually younger, on an epigenetic level. By now, the benefits of exercise have been well established, including increased strength of bones and muscles, improved mobility and endurance, and lower risk of heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure. But younger? A study recently published in Aging Cell, "Late-life exercise mitigates skeletal muscle epigenetic aging," suggests this could be the case.   (NEXT)   Fish oil users have lower risk of liver cancer   Ningbo University (China) & Albert Einstein College of Medicine (US), January 24 2022. Findings from a study published in Frontiers in Nutrition revealed a significantly lower risk of liver cancer among people who supplemented with fish oil compared to nonusers. The study included 434,584 middle-aged and older men and women enrolled in the UK Biobank who were free of cancer upon enrollment. Participants were queried concerning fish oil use in questionnaires completed at the beginning of the study. Cancer registry data reported cases diagnosed during a median follow-up period of 7.8 years.   (NEXT)   Vitamin K could offer protection against severe COVID-19, study show   Canisius-Wilhelmina Hospital (Netherlands), January 21, 2022 Proper nutrition can make a difference when it comes to many health problems, and COVID-19 is no exception. While zinc, Vitamin C and Vitamin D have been getting a lot of attention when it comes to COVID-19, researchers are now pointing to another useful nutrient: vitamin K. This fat-soluble vitamin is already well-known for its role in blood clotting, and that's why it could have a protective effect against COVID-19 given the virus's ability to cause blood clotting degradation of elastic fibers in the lungs. In a Preprint study, Dutch researchers suggested that people with severe COVID-19 may have low levels of vitamin K. They wrote: “Coagulation is an intricate balance between clot promoting and dissolving processes in which vitamin K plays a well-known role.”   (NEXT)   Olive oil could slash your chance of bone fractures in half, study says   Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea (Spain), January 24, 2022 Eating more extra virgin olive oil could cut your risk of osteoporosis related fractures, says a new study. The phenolic compounds found in extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) have a potential benefit on bone health, lowering the risk of fractures by 51%, if consumed regularly. After looking at data of 870 people, a positive role of EVOO consumption on bone-related markers was found, despite there being no significant positive effects on bone fractures in subjects allocated to an EVOO diet.   (NEXT)   Red pigment in red peppers and oranges linked to a lower risk of lung cancer   Tufts University, January 20, 2022 Xiang-Dong Wang, a cancer researcher at Tufts, has spent a long time trying to figure out why carotenoids, the main pigments providing colors that range from yellow and pink to deep orange and red in most fruits and vegetables, seem to keep chronic diseases at bay. When a 2004 study by other researchers showed that eating foods containing beta-cryptoxanthin (BCX)—a red pigment abundant in sweet red peppers, paprika, winter and butternut squash, oranges. and tangerines, among other foods—was associated with a lower risk of lung cancer in people who smoke, he made BCX a focus of his research.   (OTHER NEWS NEXT)   US Report Reveals 22 Years of Effort and Fluoridation Failed to Improve Oral Health   New York -- January 24, 2022 Despite increases in public water fluoridation, dental visits, sealants, fluoride varnish applications, and significant financial, training, and program investments, oral health hasn't improved in 22 years, according to a National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR) Oral Health in America Report (December 2021), reports the New York State Coalition Opposed to Fluoridation, Inc. (NYSCOF). “America's shockingly poor dental system, poverty and poor diets are to blame,” says attorney Paul Beeber, NYSCOF President. Millions of Americans can't access dental care, while 70% of US children and adolescents are fluoride-overdosed, afflicted with fluorosis (permanently discolored teeth). For example, the NIDCR reports: ·  The military continues to face challenges in meeting recruitment goals and military readiness because of oral health-related issues. ·  Untreated cavities among the poor remain twice that of non-poor. Disparities persist by race/ethnicity status. ·  Primary tooth decay increased in boys aged 6-11 and didn't change in adolescents' and adults' permanent teeth. ·  Untreated decay in permanent teeth shows no progress. ·   In ages 2-11, decayed tooth surfaces increased with a greater impact on boys ·   Four out of 5 Americans aged 6 years and older experience cavities, irrespective of poverty or race/ethnicity status. ·   40% of children have eroded teeth.   (NEXT)   China Builds 27 Empty New York Cities   Epoch Times, January 20, 2022 As of 2016, China's empty apartment units could house New York City 27 times over. With that in mind, how could you afford to pay the construction mortgages on 70 million apartment units with no residents deeded to you by the evil genie? A challenging question. You would have to do some fast talking with the Chinese banks of the sort Trump managed with New York banks decades ago during the S&L crisis. Your only hope of avoiding being sucked into a black hole of debt defaults would be to hire some creative scoundrels disguised as accountants to help you persuade the banks to lend you additional billions (or more probably, trillions) to postpone the day of reckoning. Note that the extent to which you could succeed would only worsen the ultimate malinvestment problem. Your assets would not be enhanced in any way by being encumbered with additional debt. They would just become more costly. That is at least a $36.4 trillion question. Maybe a $45.9 trillion, or possibly even a $116.6 trillion question. The correct answer depends on China's actual debt level. Forbes reports the estimate of Professor Victor Shih of the University of California San Diego. Shih believes that Chinese official debt figures have proven woefully inadequate. In 2017, Shih put total Chinese debt at 328 percent of GDP (reported at $14 trillion), therefore $45.9 trillion. According to Shih, “total interest payments from June 2016 to June 2017 exceeded the incremental increase in nominal GDP by roughly 8 trillion RMB.” A collapse of China's asset bubble lies ahead. I doubt any Chinese tycoons are strolling the streets of Shanghai with their girlfriends, making jokes about street people being a trillion yuan richer than they are. That underscores a problem when the government of a country enlarges debt to magnitudes beyond the scale of assets held by even the wealthiest persons. That makes it all the more unlikely that mortgaged assets can be redeemed from hock while encumbered by anything like their current level of debt.   (NEXT)   IMF sees cost of COVID pandemic rising beyond $12.5 trillion estimate   IMF/OECD News 21/01/2022 The International Monetary Fund expects to raise its forecast that the COVID-19 pandemic will cost the global economy $12.5 trillion through 2024, the head of the global lender said on Thursday. IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva told an event hosted by the Financial Times that supply chain disruptions, inflation and tighter monetary policy were “throwing cold water on the recovery everywhere.” She said huge gaps in COVID-19 vaccine rates and the overall widening divergence between rich and poor caused by the pandemic, along with learning losses and increased gender impacts, would cause more protests, tensions and insecurity.   (NEXT)   The media blackout on Fauci's damning emails   They suggest something nefarious was up on the lab leak theory yet the press has refused to notice SPECTATOR WORLD, January 17, 2022 Last week saw another batch of emails drop from Anthony Fauci, and another media blackout as to their contents. The strategy by the press in cases like this has been pretty straightforward: ignore the story, wait for right-leaning media or Republicans to pick it up, then frame any attacks on the subject as tainted by partisanship. Last week, when confronted once again by Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky, Fauci responded with more hyperbole and ad hominem. The media, meanwhile, framed the exchanges as “Rand Paul Attacks!” and “Anthony Fauci defends!” They refused to look at the information in the emails that Paul was asking about, refused to ask questions about them, refused to even report on them. They are interested in the bloodsport, not the truth. The reason for that is simple: the truth is becoming very problematic for the man who once conflated himself with science itself. The only reporting done on the emails by the New York Times, for instance, was a video clip from the Associated Press regarding the exchange with Senator Paul. What has not been covered with any sort of journalistic enthusiasm is the topic of the emails themselves, the most damning yet, which suggest that Fauci and Dr. Francis Collins, the former head of the NIH, purposefully downplayed the possibility of a lab leak in Wuhan, China, at the start of the pandemic because it might have damaged “international harmony” in the scientific community.   (NEXT)   Alberta Canada Inadvertently Published (and Quickly Deleted) Health Data Exposing that More Than Half of Vaccinated Deaths Have Been Counted as Unvaccinated   Gateway Pundit 23 January 2022 In yet another absolute bombshell revelation the government of Alberta, Canada exposed itself this week when it accidentally published damning evidence that exposes how the public health authorities have been manipulating the Covid-19 statistics. After seemingly realizing what it had just done, the corrupt Canadian province quickly scrambled to delete the incriminating data off their website, but, thanks to internet sleuths like Twitter user Metatron – and his substack post, we have the receipts. According to its latest Covid-19 update, the Alberta Government admitted to following the fraudulent standard that was in use by vaccine manufacturers during clinical trials – which is to ignore the adverse outcomes, including Covid infection, hospitalizations, and deaths, for fourteen days after vaccine administration – no matter how many doses they have had. But instead of just ignoring the cases like the vaccine manufacturers, the corrupt Alberta government has been lumping them in with the unvaxxed. In other words, anyone who was infected – was hospitalized – or even died, in the two weeks following their first, second, or even THIRD dose would be recorded as an unvaccinated case. And now, thanks to the now-deleted data, we can tell exactly how many cases have been fraudulently manipulated by inadvertently including the time from dose to infection for each of the events – and as it turns out, over half of the vaccinated deaths were added to the unvaccinated. Almost 56% of ‘recorded' Covid-related deaths among the vaccinated occurred within 14 days of vaccination – and almost 90% within 45 days, which is noteworthy because that is what's claimed to be the timeframe of the vaccine's effectiveness. As for hospitalizations, the numbers aren't that much better. Almost half of the severe cases among the vaccinated happened within the two-week window, meaning they were tallied as unvaccinated in the official record. 80% of which occurred within the first 45 days post-vaccination.   (NEXT)   COVID testing firm piled unprocessed swabs in trash bags, billed feds $113M   ARS TECHNICA  1/20/2022, Federal and state investigations into a large national chain of COVID-19 testing sites have turned up tests that were never labeled with patients' names, tests piled into trash bags stored for long periods at room temperature, tests that were never processed, and test results that were clearly fake. Behind the testing sites are two Illinois-based companies: Center for COVID Control (CCC) and Doctors Clinical Laboratory, Inc., which is said to carry out COVID PCR testing for CCC. The two companies share the same address, though CCC is owned by Chicago-area couple Akbar Syed and Aleya Siyaj, while the clinical company is owned by Mohammed Shujauddin. Together, the companies claim to provide rapid and PCR testing for COVID-19, with fast turnaround times and no appointments necessary. So far, they have collected more than 400,000 samples from over 300 locations across the US. And they have billed the federal government over $113 million for running many of those tests. The companies are currently under investigation by the federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS), as well as multiple states. On Wednesday, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison filed a lawsuit alleging numerous counts of deceptive or fraudulent practices by the pair. According to federal inspections reported by NBC News, CCC employees didn't even label some samples with patients' names. Inspection documents from federal investigators noted that "51 out of 51 patient specimen tubes contained in the box [they examined] were blank.”   (NEXT)   Why shoplifting is soaring across the US — and will only get worse   NEW YORK POST. January 22, 2022 Retail crime has been rising throughout the US for the past five years, with organized criminal rings targeting stores everywhere from Woonsocket (Rhode Island) to Greensboro (North Carolina) to Grafton (Wisconsin). The National Retail Federation reported that store losses mounted from $453,940 per $1 billion in sales in 2015 to $719,458 in 2020. The biggest increase over that period happened not during the pandemic but in 2019, when total losses from shoplifting surged to $61 billion, up from $50 billion the previous year. The COVID-19 lockdowns in 2020 and early 2021 moderated losses, largely because stores were closed or had curtailed operating hours. Now that retailing has resumed, crime has spiked again. Shoplifting no longer fits its traditional mold as a nonviolent crime perpetrated mostly by teens or substance-abusing adults. Nearly two-thirds of the retailers surveyed by the National Retail Federation said that violence associated with store thefts has risen, led by organized gangs that resell the goods they steal. Like retailers, top law-enforcement officials place some of the blame for the crime surge on a widespread lessening of penalties for shoplifting. California's recent headline-making “flash mob” shoplifting sprees have brought widespread attention to Proposition 47 — a 2014 state ballot initiative, supported by a range of left-leaning and libertarian groups, which, among other things, boosted the felony threshold for shoplifting from $450 of merchandise to $950. Soon after it passed, retailers in California began reporting a sharp uptick in retail theft, often in plain view of helpless store personnel and distressed customers. What has received far less attention, however, is the fact that California's Prop. 47 was not an outlier among states. In the past 10 years, nearly half of all states have boosted their thresholds for retail felony theft. Thirty-eight states now don't consider shoplifting a felony unless $1,000 or more of merchandise gets stolen. A 2020 National Retail Federation report on organized retail crime found that two-thirds of retailers in states that had raised their felony shoplifting minimums reported growing retail theft. (NEXT)   The Significance of the Nuremberg Code: The Universal Right of Informed Consent to Medical Interventions   By Alliance for Human Research Protection Global Research, September 20, 2021 The universal right of Informed Consent to medical interventions has been recognized in US law since at least 1914. 1. That year, the New York Court of Appeals established the right to informed consent to medical intervention in a case involving non-consensual surgery. Schloendorff v. Society of New York Hospital 105 N.E. 92, 93 N.Y. (1914) Justice Benjamin Cardozo articulated the court's reasoning: Every human being of adult years and sound mind has a right to determine what shall be done with his own body; and a surgeon who performs an operation without his patient's consent commits an assault for which he is liable in damages.” 2. The 1947 Nuremberg Code is the most important legal document in the history of medical research ethics. It established 10 foundational principles of ethical clinical research. The first and foremost principle is unequivocal: “The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential”. It prohibits research to be conducted on human beings without the informed consent of the individual. 4. The first US Supreme Court decision in which the Nuremberg Code was invoked was in 1987.  The plaintiff was a Sergeant in the US Army who sought compensation — having been a victim in a covert CIA-sponsored, LSD mind-control experiment. 5. In 1994, the Advisory Committee on Human Radiation Experiments was tasked with investigating and documenting the scope of unethical US government human radiation experiments. The (ACHRE) Report (1995) includes CIA mind-control experiments and devotes two chapters to the Nuremberg Code, and describes the growing influence that the Nuremberg Doctors Trial and the Nuremberg Code had on the American medical establishment. 6. In 2001, the Maryland Court of Appeal explicitly cited the Nuremberg Code as a source of legally enforceable ethical standards in the case against the Kennedy Krieger Institute. The case involved a government lead abatement experiment that exposed inner city Black toddlers to lead paint. The purpose was to record the damaging effects of lead. The parents were not informed about the purpose or the risks. 7.  The case involved Pfizer which conducted an unapproved, trial of its experimental antibiotic, Trovan on children in Nigeria. The court found Pfizer guilty. Rabi Abdullahi, et al. v. Pfizer, Inc., 562 F.3d (2d Cir. 2009) “Among the nonconsensual experiments that the tribunal cited as a basis for their convictions were the testing of drugs for immunization against malaria, epidemic jaundice, typhus, smallpox and cholera. Seven of the convicted doctors were sentenced to death and the remaining eight were sentenced to varying terms of imprisonment. The American tribunal's conclusion that action that contravened the Code's first principle constituted a crime against humanity is a lucid indication of the international legal significance of the prohibition on nonconsensual medical experimentation.” Telford Taylor explained,“Nuernberg was based on enduring [legal] principles and not on temporary political expedients, and this fundamental point is apparent from the reaffirmation of the Nuernberg principles in Control Council Law No. 10, and their application and refinement in the 12 judgments rendered under that law during the 3-year period, 1947 to 1949.” 10. On March 7th an Israeli citizens group filed a a petition to the International Criminal Court charging the Israeli Government with violating the Nuremberg Code with its mandatory Vaccination policy Anshe Ha-Emet (People of the Truth) a fellowship, composed of Israeli doctors, lawyers and citizens, filed a complaint against the government national “medical experiment” without the informed consent of the citizens. Attorneys Ruth Makhachovsky and Aryeh Suchowolski filed the complaint stating: “When the heads of the Ministry of Health as well as the prime minister presented the vaccine in Israel and began the vaccination of Israeli residents, the vaccinated were not advised, that, in practice, they are taking part in a medical experiment and that their consent is required for this under the

