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According to the CDC, cardiovascular disease remains to be the leading cause of death worldwide across all gender, race, and ethnic groups. In fact, one person in the United States dies from it every 34 seconds. Cardiac pathologies are sometimes seen to be “silent killers,” only recognized during the actual critical moment. Are there recommended diet and exercise levels to avoid a heart attack? How can one lower their blood pressure? Should we be scared of high cholesterol levels? Can extreme stress really "break" the heart?We are joined today by Dr. Ali Haider, a board-certified interventional and structural cardiologist. He received his BS in Biology and Neuroscience from Wesleyan University in 2000, MD from Albert Einstein College of Medicine in 2005, Internal Medicine residency at Montefiore Medical Center in 2008, General Cardiology fellowship at North Shore LIJ Health System in 2011, and Interventional Cardiology fellowship at Weill Cornell Medical College/NYP in 2012. Dr. Haider is currently an attending physician at NYP Queens. Outside the hospital, he was an Assistant Professor of Medicine at UMass Chan Medical School for a decade and has contributed to medical textbooks and journals, such as the Journal of the American College of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Revascularization Medicine. He continues to permeate cardiology education on social media, where he has amassed 170,000 followers, and on national television, having been featured on Fox News, NJ. com, and WWLP-22News.Livestream Air Date: February 15, 2022Ali Haider, MD, FACC, FSCAI: IG @yourheartdoc, YT Ali Haider MD, & Twitter @yourheartdoc1Friends of Franz: IG @friendsoffranzpod & FB @friendsoffranzpodChristian Franz (Host): IG @chrsfranz & YT Christian FranzThankful to the season's brand partners: Clove, BETR Remedies, Eko, Lumify, RescueMD, Medical School for Kids, Your Skincare Expert, Twrl Milk Tea
This episode features Jamie Ullman, Director of Neurotrama at North Shore-LIJ Health System. Here she discusses her career, being a woman in medicine, and more.
This episode features Jamie Ullman, Director of Neurotrama at North Shore-LIJ Health System. Here she discusses her career, being a woman in medicine, and more.
WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Date: October 5, 2011 Featuring: Arthur Kleinman, MD, Esther and Sidney Rabb Professor of Anthropology, Professor of Medical Anthropology, Professor of Psychiatry, William Fung Director: Harvard University, Harvard Medical School, Harvard University Asia Center Jeremy Boal, MD, Chief Medical Officer, North Shore–LIJ Health System; Professor of Medicine, Hofstra North Shore–LIJ School of Medicine Dana R. Lustbader MD, FCCM, FCCP, FAAHPM, Section Head, Palliative Medicine, North Shore–Long Island Jewish Medical Center; Program Director, Palliative Medicine Fellowship, North Shore–LIJ; founding Director, Palliative Care Unit, North Shore University Hospital; Assistant Medical Director, New York Organ Donor Network Andrea Kabcenell, RN, MPH, Vice President, Institute for Healthcare Improvement When we talk about caring for loved ones with serious illness, we usually focus on the problems and challenges most of all. And that makes sense. There is nothing easy or simple about family caregiving, and when it’s required of spouses and grown children the burdens can be especially high. Still, when you hear Arthur Kleinman describe what it was like to take care of his wife before she died, the words that jump out are honor, respect, and love ― even in the midst of grief, fatigue, and loneliness.Kleinman, a psychiatrist and medical anthropologist, discovered that caregiving could be transformative, especially the further away he got from the fast-paced, high-tech world of cure and intervention that characterize so much of health care today. But there doesn’t have to be such a divide ― not if health care providers can become more comfortable talking with patients and families about serious illness, more familiar with the benefits of palliative and end-of-life care, and more capable of appreciating the power of compassion.This WIHI discusses the very human “call to action” that family caregiving poses for all of health care today. WIHI host Madge Kaplan talks with Arthur Kleinman, two physicians from North Shore-Long Island Jewish (NSLIJ) Health System ― Chief Medical Officer Jeremy Boal and Intensivist and Palliative Care program director Dana Lustbader ― and IHI Vice President Andrea Kabcenell. In partnership with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, NSLIJ is on the cusp of bringing a great deal more expertise and knowledge to bear on how their 15 hospitals, long-term care facilities, and home health agencies can better respond to and support patients and families facing serious illness. This is a perfect moment and opportunity to engage with this team in shared learning.As Arthur Kleinman told The New York Times: “There is a moral task of caregiving, and that involves just being there, being with that person and being committed. When there is nothing that can be done, we have to be able to say, ‘Look, I’m with you in this experience. Right through to the end of it.’ ”
Ally Bunin is the AVP of Organizational Communication for North Shore-LIJ Health System (soon to be Northwell Health). She played a pivotal role in the organization's rebranding effort, with a lot of time spent creating a very comprehensive mobile app for internal communications. In this episode of ICology, we discuss the challenges and opportunities organizations face when going through an internal rebranding effort. Ally is also the chair elect for PRSA's Employee Communication Section. You can follow her on Twitter at @allybunin. Subscribe to ICology on iTunes or wherever you listen to podcasts.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 14, 2015: 2:00 PM EST Tonight we have a very special show with Dr. Andrew Feigin, Professor of Neurology and Director of the Huntington’s Disease Center at North Shore University Hospital and the Director of the Laboratory of Experimental Therapeutics for Movement Disorders at The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research of the North Shore – LIJ Health System in Manhasset, NY. Dr. Feigin has been involved in HD clinical research for 20 years; he participated in the Venezuela HD project for 10 years beginning in 1993. We will be talking about the new clinical trial called SIGNAL. Tune into a vey exciting new clinical trial using a new approach - a monoclonal antibody called VX15.