Left or Right Podcast
Vaccine Mandates Implemented for California Students, Border Patrol, and New York Hospital Workers.

Left or Right Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2021 22:51


In this episode, we talk about how government's debt, how we avoided a government shutdown, Trump's candidate for Arizona Governor, vaccine mandates for hospital workers in New York, Border Patrol, and students in California. We also talk about how Larry Hogan is carving out a campaign to run for president in 2024 under an anti-Trump campaign message.

The Dacus Report
PJI LAWSUIT AGAINST LAPD and VACCINE COMPLIANCE

The Dacus Report

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2021 25:57


Pt 1:  Guest - Michael Peffer, PJI SoCal Attorney Topic - PJI's lawsuit against the LAPD   Pt 2:  Guest - Michael Peffer, PJI SoCal Attorney Topic - Christian school faces vaccine compliance, New York Hospital issues with pregnancies   Sign up for our Legal Insider for case updates: https://www.pacificjustice.org/legal-updates-subscription/   Donate to our work: https://www.pacificjustice.org/support/donate/   Like our Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/PacificJusticeInstitute/   Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/pacificjusticeinstitute/?hl=en   Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/PacificJustice?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor

MasterMine
MasterMine | Episode 2 S2 | Dr. Kaba Hiawatha Kamene | Master Teacher

MasterMine

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 124:51


Kaba Hiawatha Kamene was born in New York Hospital, on Monday, November 16, 1953. Since 2011, Kaba Hiawatha has starred in several critically acclaimed, documentaries such as Tariq Nasheed's, Hidden Colors 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 1804: The Hidden History of the Haitian Revolution. Additionally, he is the featured narrator in the hit documentary, “Out of Darkness” and “Heavy is the Crown” by Amadeuz Christ as well as starring in “Elementary Genocide”, “Black Friday 1 and 2” and Dame Dash's, “The Secret to Ballin” with Snoop Dogg, Ice T, Wu-Tang Clan, Faith Evans,  Rev. Dr. Michael Beckwith, and other entertainment and community icons. Kaba Hiawatha's voice, speeches, writings, and  narrations have been performed in independent productions, NeruvianDoom by Nehru and Doom, titled, “Om”,  He is also the featured writer and performer on Wu-Tang  Clan's EP, “The Saga Continues” track titled, “Message.” He collaborated with Kaashe Muzik on his own two EP's titled, “From Kaos to Order” and “Mi aMoor” Kaba Hiawatha received his Bachelors' Degree in  International Politics from New York University, with a  minor in Caribbean Studies (June77). He earned his first (1st) Masters of Art in World History from Hunter  College, N.Y. (June 87) and he received his second (2nd)  Masters of Science in Educational Administration and  Supervision, from City College of New York (Feb.88). Kaba Hiawatha has been a Pan African, African Centered educator, consultant, administrator, staff developer and curriculum writer for over 40 years. He has taught every grade level (Pre-K-12) in the New  York City Department of Education for over 31 years  (Oct 1979-Jul 2009) and has been a college professor in the Black Studies department at the State University of New York at New Paltz for 12 years (Fall 2004-Spring 2016). Over Kaba Hiawatha's long career in Education, he has consulted many Boards of Education, Schools, Communities, Parents, and Student groups. His greatest experiences have been his many classroom visitations around the world and implementing successful strategies in the teaching/ learning process. He is firmly dedicated to the belief that culture plays a vitally important role in education and he credits many of his academic views to his teacher, world-renowned educator, Professor John Henrik Clarke. Kaba Hiawatha is the creator, Principal  Facilitator and Chief Executive Officer of the  African-Centered Science Academy, “Per Ankh  (Temple/House of Life)”. The Per Ankh is now a  feature in the Kemetic Wisdom School at www. shockmetaphysics.com. You can get his free E-Course and study guide at www.kabakamene.com. Kaba Hiawatha has written many educational curricula guides and collaborated with teams in the creation of many study guides. He co-authored a book titled, “Mi aMoor” with Kaashe Muzik and has authored a biography on the architect of America's African studies program “Honoring William Leo Hansberry.” Kaba Hiawatha lives in New York with his wife,  Sharen of 37 years and they have two daughters, Sasha  Madeline, Candace Deana and one son, Heru. Their children have followed in their parent's footsteps and work in fields that serve humanity and the community. Kaba Hiawatha Kamene's motto is “#No Distractions,  Keep on Keepin' on, It ain't over ‘til we win!” www.KabaKamene.com  https://www.amazon.com/Spirituality-Before-Religions-Unseen-Science/dp/1081920483/ref=sr_1_2?crid=19YHG8FUXOR0B&dchild=1&keywords=kaba+hiawatha+kamene&qid=1631835692&sr=8-2 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mastermine-mrg/message

Your Favorite Besties
New York Hospital To 'Pause' Delivering Babies After Staffers Quit Rather Than Get Vaccinated

Your Favorite Besties

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2021 17:07


Today we talk about a New York Hospital To 'Pause' Delivering Babies after Staffers quit rather than get vaccinated. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/psychics-anonymous/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/psychics-anonymous/support

Them Gworls
Gworl! Have Mercy!!

Them Gworls

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2021 98:18


Gworls! We got the VMA & Met Gala Recap. Britney Spears announced that she is engaged to Sam Asghari. Octavia Spencer took the time to let Britney know that she needs to make sure Sam signs a pre-nup. Nicki Minaj Blasts ‘Dumb Ass' Joy-Ann Reid After Calling Attention to Her Vaccine-Related Tweets. New York Hospital to ‘Pause' Delivering Babies after Unvaccinated Staffers Quit Due to Mandate && So Much More!

Bad Decisions
Mental Health in the Time of COVID with ShrinkChicks

Bad Decisions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2021 56:15


Trigger Warning: death and serious illness. Healthcare workers are on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic and the stories shared in this episode from an inside, firsthand perspective are heavy and potentially triggering.Today's episode is a guest episode with the mental health professionals of the ShrinkChicks podcast, Emmalee and Jen. We have a powerful conversation about my experience working on the frontlines of the COVID-19 crisis as a nurse. We discuss my firsthand experiences from a New York Hospital (right after a major break-up, mind you), my own severe case of COVID, how the work affected my mental health, burnout, and switching careers. I also share why I left the nursing profession all together, what I am doing now, and why part of my new mission is to help nurses find their passion.Connect with ShrinkChicks:Podcast - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/shrinkchicks/id1483261668Website - https://www.shrinkchicks.com/Learn More:https://katieduke--theresumerx.thrivecart.com/the-np-society/ https://www.theresumerx.com/katieduke/Connect with Katie:Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/thekatiedukeFacebook - https://www.facebook.com/thekatiedukeWebsite - https://www.katiedukeonline.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

ShrinkChicks
Being a Nurse is F*cking Hard with Katie Duke

ShrinkChicks

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 23, 2021 59:30


Trigger Warning: death and serious illness. Healthcare workers are on the front lines of the COVID-19 pandemic and the stories shared in this episode, from an inside, firsthand perspective, are heavy and potentially triggering.  On today's episode of ShrinkChicks, Emmalee and Jen have a powerful conversation with Katie Duke, who worked on the frontlines of the COVID-19 crisis as a Nurse Practitioner. They discuss Katie's first hand experiences from a New York Hospital (right after a major break-up, mind you), her own severe case of COVID, how the work affected her mental health, burnout, and switching careers. Katie shares why she left the nursing profession all together, what she's doing now, and why part of her new mission is to help nurses find their passion.    Thanks to this week's sponsors for supporting ShrinkChicks! We have these exclusive offers for our listeners: Lord Jones: For years people in the know have been using Lord Jones premium CBD products in their self-care rituals— why not see what they can do for you? Go to lordjones.com/shrinkchicks to get 25% off your first order! TrueBill: Truebill is the new app that helps you identify and stop paying for subscriptions you don't need, want, or simply forgot about. Go to truebill.com/shrinkchicks to start cancelling today - it could save you thousands a year!

ASCO Guidelines Podcast Series
Immunotherapy in Patients with Locally Advanced Esophageal Carcinoma: ASCO Guideline Rapid Recommendation Update

ASCO Guidelines Podcast Series

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2021 8:45


An interview with Dr. Manish Shah from New York Hospital and Weill Cornell Medicine, co-chair on “Immunotherapy in Patients with Locally Advanced Esophageal Carcinoma: ASCO Guideline Rapid Recommendation Update.” He discusses the results of the Checkmate 577 trial and the updated recommendation of the Treatment of Locally Advanced Esophageal Carcinoma Guideline. For more information, visit www.asco.org/gastrointestinal-cancer-guidelines.

Proactive - Interviews for investors
BioSig Technologies 'couldn't be more excited' to install its PURE EP tech at New York hospital

Proactive - Interviews for investors

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2021 5:45


BioSig Technologies Inc (NASDAQ:BSGM) CEO Kenneth Londoner tells Proactive it has installed its PURE EP ECG signal processing platform system at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York. Londoner says the northeast is one of the three strategic areas that the BioSig is focused on in its targeted commercial launch phase.

The Business of PT Podcast
Working as a Hospital PT in NY During Covid with DPT.Steph

The Business of PT Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2021 41:59


On this episode of podcast we have DPT Steph. She is the creator of All Things Physical Therapy Podcast as well as dptsteph.com. She is an Acute Care PT at a New York Hospital. Steph provides coaching and assistance for Pre PT, current PT students and new grads via resources, webinars, and social media content. Check her out @dpt.steph on Instagram or dptsteph.com to find out more.

A Correction Podcast
Owa Brandstein, Camille Kelly and Carl E. Johnson on The Emotional Impact of Gentrification

A Correction Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2021


When discussing the impact of gentrification, frequent topics include affordable housing, rising cost of living, and the displacement of long time residents. But what are some other, less quantifiable consequences of a neighborhood's demographic and economic transformation? What happens to your childhood memories when the people living on the street you grew up now treat you like an unwanted guest? In this episode of "A Correction Podcast", guest host Owa Brandstein speaks with two people who grew up on South Portland Ave in Fort Greene Brooklyn about the Emotional Impact of Gentrification. Owa Brandstein is 49 yrs old and born in Western Massachusetts. He is a lifelong educator and currently works as a School Improvement Lead for the Brooklyn North Field Support Center. He and his wife Grace live in Bedford Stuyvesant with his 12 year old daughter, Ona. Camille Kelly is 47 yrs old and was born in Park Slope, Brooklyn. Her current job is a DEI consultant and trainer. Camille currently lives on the Upper East side of Manhattan with her husband, Anton Kelly, and their two rambunctious boys, Rhys (11) and Tristan (9). Carl E. Johnson is 50 yrs old and was born to Edward and Patricia Johnson in New York Hospital. Carl is the Division Director for Transformative Mentoring Services at The Children's Village, is married to Jessica Duval for 6 years, and is the father of 4.Both Carl and Camille spent their childhood living on South Portland Ave in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. Camille, Owa and Carl all went to the University of Massachusetts at Amherst between 1990-1995. Subscribe to our newsletter today A Correction Podcast Episodes RSS

The Chris Chris Show
68: DMX in Grave Condition at New York Hospital

The Chris Chris Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2021 4:14


DMX suffered an overdose last night at his home which brought on a heart attack.  DMX is currently in a White Plains, NY hospital in the critical care unit.  Some sources say he has a small amount of brain activity while others say he is in a vegetative state.  This story is developing.   Thanks for watching!

Hunger Hunt Feast | Strategic Fitness
40. How Flawed Nutritional Guidelines Stay In The Mainstream With J. Gulinello, N.T.P.

Hunger Hunt Feast | Strategic Fitness

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 21, 2020 61:46


In this episode, Zane talks to J. Gulinello NTP. J. is currently completing an M.S. in Clinical Nutrition at U. of Bridgeport. He works with hospital staff in a New York Hospital to help them with their nutrition and long-term health. Doctors and other healthcare professionals receive very little nutrition education and what they learn is flawed. Formal nutrition education flawed and greatly influenced by corporate sponsorships and USDA contracts with PepsiCo, General Mills, ConAgra Censorship of health and nutrition information that contradicts the current message from health authorities on social media Poorly structured studies that use correlation to blame meat for poor health outcomes and push a plant-based agenda. Food frequency questionnaires completed every 4 years Studies confound multiple lifestyle markers like smoking, alcohol consumption, lack of exercise, processed food consumption with eating meat.   LINKS: Dietary stearic acid regulates mitochondria in vivo in humans 2018 Nature Communications STUDIES on MEAT BMJ 12/2020 confounding poor health habits with eating meat. Should dietary guidelines recommend low red meat intake?  FOLLOW J. GULINELLO:  IG: www.instagram.com/perpetualhealthco Parler parler.com/profile/PerpetualHealthCo   Connect with Zane: Ready to lose weight for good? Check out my Metabolic Makeover program at the link below! https://zane-griggs-fitness.mykajabi.com/pl/213309   Questions? You can email your questions to zane@zanegriggs.com. Connect with me at zanegriggs.com or on Instagram @zanegriggsfitness   QUICK EPISODE SUMMARY: Meet J. Gulinello Bridging the gap Looking deeper into how much health professionals know about nutrition How J introduces a culture of healthy nutrition to me, medical professionals Health issues medical professionals typically suffer from Blood glucose levels vs blood insulin levels Your diet is the simplest intervention with the least side effects  Addressing the hurdles of employing a progressive nutritional approach to the traditional medical system The censorship in progressive health via media/ social media Plant vs. meat-based diets Approaching things biochemically  A crash course on stearic acid Final thoughts: J’s general guidelines for better metabolic health 

Midnight Showing
Extreme Measures (1996) - MS31

Midnight Showing

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2020 43:56


This week Nash and Luke are giving a hand to Hugh Grant in the emergency room of a busy New York Hospital. The catch you may ask? Mysterious patients, with unprecedented symptoms that often lead to death. And of coarse, Hugh Grant wont let it go.

ESG Insider: A podcast from S&P Global
The New 'Sandwich Generation': New York Hospital Exec Says Pandemic Will Force Rethink of Eldercare

ESG Insider: A podcast from S&P Global

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2020 34:02


Pictured is Pamela Sutton-Wallace and her two daughters. In this episode, we bring you an exclusive interview with Pamela Sutton-Wallace, a healthcare executive at a New York City hospital that is one of the largest in the U.S. She took on the role just weeks before the pandemic turned the city into a coronavirus hotspot.   Sutton-Wallace shares her decades of personal and professional experience as a leader in the healthcare industry while raising her children. She tells us how she expects the coronavirus will change family leave policies. She talks about the guidance she gives to women looking to advance in their careers while balancing demands of childcare and caring for aging relatives. And she discusses the demands on the “sandwich generation” — adults caring for an aging parent who are also raising children or supporting them financially. Sutton-Wallace has two college-age daughters and her own mother lives with her. This is the second in a two-part series in which ESG Insider explores the ways corporate America is responding to COVID-19 and finding ways to retain employees. In the first part, we discussed research into gender, parental leave and family caregiving policies in the U.S. private sector, which S&P Global conducted in partnership with AARP.

Healthy Medicine Radio
Healthy Medicine #156: The Art of Medicine

Healthy Medicine Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2020


Dr Zieve talks with Dr Mitchell Gaynor about simple, natural ways to prevent and alleviate cancer. Mitchell Gaynor MD is founder and president of Gaynor Integrative Oncology and Assistant Clinical Professor of Medicine at Weill College, affiliated with Cornell University and New York Hospital. He has served on the Executive Review Panel at the Department of Defense Alternative Medicine for Breast Cancer Sector and the Smithsonian Instituteís Symposium on New Frontiers in Breast Cancer and the Environment. He is a frequent speaker and lecturer at hospitals, conferences, and universities across America and abroad. Read more at gaynoroncology.com If you cannot see the audio controls, your browser does not support the audio element

Mayo Clinic Q&A
Using Tele-ICU to support New York hospital

Mayo Clinic Q&A

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2020 11:12


Using tele-ICU capabilities, Mayo Clinic physicians in critical care medicine are volunteering to support staff at New York-Presbyterian Lawrence Hospital, which has been inundated with COVID-19 cases. At this unprecedented time, these two organizations are collaborating and innovating to help patients. On the Mayo Clinic Q&A podcast, Dr. Sean Caples, a Mayo Clinic pulmonologist and critical care physician, describes the real-time connectivity for Mayo physicians to provide assistance from anywhere directly to the New York-Presbyterian Lawrence ICU. At the same time, Mayo doctors are drawing on the experience gained by New York-Presbyterian Lawrence providers in caring for patients with COVID-19 and its complications.  