Listen NowOver the past few years the lines between health care payers and health care providers have been blurring. Some say these health care industry silos, insurance companies and acute and post-acute providers, will eventually merge. For cost purposes, health care plans are ever-increasingly interested in improving their relationship with patients in order to provide more efficient and effective care. Health care providers want to better control their revenue streams and be more competitive. CareConnect, formed last year by North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, is New York State's first provider-owned commercial health insurance plan. During this 21-minute interview Mr. Alan Murray discusses the reasons CareConnect was formed, how it's structured, its patient population, how its physicians deliver care within the CareConnect network and what it is doing to improve its patient and service community's population health. Mr. Alan Murray is the Co-Founder, President and Chief Executive Officer of North Shore-LIJ CareConnect, the first provider owned health plan in New York State. Mr. Murray is also currently President and CEO of North Shore-LIJ Health Plan whose offerings include a managed long-term care plan for Medicaid recipients. Previously, Mr. Murray was VP of Managed Care for North Shore-LIJ Health System. Mr. Murray also served for five years as a Vice President for UnitedHealthcare in New York and previously still as at WellPoint/Empire BlueCross BlueShield). Mr. Murray's background also includes serving for over five years as a Second Officer in the British Merchant Navy.For more on CareConnect see: http://www.nslijcareconnect.com/ This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.thehealthcarepolicypodcast.com
Dr. Lawrence Smith is Founding Dean of the Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine and Physician-in-Chief of the North Shore-LIJ Health System. The two institutions established the School of Medicine, a true partnership of outstanding institutions.
The Infectious Diseases Society of America's Guideline Update presents concise summaries of important IDSA guidelines. This podcast discusses the IDSA Clinical Practice Guideline for Vaccination of the Immunocompromised Host, published online in Clinical Infectious Diseases, December 2013. For details of the guidelines presented, please go to www.idsociety.org . Presented by: Neil S. Skolnik, M.D., Professor of Family and Community Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, Associate Director, Family Medicine Residency Program, Abington Memorial Hospital. Lorry Rubin, MD Director of Infectious Diseases, Cohen Children’s Medical Center of NY of the North Shore-LIJ Health System, Professor of Pediatrics, Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine
Andrew Witty is the CEO of GlaxoSmithKline. He's been credited with taking on a pharma company with a history of behaving badly in the past – as shown by a record $3bn fine levied by the US government last year. How much is he able or willing to change the culture of an industry, which is under pressure to alter its practices? Rebecca Coombes finds out. Also this week, Michael Dowling, president and CEO of the North Shore-LIJ Health System in New York, has built his organisation up from two hospitals undergoing a difficult merger into a giant integrated system. He explains his no-nonsense approach to making change work.
Michael Stoler continues to talk about healthcare with M. Dowling, president & CEO of North Shore-LIJ Health System; B. Rabner, president & CEO of the Princeton HealthCare System and S. Safyer, M.D., president & CEO of Montefiore Medical Center.
Host Michael Stoler continues his conversation with Michael J. Dowling, president & CEO of North Shore-LIJ Health System, discussing his 12 years service as NYS director of Health, Education and Human Services and as deputy secretary to Gov. Mario Cuomo.
Host Stoler and president & CEO of North Shore-LIJ Health System, Michael Dowling talk about Mr. Dowling's extraordinary career to enhance the health and well-being of our community.