Inside EMS
Inside EMS: The view from inside a New York hospital dealing with COVID-19

Inside EMS

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 29:54


Inside EMS: The view from inside a New York hospital dealing with COVID-19 by EMS1 Podcasts

Post Reports
A New York hospital transformed by the pandemic

Post Reports

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2020 32:06


Inside a New York hospital on the front lines of the pandemic. And how health-care workers are forced to face their own mortality. Read more:Inside a major New York City hospital system battling coronavirusAs they rush to save lives, health-care workers are updating their own wills and funeral plansFollow The Post’s live coverage of the coronavirus pandemic here. Subscribe to The Washington Post: https://postreports.com/offer

Social Distance
On the Front Lines at a New York Hospital

Social Distance

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2020 23:06


The mask shortages in New York are worse than we imagined. Jim and Katherine talk to a doctor who describes the dire scene inside a major hospital. Recorded 1pm ET, March 21, 2020. If you want to help hospitals with supply shortages, a spreadsheet with more information is available here: https://bit.ly/3dn2eVa

Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology
Conversations with the Pioneers of Oncology: Dr. Robert Young

Cancer Stories: The Art of Oncology

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 26, 2019 43:19


Dr. Hayes interviews Dr. Young about his time with CHOP and MOPP TRANSCRIPT   Disclaimer: The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. This is not a substitute for professional medical care and is not intended for use in the diagnosis or treatment of individual conditions. Guests on this podcast express their own opinions, experience, and conclusions. The mention of any product, service, organization, activity, or therapy should not be construed as an ASCO endorsement. Dr. Hayes: Welcome to JCO's Cancer Stories, The Art of Oncology, brought to you by the ASCO Podcast Network, a collection of nine programs, covering a range of educational and scientific content, and offering enriching insight into the world of cancer care. You can find all of the shows, including this one, at podcast.asco.org. Welcome to Cancer Stories. I'm Dr. Daniel Hayes. I'm a medical oncologist and translational researcher at the University of Michigan, Rogel Cancer Center. And I've also had the pleasure of being past president of the American Society of Clinical Oncology. I'm privileged to be your host for a series of podcast interviews with people I consider the founders of our field. Over the last 40 years, I've really been fortunate to have been trained and mentored and inspired by many of these pioneers. It's my hope that through these conversations we can all be equally inspired by gaining an appreciation of the courage, the vision, and also the scientific understanding that led these men and women to establish the field of clinical cancer care over the last 70 years. By understanding how we got to the present and what we now consider normal in oncology, we can also imagine and we can work together towards a better future for our patients and their families during and after cancer treatment. Today, my guest on this podcast is Dr. Robert Young. Among many designations he has, my favorite I think for Dr. Young is that he was considered one of the, quote, "gang of five," end of quote, I think self-named, who were responsible for developing the first curative chemotherapy regimen for Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin's lymphomas at the National Cancer Institute in the early 1970s. Dr. Young is currently president of RCY Medicine, a private consulting firm based in Philadelphia. He was raised in Columbus, Ohio, where he couldn't get into the University of Michigan. So he went to a second-rate community college in Columbus called Ohio State. My bosses made me say it that way, Bob, here at the University of Michigan. Dr. Young: Not the correct way, The Ohio State University. Dr. Hayes: So he received his MD then at Cornell in 1965, followed by an internship at the New York Hospital. He spent the next two years as a clinical associate in the medicine branch at the National Cancer Institute. And then he completed his residency in medicine at Yale New Haven Medical Center. In 1970, he returned to the NCI, where he stayed for the next 18 years, serving during most of that as the chief of the medicine branch. Dr. Young accepted the role as president of the Fox Chase Cancer Center in Philadelphia and served in that role and then chancellor in 2009. Dr. Young has authored over 400 peer reviewed papers regarding a broad range of both scientific and policy issues in oncology. But in addition to the I consider astonishing and precedent-setting reports of cures in Hodgkin's disease and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, perhaps most importantly with his longtime colleague and friend Dr. Robert Ozols, he led many of the early and groundbreaking studies in ovarian cancer diagnosis and treatment that I think still guide our care today for patients with this disease. He's won too many awards and honors for me to go through. But of the major ones, he won the prestigious Bristol-Myers Squibb award, which he shared with Dr. Ozols in 2002, the Margaret Foley Award for Leadership and Extraordinary Achievements in Cancer Research from the American Association of Cancer Research, and ASCO's Distinguished Service Award, one of our highest awards, for Scientific Leadership in 2004. Of note and close to my own heart, Bob served as the ASCO president 1989/1990, which I consider a really critical time in the evolution of our society. Dr. Young, welcome to our program. Dr. Young: Thank you. Dr. Hayes: So as I noted, you grew up in Columbus, Ohio, or again, as we say in Ann Arbor, that town down south, but more importantly that your father was a surgeon. And I've heard you tell the stories as a boy you went on rounds with him and that inspired it. Was he academic or was he a really community physician or both? Dr. Young: Well he was a little of both. He was primarily a community physician. But he did, particularly at the time of the Second World War, because he was a very skilled hand surgeon, he got involved with a lot of hand surgery related to a company called North American Aviation that produced a lot of World War II planes. And there were a lot of injuries in that setting. And so he became quite a skilled hand surgeon and actually taught at Ohio State's Medical Center. So he had both an academic and community-based practice. But primarily he was a practicing community surgeon. Dr. Hayes: And did you actually go into the OR with him as a boy? Dr. Young: Oh, yeah. Oh, sure. Dr. Hayes: Wow. Dr. Young: You know, in those days, there weren't any rules and regulations about that. And so I went in and watched surgery and held retractors and participated, you know, when I was a youngster. Dr. Hayes: Wow. What a privilege. You're right, that would not be allowed now. That's a good story. What did you see, bad and good, compared to medicine now then. I mean, if you had to say here are a couple things that we've lost that you regret. Dr. Young: Well, I think that it was more under the control of the physician than it is in this day and age in so many ways. For instance, my father practiced in three different hospitals. And he admitted patients depending upon what kind of surgical support and nursing support they needed. If they were complex, he went to a bigger hospital. If they were very straightforward cases, he put them into a smaller hospital. And so he had a lot more control over how his patients were dealt with and the circumstances under which they were cared for. And, of course, most of his practice was before Medicare and all of the insurance sort of thing, so that people paid what they could pay. And so it was a much simpler and much more physician-driven practice than it is today. Dr. Hayes: Just as an aside, there's a wonderful book called The Brothers Mayo, written by a woman named Clapesattle in the 1930s after both Charlie and Will died. And it's a history of the Mayo Clinic. But in it, she says that Will basically charged people what they could afford to pay. So if you were wealthy, he charged you a lot. And if you were poor, he gave it to you for free and everything in between. And he sort started made up the billing schedule the way he wanted it to happen. And one of his more wealthy patients challenged him on this, and he said, go somewhere else. Dr. Young: Yeah, well, that's exactly the kind of practice my father ran. Dr. Hayes: Yeah. Anyway, I'm intrigued by year two-year stint at the NCI in the late '60s before you then went back and finished at Yale. And hopefully this is not insulting and I know you're considered one of the so-called yellow berets. But tell me, tell us all about your choice to interrupt your residency and go to the NIH. I don't think our young listeners really understand the political climate and the circumstances of the time that led so many of you to go there. Dr. Young: Well, I think that's a great question, because it will lead to some of the other discussions we have later. But essentially, I graduated from medical school in 1965 at the height of the Vietnam War. And in those days, there was not only a general draft, there was a physicians draft. So graduating in medical school in those days, you had one of three choices. You could either take your chances-- and again, the numbers, your priority scores at the time, didn't really have anything to do with it, because they took as many doctors of whatever kind of type they wanted for whatever purpose they wanted. So that you couldn't be sure if you had a low number that you'd not be drafted. But you could take your chance. And in those days, a lot of people did. And a lot of people got drafted. Or you could join the Berry Plan, which was at the time an opportunity to continue your specialty training until you were finished. But then you owed back the military the number of years that you had been in specialty training. Or you could do a much less well-known track and that is with the US Public Health Service. And amongst the opportunities for the US Public Health Service were things like the Indian Health Service and the Coast Guard Service and those sorts of things, or the National Institutes of Health, about which at the time I knew almost nothing except that it existed. And I owe it to some of the folks that I worked with at Cornell, primarily a hematologist oncologist by the name of Dick Silver, Richard Silver, who's still at practice at New York Hospital, who when I was working in the labs there, because I was doing some research when I was at Cornell, and they were telling me about the fact that you could actually apply for a position at the NIH. And you would be in the US Public Health Service. So it took me about 3 milliseconds to figure out that for me that was clearly a track that I wanted to explore. And I had done some research in platelet function and platelet kinetics and so forth. And there was a guy by the Raphael Schulman who is at the NIH at the time. And I said, that would be a miracle if I could get this. So the way it worked was that you applied. And then you actually interviewed with a whole bunch of different people. And as it turned out, I didn't get a position with Dr. Schulman. But I was introduced to the National Cancer Institute and both the leukemia service and the then called the solid tumor service. And I applied to various things like that. And I actually got in on the leukemia service. So I walked in after I signed up and was taking care of little kids with acute leukemia, having never been a pediatrician or knowing anything about leukemia. But it was a baptism of fire and a very exciting place even then. Dr. Hayes: I want to get back to that in a second because that's a critical part of this. But, again, going back to the political climate, my opinion, this entire issue and your personal journey and many others had a profound effect on both the scientific and medical community of this country as a whole. I think it was an unintended effect. But because of the Vietnam War and because the NIH was such a great place to train in those days. Do you agree with me? Dr. Young: You are absolutely correct. I mean, one of the things that needs to be said is that this was a transformational phenomenon for cancer research. But it also took place in every other field. And the NIH at the time was just swarming with people of all medical disciplines who were coming to take advantage of the opportunities that existed within the NIH, but also to serve in this capacity as opposed to some of the alternatives that were around. And I think I heard a figure one time, which I'm sure is true, and that is at one point in time, 30% of the chairmen of medicine in the United States had done training at the NIH before they ended up being chairmen of medicine. So that gives you an idea of the impact of this. And you're absolutely right, it was a totally unintended consequence. Nobody ever designed it that way. Nobody ever planned for it to happen that way. But in retrospect, when looked at it and you can see exactly why what happened happened. Dr. Hayes: Yeah. And I interrupted you, but I did it on purpose, because it didn't sound to me like you really had a plan to go into cancer treatment, but sort of landed there serendipitously. Is that true? I mean how do you end up there? Dr. Young: Oh yeah, oh, yeah, I mean I did get very interested in hematology when I was in medical school. I first went to medical school, of course, thinking I was going to be a surgeon, because my father had a great practice and he had a wonderful experience with surgery and it was really cool. But I just found that I just wasn't designed just the same way. And it was increasingly clear that cancer was not my not my goal-- I mean, surgery was not my goal. And so, you know, I knew I wanted to stay in internal medicine. And I got interested in the research. And I had done some significant research and in platelet function, as I said. I knew that's what I wanted to do, some sort of clinically-related research in medicine. If I'd had my choices, of course, I would have gone into a sort of pure hematology track. And, of course, it's worth saying that it's difficult for oncologists nowadays to understand how big an outlier oncology was. There was no subspecialty in oncology at the time I went to train down there. There was a subspecialty in hematology. And, of course, all of us, the Gang of Five that you mentioned, all of us took hematology boards. And that's because it wasn't clear that there was going to be oncology. When oncology came along we all took the first oncology boards ever given. So that gives you an idea of how early in the history of oncology we were in the late '60s, early 1970s. Dr. Hayes: So we're talking 1970 or so right when you started? Dr. Young: Well, 1967 to '69, I was a clinical associate. Then I was at Yale for a year. And then in 1970, I came back on the senior staff. Dr. Hayes: And who were the characters above you when you came in? I know Doctors Frei and Freireich had been there before. Dr. Young: Yes. Frei and Freireich had just left the year before. One went off to MD Anderson, the other went off to the Memorial. And George and Vince-- George Cannellos, Vince DeVita-- had stayed on, with Vince as the head of the medicine branch. And then when we came back, Vince sort of brought two of us back that he'd had before, Bruce Chabner and I. He'd sort of sent us off to Yale and said they could buff us up a little bit. And he didn't offer us a job coming back. But we went off, and we were training up there. And he called us both up and says, why don't you to come back and join the senior staff. He recruited Phil Schein as well. And so that was the Gang of Five that we started out. Four of us ended up being president of ASCO at one time or another. And I suspect the only one who didn't, Bruce Chabner, probably would have except for the fact that he was the director of the Division of Cancer Treatment of the NCI for a long time. And the NCI and the NIH changed its attitude toward allowing people to participate in major leadership positions nationally, a tragedy as far as I'm concerned, which has I think affected the morale of the NIH and a lot of other things and deprived a lot of good people of opportunities to serve nationally. But that was the way it was, otherwise we would all ended up at some point leading-- Dr. Hayes: So the Gang of Five was you Bruce Chabner, George Cannellos, Phil Schein, and Vince DeVita, right? Dr. Young: Right, exactly. Dr. Hayes: And what were the dynamics among you? I mean, so were you and-- Dr. Young: Well, I mean, it was an incredible time. You know, there was enormous talent that had poured into the NIH, as we talked before. And an enormous amount of talent was present and was recruited in during this period of time. I mean, you know, Paul Carbone was still there. John Minna was recruited. Harman Ayer, who was the longtime chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society. Tom Waldman was a world class hematologist. Max Wicha was a part of this group. Sam Broder, Allen Lichter, an other ASCO president, Steve Rosenberg, Phil Pizzo was the head of the pediatric oncology branch, now dean at Stanford. And it goes on and on and on. And so there's a massive amount of talent and a lot of freedom. And so Vince was clearly the leader, he had a lot of ideas and a lot of creativity. But he let out a lot of people do whatever they wanted at the same time. And it was sort of a situation in which we all participated, because we were all attending at the same time. So Vince and George did a lot of the lymphoma and Hodgkin's disease stuff. We all participated. I got interested in ovarian cancer. And you talked about that. Bruce Chabner and Phil Schein were always very pharmacologically oriented. And so they did a lot of the phase 1 and phase 2 trials and a lot of the laboratory backup associated with the studies we did. And everybody shared. And so there was really not a lot of competition in that sense. Everybody was I think very competitive. Because it was all sort of shared, it worked out so that everybody felt that they were getting a substantial part of the recognition that was going on in the group. Another thing that was unusual about the NIH, but it had unintended, but important consequences is that nobody had anything to do with what they got paid. So that you could go to events and say, well, you know, I deserve to be paid more, but it didn't have anything to do with what you got paid. We had no control over anybody's salary. So that I don't think the whole time I was there, the whole 14 years I was chief of the medicine branch, I don't think I ever had a conversation with anybody about money, because I didn't have anything to do with what people got paid. Let me tell you, that's a big change. It actually has a remarkable, remarkable effect on the way people work. Because if for some reason somebody wanted to make more money, they just had to leave. There wasn't any way to do it. So you either had to accept that this is what everybody got paid and that you were rewarded by the opportunities to do the kinds of research that were done. Or you said, look, I need to go on and go somewhere else. Dr. Hayes: Now, just between you and me, and maybe a few thousand other people who are listening to this, who is the first guy to say let's give combination chemotherapy to Hodgkin's disease? Dr. Young: Well, actually, I don't know the answer to that. I think if I had to guess, I would say Vince, because Vince and George had been around in the Frei and Freireich days. And of course, you know, they'd already had experience with the impact of combination chemotherapy in leukemia. And so the concept was you took drugs that were active in the disease and put them together if they had different kinds of toxicity. And you were then able to utilize the combined impact on the tumor and sort of spread around the toxicity. So it was more tolerable. And that was the concept. And I think that because Vince and George were treating chronic leukemias and treating Hodgkin's disease, the notion of combining it with combinations was pretty straightforward evolution from the experience in leukemia. There are other people who claim that. I think from time to time both Jay Freireich and Tom Frei have claimed it. I think that there was a dust up between Vince and Paul Carbone and George because there was some suggestion by somebody that Paul was the one who originated the idea or Gordon Zubrod. And quite frankly, I don't know. If I knew, I would tell you. But I don't actually know. I can tell you this, that the emotional and passionate driver of the concept of combination chemotherapy as a successful modality in Hodgkin's disease and lymphoma was Vincent. Dr. Hayes: Your answer is very consistent with what other people have said the same thing. It must have been somewhere along the line that all of you began to see that there really were cures. And did you realize, as a group, that you were making history? Or was it just day to day-- Dr. Young: Well, you know, it's interesting. I can tell you one of the most transformational experiences that I had in the early days is, of course, we were following all these patients who had started on MOP. And so to do that you had to sort of go back and pull out the charts and all this kind of stuff. You know, we didn't have electronic systems that had all the stuff recorded. You just had to go down and pull off the charts. And what struck me so tremendously was the attitude of the physicians that had first started some of these patients on this therapy, because the notes made it very clear that they were sort of flabbergasted when these people came back after the first couple of months and they were watching their disease disappear, and that they really didn't anticipate at all, initially, that they were going to see these people after a couple of weeks. And it was very clear in the notes. By the time we had gotten there, of course, there were a significant number of people already on the trial. And it was already clear that we were seeing things that nobody had ever seen before. And I think that's when it first began to dawn on everybody. And as soon as we saw it in Hodgkin's disease based on the experience that we'd seen with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, we had a suspicion that it would likely be the case as well there. Dr. Hayes: So you already bounced across it, but as I was looking through your CV I knew this anyway, you really mentored a who's who of oncology-- Rich Schilsky, Dan Longo, Max Whishaw, Dan Van Hoff-- and you noted already that oncology training has evolved. I mean BJ Kennedy pushed through boards I think in '74 or '75, something around there. What have you seen in the evolution on oncology training that you think is good or bad? Dr. Young: Oh, I think in general, it's much better. And I think it's much better because, of course, there's a lot of success that's been built into what's been accomplished. And that makes it a lot easier to teach people about how to treat Hodgkin's disease well, than we ever could at the time we were doing it because nobody knew the answer to those things. And I think there's also a lot more of it. You know, I think at the time we were at the NIH, you know, I think credibly you could count on both hands the number of really established academic oncology programs in the United States. And now, there are probably 100. And so the quality of training and the quality of mentoring is dramatically better than it was in those days. In those days, you know, hematologist we're doing most of the treatment of cancers. And they were all sort of in the Sidney Farber mode. You take one drug, and you give it as long as it works. And then you switch to another drug and use that as long as it works. And that was pretty much the way hematologists approached the disease. And by all means, you don't cause any toxicity. Dr. Hayes: I picked up several adults who had been Sidney Farber's patient when I was at the Dana-- Sidney Farber Cancer Institute in those days in the early '80s. So I had his handwritten notes. And sadly, I did not photocopy them. I would have love to have had it. But he had a very different mindset in terms of the way-- Dr. Young: Oh, absolutely, absolutely. And as far as I can tell, this is just my own personal reaction, is that I don't think either George or Vince at the time we got here shared any of that attitude. George is a little more cautious than Vince, as everybody knows. But neither one of them for a minute ever suggested that we were being too aggressive, that it was unfair and immoral to treat people with these kinds of toxicities, not that they desired to make people sick. But they were absolutely convinced that aggressive therapy could make a dramatic difference in the natural history of these diseases. Dr. Hayes: Yeah, certainly, Dr. Frei felt that way too. Dr. Young: Yes. And well, they were his mentors. I mean, you know, all these guys were there at the same time. And they were all influencing one another. Dr. Hayes: You know, it's amazing, I think all of us-- there are 44,000 members of ASCO now-- basically are derived from about 10 people in the 1950s and '60s, most of the DNA, not completely-- Karnofsky and some others around, but-- Dr. Young: Oh, yeah. Dr. Hayes: Well, the other thing is actually, you were talking about the safety, what are the war stories? I mean, how did you give chemotherapy? Were you guys mixing it up and giving it yourself? You know, we got all these bells and whistles. Dr. Young: Well, I mean, for instance, you know this is the first time really protocols were written. And the reason that we wrote protocols was simply because we were working with fellows. And they literally needed the recipe of what it was they were supposed to give and when. And so we wrote up these what were the first of the clinical trial protocols. There was no formal informed consent at the time of these studies. We had, of course, informed consent, the same way you do informed consent now, really. And that is you talk to the patient. You explain to the patient what the treatment is and what your expectations for the treatment are. And the patient understands the disease they face and decide that they can do it or not do it. And it's actually still the same today. The only difference is we now have 14, 17-page informed consent documents that make lawyers happy, but don't really impact, at least in my view, whether patients decide to participate or not. But we didn't have those. So I think that was the other one of the great things about the setting at the NIH, not that I'm anti-informed consent, but it was simpler. It was easier to get something done. You could do unconventional treatment and nobody looked at you and said, "you can't do that, that's never been done before, you're not allowed to do that." We didn't have academic constraints. One of the things that always surprised me is when, you know, we would develop a particular technique, like peritoneoscopy or laparoscopy for ovarian cancer staging, and when guys left the program having been well-trained to do this, they couldn't do it when they went to their new institutions because gastroenterologists did this. That was the sort of thing that the constraint wasn't here. There were also very easy-- I mean, all you had to do was to get an idea and write it up. I took a look at ovarian cancer and said, you know, "It seems to me, here's a disease that's now being managed by gynecologic oncologist. Internists never see these patients. They're all treated with the melphalan. And those that happen to live a long time develop acute leukemia from that treatment. They ought to be something better than what we're doing." And so we just decided that we would begin to take patients with advanced ovarian cancer into the NIH. And the rest sort of is history. But you couldn't do that in another hospital. You know, the biggest treaters of ovarian cancer probably program-wise was MD Anderson. But all his patients were treated by gynecologic oncologists. You couldn't have gone into the MD Anderson and said, "OK, we're going to take over the treatment of advanced ovarian cancer." They would have laughed in your face. Dr. Hayes: Actually, you just segued into my next question. And again, you and Dr. Ozols, in my opinion, completely changed the course of ovarian cancer treatment. Did you get a lot of pushback from the gynecologic community? Dr. Young: Well, no, actually. It's interesting. Now I don't know what we got behind the lines, you know when they were all sitting around the bar after the meetings. We really didn't. First of all, one of the other advantages of being at the NIH is that when you said something, people listened. And the other thing is, of course, when we got really going with ovarian cancer-- this was after the passage of the National Cancer Act-- and there was money at the NIH. So one of the things we did, for instance, was to put on a series of symposia about ovarian cancer treatment, what was going on, what wasn't going on, and brought the movers and shakers of this field together in meetings and talked about what was being done and what should be done and what information we didn't have that we needed. And we actually got funded for a period of time, a group called the Ovarian Cancer Study Group, which eventually evolved into the Gynecologic Oncology Cooperative Group, National Cooperative Group. So we had some other tools that we could bring to bear to drum up an interest in new research in ovarian cancer. And, of course, gynecologic oncologists couldn't prevent us from taking patients that were referred to us. And our surgeons, for instance, none of whom were gynecologic oncologists, were happy to help and to operate on them when they needed to be operated on. And Steve Rosenberg's group has fantastic surgeons. So we didn't have any problem getting state of the art surgery done on these people. And, in fact, they are general surgeons learned some gynecologic oncology at the same time. Dr. Hayes: Yeah, you know, it's been interesting to me that the surgeons, the general surgeons, willingly gave a systemic therapy. But that still in this country, there are very few medical oncologist who do GYN oncology. It's still mostly done by GYN oncologists. Dr. Young: Yes. Dr. Hayes: And there are very few trained medical oncologist in this. And I think it's gotten too complicated for a surgeon to do both. I don't really see why that hasn't happened based on, especially your model and Bob's model, that's my own soapbox. Dr. Young: Yeah, that's an interesting point, because at the NIH, when we were there, Steve Rosenberg and Eli Gladstein in radiation therapy, there were no rules that said that they couldn't do chemotherapy. And, in fact, they did it sometimes. And we didn't say anything about it. Usually, they called on us and said, hey, look, you know, we need you to help us or participate with us or whatever. But there were no rules that said that they couldn't. And sometimes they did. But for the most part they said, "look, this is not the business we're in. We want you guys to do the chemotherapy." And so for the most part we were able to do that. Dr. Hayes: The entire NSABP, those guys were all given their own surgery, their own chemotherapy. And they ultimately handed most of it over to medical oncology through the years. But that's not happened so much in GYN. OK, I want to go into your role in ASCO at the end here. And as I noted, I think you were president during a really critical turning point for the society. And just a few things, you already mentioned that I think you were already at Fox Chase when you ran. So you'd left NCI. And what made you run? But more importantly, tell us about your role in the evolution at that time of the society. Dr. Young: I think actually they recruited me to run just at the time that I was looking to leave. And so I left in December of 1988. And I was president of ASCO 1989 to 1990. At the time, I had moved from the medicine branch and ran the cancer center's program for a year. And I decided that I liked it. I thought, well, maybe I'll just stay here for the rest of my life, the way Steve Rosenberg did and others have done very successfully. But I said, well, you know, it's either sort of now or never. And so I decided that I would make the jump. But when I got into the sort of ladder, if you will, of ASCO through the board and so forth, it became clear that there were a couple of things that were a real challenge for the society. The society had at the time for the most part been essentially run on contract, that there was no organization of ASCO at all. It was it was all run by a contract organization. And it was clear that we had grown to a size such that we really needed to begin to recruit our own leadership staff. And so my year as president was actually the first year we hired a full-time employee. And she was based in a law firm that we used for ASCO legal business. But that was the first employee ever hired by ASCO. And that was in 1990, or 1989, I don't remember which, put in that year anyway. The other thing that was going on, which was critical for the society, is that, of course, there's always been a 'town gown' challenge in all aspects of medicine. And medical oncology was no different. So it had originally been the province of academic oncologists. But the numbers began to change dramatically. And it became clear that there was an enormous number of community-based oncologists, who looked at the challenges that face the organization somewhat differently than the academics. And this is one of the things that I think I benefited from growing up with a father that had both his feet in the community-based practice and the academic practice. And I realized how private practicing physicians view academics and view academic control of organizations. And I realized-- and others did too. I wasn't alone on this-- that we really needed to build up the recognition of community-based oncology as a first class citizen in the society. And so we began to create and bring in all of these state society organizations. And we began to get leadership roles who were based in community oncology, rather than just academics. And Joe Bailes was our first head of the Public Relations Committee of the society and grew this into a national presence and became the first community-based president of ASCO. So I think I think those are the two things that I saw that hopefully I made an impact on. And it always amazes me to realize that the society was really that young. I mean, people can't believe that it's just, what, 30 years ago when we had our first employee. Dr. Hayes: Yeah, that's why I'm doing these podcasts. We make sure we get this history. You know, it's interesting, I often give you credit for the ladder. As president myself, it was made very clear to me that 90% of the patients in this country with cancer are treated by community oncologists, maybe 85% or so. And about 2/3 of our membership are community oncologists. So we now have designated seats on the board of directors. We started a Department of Clinical Affairs that Steve Grubbs is running. That's just a few years old. But, boy, it's been fabulous. We now have a designated chair, the state affiliate council is invited to the board of directors and sits in and presents. And the state affiliate councils meets at ASCO headquarters at least once a year. And we've had a couple presidents who are, besides Joe, Doug Blayney and Skip Burris now coming in in June. So I think we've been reaching out. It always struck me when I sat in the headquarters, the seven founding members were, for the most part, community people. They met just to talk about how do you give chemotherapy. It wasn't, you know, about Tom Frei or Freireich or Jim Holland. It was folks in the community. And then it grew into an academic society. And I think you and then Joe Bailes and others kind of brought us back and grounded us. And to me, that's a really critical evolution in our society. I think it's made us much stronger. So those are most of my questions. You've answered almost everything I had written down that I always wanted to ask you if I got a moment in a cab with you. I want to thank you for taking time to do this. But more importantly, I want to thank you for all the contributions you have made to the field. I mean, I don't think I would be here and I don't think most of us who do oncology would be here if it weren't for you and the Gang of Five and the things you've done, both by the courage to moving forward to giving the kinds of chemotherapy and stuff, establishing science in the field, but also the policy stuff. Your articles in The New England Journal over the years, I think have been classics. You should put this all in a book and send them out to everybody because they have to do with not just giving chemotherapy, but the whys and hows of what we do. So I know I'm being long-winded, but that's because I'm a big fan. Well, thank you very much. Dr. Young: You know one of the things, I got to say is that I've just been a very lucky person. I happened to have had great opportunities. And I think I was able to take advantage of those opportunities. But somebody gave me those opportunities and put me at the right place at the right time. And so I am a very lucky guy. Dr. Hayes: Well, and I want to finish up and say how nice it is to see at least one graduate of Ohio State University do well. You know, it doesn't come very often. So congrat-- Dr. Young: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah The team up north, the team that will not be named, yes. Dr. Hayes: Thank you so much. And appreciate all you've done. Again, appreciate your taking time with us. Dr. Young: Thank you very much, Dan. Dr. Hayes: Until next time, thank you for listening to this JCO's Cancer Stories, The Art of Oncology podcast. If you enjoyed what you heard today, don't forget to give us a rating or review on Apple Podcasts or wherever you listened. While you're there, be sure to subscribe so you never miss an episode. JCO's Cancer Stories, The Art of Oncology podcast is just one ASCO's many podcasts. You can find all the shows at podcast.asco.org.

EMRA*Cast
Disrupting Gender Bias

EMRA*Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2019 21:01


Host: Tiffany Proffitt DO, MABS PGY-4 Lakeland Health @ProMammaDoc Guests: Dr. Anita Rohra: Assistant Professor at Baylor College of Medicine, residency at New York Hospital in Queens, Ultrasound Fellowship at Baylor, upcoming speaker at FIX 2019 @RohraAnita  Overview:  In this episode, Tiffany discusses gender disparities in the evaluation of female residents in the context of the 2017 JAMA study with Dr. Anita Rohra. The study compared the ACGME milestone data collected over 2 years from 8 emergency medicine residency programs across the country of male versus female residents. It demonstrated that both male and female residents started residency at a similar competency level according to milestones, however, female emergency medicine residents were evaluated 0.15 milestones, equivalent of 3-4 months of training, lower than their male counterparts at graduation.  The study further found that both male and female attendings evaluated the female residents lower, oftentimes counter to the expressed beliefs of the attendings.  References: Dayal A, O'Connor DM, Qadri U, Arora VM. Comparison of Male vs Female Resident Milestone Evaluations by Faculty During Emergency Medicine Residency Training [published correction appears in JAMA Intern Med. 2017 May 1;177(5):747]. JAMA Intern Med. 2017;177(5):651–657. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.9616October 2017  Mueller, Anna S., Tania M. Jenkins, Melissa Osborne, Arjun Dayal, Daniel M. O’Connor, and Vineet M. Arora. 2017. “Gender Differences in Attending Physicians’ Feedback to Residents: A Qualitative Analysis.” Journal of Graduate Medical Education 9(5): 577–85.  The Delta Factor: Overcoming Gender Disparities https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/emracast/530117925-emresidents-overcoming-gender-disparities-with-dr-esther-choo-and-dr-tiffany-proffitt.mp3 Key Points: Overcoming gender bias requires constant diligent evaluation of ourselves and our behavior.  Change will only come with speaking out and awareness. The attainment of equality is an active, not a passive, process.

KRCB-FM: Second Row Center
The New Century - November 21, 2018

KRCB-FM: Second Row Center

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2018 4:00


For an area with as large a gay population and as much theatre as Sonoma County, it’s surprising how little gay-themed theatre is produced in the region. Oh sure, the larger companies will produce the more mainstream musicals like Cabaret or La Cage aux Folles every few years, and Halloween usually brings The Rocky Horror Show, but little else seems to cross local stages. The nomadic Pegasus Theater Company, in existence in one form or another for about 20 years, is the exception. Its Russian River roots have been planted firmly in the gay community since its inception, and it regularly programs shows with gay content into its seasons. Previous productions include newer plays like Avow to old chestnuts like Norman, is that You? This season Pegasus brings Paul Rudnick’s The New Century to the Mt. Jackson Masonic Lodge in Guerneville. Rudnick (I Hate Hamlet, In & Out) has taken a collection of comedic one-acts and put them together for this show. It’s basically three monologues and a “wrap up” scene. “Pride and Joy” opens the show with a meeting of the Massapequa, Long Island chapter of the PLGBTQCCC & O – the “Parents of Lesbians, Gays, Bisexuals, Transgendered, Questioning, Curious, Creatively Concerned and Others”. Ms. Helene Nadler (Thea Rhiannon) introduces herself to the membership as the "most loving mother of all time". She has to be. She has three children: a lesbian daughter, a transgendered son who dates lesbians, and a gay son into BDSM and scatology. Beat that, parents. We the meet “Mr. Charles, Currently of Palm Beach”. Charles (Nick Charles) has been exiled from New York by the gay community for being “too gay”, which happens to be the title of the cable access show he now hosts along with his “ward” Shane (director John Rowan) where he answers viewer mail and revels in being who he is. With “Crafty” we meet Barbara Ellen Diggs (Noel Yates), a crafts-crazy Midwesterner who makes toilet paper koozies and tuxedo toaster covers. The passing of her son by AIDS has led her to question her faith. “I don’t know if I believe in God anymore,” she says, “but I do believe in cute.” All these characters come together in a really contrived closing scene set at a New York Hospital maternity ward that seems tacked on to create a full-length show. The show suffers from the challenges inherent in running a small theatre company - no budget, minimal sets and lighting, a limited talent pool leading to casting issues, etc., but it has heart, which counts for a lot, and you have to love a show that credits costumes to an entity called “Nutsack Creations”. ‘The New Century’ runs through November 25 at the Mt. Jackson Masonic Lodge in Guerneville. Friday and Saturday evening performances are at 7:30pm, the Sunday matinee is at 2pm. For more information, go to pegasustheater.com

Health Matters Sonoma
1-18-18 Author Issac Alexis-Life And Death Behind The Brick And Razor-Code Red Diamond

Health Matters Sonoma

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2018 54:18


About Life And Death Behind The Brick And Razor-Code Red Diamond:Enter The Fast Paced World Of Correctional Medicine where Split Second Decisions Are Made preventing A Patient From Bleeding To Death. Also Get Health And Wellness Tips as Well. Also Great Points are Reviewed in Detail to Strategically Assist Teenagers in Defense against Bullying, Peer Pressure, Drug Abuse, Gang membership, STD's And So Much MoreAbout Dr. Isaac Alexis:Isaac Alexis, MD, completed an internship in trauma surgery at Cornell University at New York Hospital of Queens. Dr. Alexis served as medical director at the Department of Justice as well as director of infection control and chair of the quality improvement medical committee. He has several years of correctional medicine under his belt This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit healthmatters.substack.com

Legends of S.H.I.E.L.D.: An Unofficial Marvel Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Fan Podcast
Legends of S.H.I.E.L.D. #131 Daredevil Dog To A Gunfight (A Marvel Comic Universe Podcast)

Legends of S.H.I.E.L.D.: An Unofficial Marvel Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Fan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2016 70:51


The Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent Stargate Pioneer, Consultant Michelle and Consultant Lobster discuss the Daredevil season 2 second episode “Dogs To A Gunfight.” The hosts continue the Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Marvel Collector Corp Women Of Power crate giveaway and give some of their takes on what they would submit. And the hosts also round up the show by running down the weekly Marvel news, respond to listener feedback and interact with live streaming chat comments.   THIS TIME ON LEGENDS OF S.H.I.E.L.D.: [02:12]   - Giveaway: Marvel Collector Corps Crate Women Of Power - Daredevil Season 2 Episode “Dogs To A Gunfight” - The weekly Marvel News - YOUR feedback!!!! - Highlights From The Live Chatroom   LEGENDS OF S.H.I.E.L.D. MARVEL COLLECTOR CORPS CIVIL WAR CRATE [02:32]   The hosts continue their next giveaway for the Marvel Collector Corps Women Of Power crate. SP, Michelle and Lobster all give their entries into the giveaway. By the live streamed show on July 20th, 2016 let us know which male Marvel Cinematic Universe character you would like to see gender swapped and WHO you would cast in the role. Make them good, make them funny but most of all just get them into us so you can be included in this Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. awesome giveaway.   DAREDEVIL DOGS TO A GUNFIGHT [06:26]   Meaning of “Dogs To A Gunfight” Dog Of Hell Gang Involved Ambush is the gunfight Actual dog Status of New York Hospital fight clean-up Status of Law Firm (Nelson & Murdock) Foggy and Matt at odds --- let the cops handle it Nelson and Page try to take care of things at the office Fights Pawn shop owner Semi-truck Dogs Of Hell slaughter Daredevil v Punihser round 2 at the Grotto ambush Cops shooting at Punisher AND Daredevil Matt Murdock / Dardevil Passed out on rooftop Wants aspirn Getting shot in the head does really nasty things to him Karen comes to see him Learns about the punisher from Karen Vigilante talk with Karen. Goes back to the suit-maker, Melvin (Betsy) Bell rung Keep each other safe Stilt Man suit in background! Goes to checkout the bar shooting crime scene Notices dog chains at the bar Finds the dog, and all the gear Listens to the cops setting up Grotto with The Punisher Concussion returns Foggy Nelson Runs rooftop to rooftop. “I love my keys” Tries to take Matt’s costume away Calls US Attorney’s office to call Reyes bluff on witness protection  (Round 1) Knows that the cops are firing at Daredevil and concerned with Grotto Runs out to get Daredevil Karen Page Continues to take care of Grotto What if I deserve it? (From the Punisher) Comes to Matt for comfort Matt, you know that I’m not an idiot Maybe we created the Punisher….created vigilante justice You’re worth keeping around Law Enforcement Brett handles Grotto and gives Nelson and Page info on Punisher Cops are split on Punisher….Devil worshipers Hello Samantha Reyes Sends Grotto to talk to Brass Punisher Named by assistant DA Goes to his pawn shop dealer NYPD mobile encrypted communications She’s barely 12. Gaurnenteed. Wrong thing to say Takes out the dogs Of Hell with the semi-truck and dead driver Crashes the yard with the truck Camps out on top of the water tower Takes Daredevil hostage Grotto Wants to give up the Irish mob Edgar Brass. Drug dealing butcher Goes to meet Brass Cops take Grotto into the metal container   "Dogs To A Gunfight”   Directed by: Phil Abraham 31 Total Directing Credits http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0008971/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#director 3xHalt And Catch Fire 6xOrange Is The New Black 4xDaredevil 15xMad Men 1xThe Following 1xElementary 1xWeeds 1xThe Walking Dead 1xThe Good Wife 2xSons Of Anachary 1xBreaking Bad 1xThe Sopranos   Written by: Douglas Petrie 17 Total Writing Credits http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0677956/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#writer 1xThe Defenders 7xDaredevil 2xAmerican Horror Story 2xThe 4400 17xBuffy The Vampire Slayer ALSO PRODUCED: The Defenders, Daredevil, American Horrow Story, Charlie’s Angels, Pushing Daisies, CSI, Tru Calling, Buffy The Vampire Slayer   Written By: Marco Ramirez http://www.imdb.com/name/nm3059675/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#writer 1xThe Defenders 6xDaredevil 1xFear The Walking Dead 2xOrange Is The New Black 3xSons Of Anarchy ALSO PRODUCED: The Defenders, Daredevil, Fear The Walking Dead, Da Vinci’s DemonsDirected by: Michael Rymer 21 Total Titles http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0753382/?ref_=fn_al_nm_1#director 1xJessica Jones 9xHannibal 2xAmerican Horrow Story 1xLongmire 2xFlashforward 24xBattlestar Galactica   NEWS [45:30]   CIVIL WAR   http://comicbook.com/marvel/2016/06/17/captain-america-civil-war-crosses-400-million-at-u-s-box-office/   GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY 2 & BEYOND   http://comicbook.com/marvel/2016/06/22/spider-man-homecoming-adds-michael-mando-/   http://comicbook.com/marvel/2016/06/21/spider-man-homecoming-adds-abraham-attah-/   http://comicbook.com/marvel/2016/06/20/hannibal-buress-officially-cast-in-spider-man-homecoming/   http://comicbook.com/marvel/2016/06/20/spider-man-homecoming-adds-three-new-cast-members/   http://comicbook.com/marvel/2016/06/16/spider-man-homecoming-adds-silicon-valley-star-martin-starr/   http://comicbook.com/2016/06/16/logan-marshall-green-in-talks-for-spider-man-homecoming-villain-/   AWWWWWW/COOL STUFF   http://comicbook.com/marvel/2016/06/17/daredevils-charlie-cox-taking-funko-pops-to-hospitals-and-school/   FEEDBACK [55:37]   - TWITTER   Ferris ‏@dxferris  Jun 19 Watched episode 12 of #Daredevil believing it was the season finale. Then it wasn't; one more. Christmas in July! @LegendsofSHIELD   ********************************* Legends S.H.I.E.L.D. ‏@LegendsofSHIELD  Jun 19 DCoop dream role: James Bond. #Comicpalooza   Christy ‏@adanagirl  Jun 19 @LegendsofSHIELD He did play Bond's creator in a short BBC series.   ********************************* Ferris ‏@dxferris  Jun 19 Ferris Retweeted Ferris Never expected that kind of emotionally devastating moment from the Punisher of all characters. cc @LegendsofSHIELD Ferris added, Ferris @dxferris Father of the year: Frank "The Punisher" Castle. Big ups @jonnybernthal & episode writer John C. Kelley https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDYiDrnQQlk … #FathersDay   ********************************* Ferris ‏@dxferris  Jun 18 Anyone have the Daredevil soundtrack? (Netflix, not movie)? How is it? @LegendsofSHIELD   ********************************* Nerdy Curiosities ‏@nerdycurious  Jun 18 Ladies represent! #podcaster panelist @LegendsofSHIELD #CPHOU     ****************************************   Chris Ferrell ‏@TheChrisFerrell  Jun 17 @mingchen37 I think that @sithwitch from @LegendsofSHIELD got a great interview with you. It was a great listen.   **************************************** andiminga ‏@andiminga  Jun 16 andiminga Retweeted Netflix Life @LegendsofSHIELD Though first gonna need to rewatch first two seasons on BluRay. andiminga added,   Netflix Life @NetflixLifee .@AgentsofSHIELD Season 3 is on @netflix! http://netflixlife.com/2016/06/16/marvels-agents-of-shield-season-3-is-now-on-netflix/ … @clarkgregg @ChloeBennet4 @MingNa @IMBrettDalton   E-MAIL   Andi to stargatepioneer Episode 2   - right... how did Foggy manage to drag Matt back home??? - Matt's senses switching between oversensitive to none, this can't be good -  "Cut the shit, Lady. You are dealing with us!" Okay...Foggy has some balls. - "barely 12"...oh man...that was a stupid idea to tell Shane Adios! - nice offer Karen but something really dramatic has to happen before Matt will be honest with you - the snitch definitely WON'T get out of there alive   Bottom line: improving, 8 out of 10 doomed pawn-shop owners   OUTRO [63:50]   Haley, Lauren and Stargate Pioneer love to hear back from you about your top 5 Marvel character lists, your science of Marvel questions, who would you pick in an all-female Avenger team, or who’s Marvel abs you would like to see. Call the voicemail line at 1-844-THE-BUS1 or 844-843-2871.   Join Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. next time as the hosts discuss the Daredevil season 2 second episode “Dogs To A GunFight.” You can listen in live when we record Wednesday nights at 8:00 PM Central time at Geeks.live (Also streamed live on Spreaker). Contact Info: Please see http://www.legendsofshield.com for all of our contact information or call our voicemail line at 1-844-THE-BUS1 or 844-843-2871   Don’t forget to go check out our spin-off podcast, Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D..: Longbox Edition for your weekly Marvel comic book release run-down with segments by Black Adam on S.H.I.E.L.D. comics, Lauren on Mutant Comics and Neil with his pull list run-down. Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D.: Longbox Edition is also available on the GonnaGeek.com podcast network.   Legends Of S.H.I.E.L.D. Is a Proud Member Of The GonnaGeek Network (gonnageek.com).   This podcast was recorded on Wednesday June 22nd, 2016.   Standby for your S.H.I.E.L.D. debriefing ---

The Lubetkin Media Companies
Jewish Sacred Aging Podcast 2016-10: Rabbi Edythe Mencher, Disabilities Inclusion Learning Center

The Lubetkin Media Companies

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2016 31:53


In this week's Jewish Sacred Aging Podcast, Rabbi Address goes on location at Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in New York City to interview a long-time colleague, Rabbi Edythe Mencher, who coordinates the Union for Reform Judaism's partnership with the Ruderman Family Foundation for Inclusion of People with Disabilities. Rabbi Edythe Mencher serves as Faculty for Sacred Caring Community and Coordinator of the URJ-Ruderman Family Foundation Partnership for Inclusion of People with Disabilities. Rabbi Mencher writes for Reform Judaism Magazine and presents and consults regularly on issues related to leadership development, disabilities inclusion, spirituality, mental health and family life at congregations, schools and organizations throughout North America. She is also an adjunct faculty member of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion's Interfaith Doctor of Ministry Program in Pastoral Counseling. She has in the past served as Rabbinic Consultant to UJA Federation of New York in developing programming for congregations relating to mental health issues and wellness. Prior to her ordination she was a member of the faculty of New York Hospital's Department of Psychiatry and a therapist at the Jewish Board of Family and Children's Services. Rabbi Mencher was ordained by Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion (New York) in 1999. She received certification from the Westchester Center for the Study of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy in 1989 and currently serves on the faculty of the Training Institute. She earned her Master of Social Work degree from Hunter College School of Social Work.

Moscova Media Podcast
Humanity Born in Africa, African World Travel by Kaba Hiawatha Kamene

Moscova Media Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2015 44:00


Kaba Hiawatha Kamene was born with the name, Booker Taliaferro Coleman, Jr., at New York Hospital, on Monday, November 16, 1953.  He is a teacher, consultant, administrator, staff developer and curriculum writer. Kaba Hiawatha has been an educator in Bronx, N.Y., since October 6, 1979.  Presently, Brother Kaba retired from the NYC Department of Education (July 09) and is a consultant to Academic institutions, educators, parents and community members interested in teaching and learning.  Throughout the 90's Kaba Hiawatha served as Curriculum and Staff specialist on several New Vision and Charter School teams. Kaba Hiawatha Kamene received his Bachelors Degree in International Politics from New York University, his minor was in Caribbean Studies (June77). He got his first (1st) Masters of Art in World History from Hunter College, N.Y. (June 87).  He received a second (2nd) Masters of Science in Educational Administration and Supervision, from City College of New York (Feb.88). Over Kaba Hiawatha's long career in Education, he has consulted many Boards of Education, Schools, Community, Parent and Student groups.  He has visited many classrooms around the country and implemented successful strategies in the teaching/learning process.  He is firmly dedicated to the belief that culture plays a vitally important role in education and proudly credits many of his academic views to his teacher world-renowned, educator, Professor John Henrik Clarke. In September 2001, he implemented his lifelong goal of developing an African-Centered Science Academy named, “Per Ankh (Temple/House Of Life)”.  Kaba Hiawatha functions as the Academy's Principal Facilitator and Chief Executive Officer. The Per Ankh is an online program on www.townzonetv.com.  

Moscova Media Podcast
Humanity Born in Africa, African World Travel by Kaba Hiawatha Kamene

Moscova Media Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2015 43:32


Kaba Hiawatha Kamene was born with the name, Booker Taliaferro Coleman, Jr., at New York Hospital, on Monday, November 16, 1953.  He is a teacher, consultant, administrator, staff developer and curriculum writer. Kaba Hiawatha has been an educator in Bronx, N.Y., since October 6, 1979.  Presently, Brother Kaba retired from the NYC Department of Education (July 09) and is a consultant to Academic institutions, educators, parents and community members interested in teaching and learning.  Throughout the 90’s Kaba Hiawatha served as Curriculum and Staff specialist on several New Vision and Charter School teams. Kaba Hiawatha Kamene received his Bachelors Degree in International Politics from New York University, his minor was in Caribbean Studies (June77). He got his first (1st) Masters of Art in World History from Hunter College, N.Y. (June 87).  He received a second (2nd) Masters of Science in Educational Administration and Supervision, from City College of New York (Feb.88). Over Kaba Hiawatha’s long career in Education, he has consulted many Boards of Education, Schools, Community, Parent and Student groups.  He has visited many classrooms around the country and implemented successful strategies in the teaching/learning process.  He is firmly dedicated to the belief that culture plays a vitally important role in education and proudly credits many of his academic views to his teacher world-renowned, educator, Professor John Henrik Clarke. In September 2001, he implemented his lifelong goal of developing an African-Centered Science Academy named, “Per Ankh (Temple/House Of Life)”.  Kaba Hiawatha functions as the Academy’s Principal Facilitator and Chief Executive Officer. The Per Ankh is an online program on www.townzonetv.com.  

Omnipresence Media
Humanity Born in Africa, African World Travel by Kaba Hiawatha Kamene

Omnipresence Media

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2015 44:00


Kaba Hiawatha Kamene was born with the name, Booker Taliaferro Coleman, Jr., at New York Hospital, on Monday, November 16, 1953.  He is a teacher, consultant, administrator, staff developer and curriculum writer. Kaba Hiawatha has been an educator in Bronx, N.Y., since October 6, 1979.  Presently, Brother Kaba retired from the NYC Department of Education (July 09) and is a consultant to Academic institutions, educators, parents and community members interested in teaching and learning.  Throughout the 90’s Kaba Hiawatha served as Curriculum and Staff specialist on several New Vision and Charter School teams. Kaba Hiawatha Kamene received his Bachelors Degree in International Politics from New York University, his minor was in Caribbean Studies (June77). He got his first (1st) Masters of Art in World History from Hunter College, N.Y. (June 87).  He received a second (2nd) Masters of Science in Educational Administration and Supervision, from City College of New York (Feb.88). Over Kaba Hiawatha’s long career in Education, he has consulted many Boards of Education, Schools, Community, Parent and Student groups.  He has visited many classrooms around the country and implemented successful strategies in the teaching/learning process.  He is firmly dedicated to the belief that culture plays a vitally important role in education and proudly credits many of his academic views to his teacher world-renowned, educator, Professor John Henrik Clarke. In September 2001, he implemented his lifelong goal of developing an African-Centered Science Academy named, “Per Ankh (Temple/House Of Life)”.  Kaba Hiawatha functions as the Academy’s Principal Facilitator and Chief Executive Officer. The Per Ankh is an online program on www.townzonetv.com.  

Propaganda Earth
Get Your Body Into Balance Great Conversation with Dr. Richard Brown

Propaganda Earth

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2014 121:00


Richard P. Brown, M.D.   Dr. Brown is Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University. After receiving his M.D. in 1977 from Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, Dr. Brown completed his Residency in Psychiatry and a Fellowship in Psychobiology and Psychopharmacology at New York Hospital. He is the recipient of numerous awards and has authored over 80 articles and book chapters on pharmacological treatments, clinical studies, and complementary approaches in psychiatry.   Mind-Body-Spirit Practices Dr. Brown has engaged in yoga and meditative practices including Zen meditation, yoga and breath practices, and Chi Gong for over 30 years. He is a certified teacher of Aikido (4th Dan), yoga, Chi Gong, and meditation. This extensive experience is the basis for his new Workshop: Breath~Body~Mind™. Participants learn to combine breath and movement practices derived from yoga, Chi Gong, Coherent Breathing, and Open Focus meditation. Special workshops are available for health care professionals and veterans. Dr. Brown supports Serving those Who Serve (www.STWS.org) by providing courses for survivors of the 9/11 WTC attacks and Ground Zero workers http://www.haveahealthymind.com 

Tough Talk Radio Network
Workshop Wednesdays - Beauty is a Lifestyle, Don't Take it for Granted

Tough Talk Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2014 52:00


Workshop Wednesdays with Tony Gambone and his guest Dr. Jeffrey LaGrasso Dr. Jeffrey LaGrasso is a plastic surgeon in the complete sense.  His desire to make things more beautiful, his ability to listen, his artistic sense and his superior technical skills set him above the rest.  When asked how to define his work, Dr. LaGrasso replies that no detail is left neglected.  From the consultation, to the operative procedure and the post-operative care, everything is considered and planned down to the last meticulous detail.  Dr. LaGrasso uses a rigorous approach to his patients, with a highly individual touch.  His plan adapts to the concerns and goals of each new patient, as no two patients are alike. Dr. Jeffrey LaGrasso is a world renown plastic surgeon who is board certified by the American Board of Plastic Surgery.  His surgical skills were perfected through his extensive training and experience.  Dr. LaGrasso completed his General Surgical training at the New York Hospital of Queens and then continued onto his Plastic Surgical training at Albany Medical Center.  He was then selected to complete a prestigious Craniofacial and Pediatric Plastic Surgery Fellowship at the Children's Hospital of Los Angeles, an honor only a select few plastic surgeons receive.  This is an advanced specialty with emphasis on the reconstruction of complex deformities in children.  During his fellowship, Dr. LaGrasso received international acclaim for his involvement in the separation of the conjoined twins in Los Angeles in 2006.  While in California, Dr LaGrasso also maintained Plastic Surgery Privileges at Cedars Sinai Medical Center in Beverly Hills.

Nurse Tori Cellfie Show
We Want Progress, But Are Resistant to Change with Dr. Gil Wernovsky. Pediatric Cardiology Legend + Co-Chair of World Congress. Open-Minded Practice + Dynamics of Successful Medical Teams

Nurse Tori Cellfie Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 91:59


Dr. Wernovsky is a pediatric Cardiologist and Intenvisist specializing in Cardiac Critical Care at Children's National Hospital. Dr. Wernovsky graduated with his BS degree in 1978 in anthropology and music! He attended Pennsylvania State University College of Medicine, receiving his M.D. in 1982. He completed a pediatric residency at New York Hospital (now known as Weill Cornell Medical Center) in 1985, and his pediatric cardiology fellowship at Boston Children's Hospital in 1988, with a focus on cardiac intensive care. He was appointed the Associate Director of the Cardiac ICU in 1995.Dr. Wernovsky started at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia in 1995, where he was the Medical Director of one of the first Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Units in the United States. Dr. Wernovsky has been involved in the training and mentoring of over 300 fellows in pediatric cardiology, cardiac surgery, neonatology, critical care medicine, and cardiac anesthesia, in addition to countless residents and medical students. He has edited six textbooks and 13 periodicals and has published nearly 300 peer-reviewed manuscripts, book chapters, and reviews. He has an H-index of 91 and his work has been cited over 25,000 times.He is a founding member of:Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Society (1996)International Society of Pediatric Mechanical Circulatory Support(2009)World Society for Pediatric and Congenital Cardiac Surgery (2010)Cardiac Neurodevelopmental Outcome Collaborative (2016)Congenital Heart Academy (2020) – which presented over 100 webinars free of charge in 2020-2021 during the COVID-19 Pandemic, to over 26,000 attendees in over 115 countries.He is also the co-chair of the upcoming 8th Quadrennial World Congress of Pediatric Cardiology and Cardiac Surgery, planned for August, 2023 in Washington, D.C. He was awarded the prestigious Newburger-Bellinger Award in 2015, for his lifetime contributions to the field of Neurodevelopment in children with heart disease. We are so thankful for his time today and to have on a man with such passion to change lives and improve medical team dynamics. REGISTER FOR PEDIATRIC CARDIOLOGY WORLD CONGRESS HERETo connect with Gil click HERETo connect with Tori click HERE To connect with Sam click HERETo connect with Cellfie Show click HERECheck out our Youtube page HERESubscribe to the Sweet and Salty HERERate + Review the Show to Claim your Cellfie Swag Bag! HERESUBMIT YOUR CELLFIE SHENANIGANS HERETHIS EPISODE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY GALESAll healthcare workers should have access to comfortable and protective footwear at an affordable priceCode: Cellfie10CLICK HERE THIS EPISODE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY RESUME RX Stand out in your job search! Online courses, templates, and resources for healthcare professionals to land the career of your dreams.Code: CELLFIE 20% off CLICK HERE Nurse Résumé Templates CLICK HERE FILL-IN-THE-BLANK SOLUTION FOR YOUR RÉSUMÉ AND COVER LETTERUP AT DAWN X CELLFIE STUDIOS SOCK COLLABSnag your Cellfie Compression socks CELLFIE15 for 15% collab sock CLICK HERE COMPLETE NURSE INTERVIEW GUIDE TO LAND YOUR DREAM JOB 28-page eBook, digital download. Fully loaded with strategies, nurse pro times, and juicy details to perfect the art of interviewing.CLICK HEREAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Mayo Clinic Q&A
Using Tele-ICU to support New York hospital

Mayo Clinic Q&A

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 1970 11:12


Using tele-ICU capabilities, Mayo Clinic physicians in critical care medicine are volunteering to support staff at New York-Presbyterian Lawrence Hospital, which has been inundated with COVID-19 cases. At this unprecedented time, these two organizations are collaborating and innovating to help patients. On the Mayo Clinic Q&A podcast, Dr. Sean Caples, a Mayo Clinic pulmonologist and critical care physician, describes the real-time connectivity for Mayo physicians to provide assistance from anywhere directly to the New York-Presbyterian Lawrence ICU. At the same time, Mayo doctors are drawing on the experience gained by New York-Presbyterian Lawrence providers in caring for patients with COVID-19 and its complications.   Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy