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Tijdens actiekomedie Novocaine zit je geregeld "Oei, dat moet pijn doen...", maar de grap is dat hoofdpersoon Jack Quaid dat niet voelt. Blijft dit concept voor John en Jasper een film lang leuk? Daarna wordt er uitgebreid stilgestaan bij The Seed of the Sacred Fig van de Iraanse dissident Mohammad Rasoulof. Van de totstandkoming tot het metaforische einde een intrigerende film. Maakten de kritische boodschap en de lengte van bijna 3 uur het een zware zit? Aan het einde kort even aandacht voor het floppen van Disney's Snow White. 00:00 Introductie01:41 Recensie: Novocaine16:26 Recensie: The Seed of the Sacred Fig33:45 Snow White en VooruitblikSupport the show: https://www.patreon.com/movieinsidersSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Do you often find yourself reliving traumatic memories from the past, only to realize they're affecting your present moment? It's as if your mind is stuck in a time loop, replaying the same painful experiences over and over again. In this video, we'll explore the concept of reliving traumatic memories in the present and how it can impact your mental health, relationships, and overall well-being.Learn how to recognize the signs of reliving traumatic memories, and discover OEI Therapy to break free from the past and live a more fulfilling life in the present.mental health awareness, ptsd, anxiety, mental health, depression, trauma, past experiences, mindfulness, personal growth, stress management, trauma awareness, psychology, therapy, inner child work, post traumatic stress disorder, childhood trauma, memories, healing from trauma, healing, oei therapy, Observed Experiential Integration (OEI) for trauma, Observed Experiential Integration Therapy OEI, oei, OEI for trauma, OEI techniques for anxiety reduction, oei therapy, OEI therapy versus EMDR therapy,
Hospitals routinely measure, analyze, and track adverse patient harm events, collecting information about and reporting on certain types of such events in order to meet the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) program and state legal requirements.Prior work plans of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Office of Inspector General (OIG) revealed that hospitals reported few harm events to state reporting systems.During the next live edition of Monitor Mondays, Dr. James Kennedy, president of CDIMD, will unwrap the January 2025 OIG proposal (OEI-06-18-00401) to evaluate hospital quality reporting, suggesting how hospitals' clinical documentation integrity (CDI) and coding workflows can address errors of omission or commission.Access the OIG's announcement at https://oig.hhs.gov/reports-and-publications/workplan/summary/wp-summary-0000907.asp.The venerable weekly Internet broadcast will also include these instantly recognizable features:• Monday Rounds: Ronald Hirsch, MD, vice president of R1 RCM, will be making his Monday Rounds.• The RAC Report: Healthcare attorney Knicole Emanuel, partner at the law firm of Nelson Mullins, will report the latest news about auditors.• Risky Business: Healthcare attorney David Glaser, shareholder in the law offices of Fredrikson & Byron, will join the broadcast with his trademark segment.• Legislative Update: Adam Brenman, senior government affairs liaison for Zelis, will report on the latest news concerning healthcare legislation.
Tips en inzichten van Joop Wolters om met impact te spreken en te overtuigen. Welkom bij een nieuwe aflevering van de Tijdwinst Podcast, dé plek waar we je inspireren en motiveren om slimmer te werken, meer werkgeluk te ervaren en... deze keer zelfs te schitteren op het podium! In deze aflevering gaat onze host Björn Deusings, expert in timemanagement, in gesprek met niemand minder dan Joop Wolters: ondernemer, oprichter van het Sprekerscollectief en dé specialist in presenteren.Joop deelt vanuit zijn jarenlange ervaring als spreker, trainer en voormalig docent hoe je je spreekvaardigheden naar het volgende niveau tilt. Zijn interactieve aanpak – gebaseerd op zijn eigen OEI-principe (Open, Energiek en Interactief) – is een frisse kijk op communicatie, teamwork en leiderschap. Joop vertelt niet alleen hoe je je boodschap krachtig overbrengt, maar ook hoe je je eigen stijl ontwikkelt én trouw blijft aan jezelf.Dit wil je niet missen:
Tips en inzichten van Joop Wolters om met impact te spreken en te overtuigen. Welkom bij een nieuwe aflevering van de Tijdwinst Podcast, dé plek waar we je inspireren en motiveren om slimmer te werken, meer werkgeluk te ervaren en... deze keer zelfs te schitteren op het podium! In deze aflevering gaat onze host Björn Deusings, expert in timemanagement, in gesprek met niemand minder dan Joop Wolters: ondernemer, oprichter van het Sprekerscollectief en dé specialist in presenteren.Joop deelt vanuit zijn jarenlange ervaring als spreker, trainer en voormalig docent hoe je je spreekvaardigheden naar het volgende niveau tilt. Zijn interactieve aanpak – gebaseerd op zijn eigen OEI-principe (Open, Energiek en Interactief) – is een frisse kijk op communicatie, teamwork en leiderschap. Joop vertelt niet alleen hoe je je boodschap krachtig overbrengt, maar ook hoe je je eigen stijl ontwikkelt én trouw blijft aan jezelf.Dit wil je niet missen:
We hebben nieuwe microfoons! En gaan er meteen zwoeler door praten. In deze aflevering gaan we het hebben over sprongen: bestaan die sprongetjes en donderwolkjes in het eerste jaar echt of is het onzin? Is de “Oei ik groei” app of het boek een lifesaver of onzin? En gaan we als moeder eigenlijk ook door sprongen? Daarnaast delen we de struggles en de geruststelling die sprongetjes met zich meebrengen. Want eerlijk is eerlijk: sprongetjes kunnen vermoeiend zijn (voor iedereen), maar soms ook stiekem heel chill als je bevestiging zoekt. Ohja en, hoe slecht is koffie voor een dreumes? *** Op het moment van opname zijn onze kindjes 14 en 16 maanden oud. Gehoord in deze aflevering: - Kinderreanimatiecursus (29,95 euro. Alleen nog verkrijgbaar in 2024) https://mswacademy.plugandpay.nl/r?id=ou6YbtjP Extra: Gebruik onze code MOEKES10 voor 10% korting bij: - Vitakruid voor je (mama & baby) supplementen - Plantoys - duurzaam houten speelgoed En MOEKES20 voor 20% korting bij: - DILLING (100% natuurlijke biologische wollen kleding) - geldig t/m 31-12-2024 Meer weten of heb je een vraag? Volg ons op Instagram: @moekesdepodcast Malou de Rooy @maloulaura.nl Simone Plukkel @splukkel ----- Adverteren in deze podcast? Mail naar moekesdepodcast@gmail.com
Nos acercamos a Brasil, que ha acogido la 5ª edición del Premio Iberoamericano de Educación en Derechos Humanos Óscar Arnulfo Romero organizado por la OEI. Hablamos con Irene Aguirrezábal, responsable del programa de Derechos Humanos e Igualdad de la OEI. Cientos de propuestas se han presentado este año, que ponen de manifiesto la ilusión por cambiar y mejorar las cosas en educación sobre Derechos Humanos en América Latina. Finalmente, tres proyectos fueron los ganadores. El primer premio ha sido para Perú con una iniciativa de feminismo con mujeres de comunidades indígenas; el segundo, sobre los peligros de las redes y las tecnologías en menores de Argentina, y el tercer puesto ha sido para un proyecto de recuperación de estudios a menores migrantes en Honduras.Escuchar audio
Het begin van een tweeluik, waarin we ons deze week laven aan de Denker des Vaderlands, Marjan Slob, en volgende week aan de Theoloog des Vaderlands, Kees van Ekris. Wat hebben zij aan wijsheid te bieden in deze turbulente tijd? Marjan Slob is filosoof, schrijver en sinds april 2023 de Denker des Vaderlands. Ze is gewend om filosofie te verbinden met actuele vraagstukken. Zo adviseerde ze de Onderzoeksraad voor Veiligheid, het Planbureau voor de Leefomgeving en het Rathenau Instituut voor wetenschap en technologie. Ze schreef over uiteenlopende zaken als de wolf (waarom is dat zo'n hype?), geluk (hoe kun je gelukkig zijn met zoveel lijden in de wereld?) en eenzaamheid (waarom is dat een veel dieper, existentieel probleem?). Marjan groeide op op de biblebelt maar heeft een hekel aan dogma's. Oei, als dat maar goed gaat met Stefan. En oh ja, we vroegen haar ook nog even wat de zin van het leven is. Gewoon, omdat het kan. David Boogerd spreekt Marjan Slob uiteraard samen met vaste gast, theoloog Stefan Paas, professor aan de VU in Amsterdam en de Theologische Universiteit Utrecht.
Mariano Jabonero, secretario general de la OEI, organismo internacional de ámbito intergubernamental que persigue la colaboración entre los países iberoamericanos en cuestiones como la educación, la ciencia y la cultura en contextos de defensa de la democracia y las políticas de igualdad, ha explicado en Las Mañanas de RNE con Josep Cuní desde Oviedo que "América Latina no es lo que era. Ha cambiado mucho en los últimos años. Los retos, ahora, son distintos". Escucha la entrevista completa en RNE Audio. Escuchar audio
Wie können wir entspannter werden, gelassener – kurz: wie können wir Gleichmut kultivieren? In Zeiten, in denen sich alle immer und ständig über alle aufregen, ein Shitstorm dem nächsten folgt und wir vor lauter Empörung gar nicht mehr wissen, wohin mit uns, brauchen wir alle mehr Gleichmut. Aber was genau ist das und was heißt "Gleichmut kultivieren"?**********An dieser Stelle findet ihr die Übung:00:31:29 - Geleitete Meditation, um sich selbst Wünsche für Gleichmut zu schenken und andere weiter zu geben**********Quellen aus der Folge:Heidenreich, T., Graser, J., Nguyen, M. H., & Michalak, J. (2024). Meditation in der Psychotherapie. Die Psychotherapie, 1-12. Lv, J., Liu, Q., Zeng, X., Oei, T. P., Liu, Y., Xu, K., ... & Liu, J. (2020). The effect of four Immeasurables meditations on depressive symptoms: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review, 76, 101814. Anālayo. (2015). Compassion and emptiness in early Buddhist meditation. Windhorse Publications Limited. **********Mehr zum Thema bei Deutschlandfunk Nova:Achtsamkeitszentrierte Körperpsychotherapie: Hakomi – Gefühle körperlich erfahrbar machenAchtsamkeit: Gewaltfreie Kommunikation - so funktioniert esWohlbefinden: Wie wir es achtsam kultivieren**********Den Artikel zum Stück findet ihr hier.**********Ihr könnt uns auch auf diesen Kanälen folgen: Tiktok und Instagram.**********Ihr habt Anregungen, Ideen, Themenwünsche? Dann schreibt uns gern unter achtsam@deutschlandfunknova.de
Comenzamos en México, donde la recién nombrada presidenta, Claudia Sheinbaum, ofrece una rueda de prensa en la que explica su línea de gobierno, muy continuista con la política de su antecesor, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, sin olvidar otros retos que ha heredado de él. También hablamos de otros asuntos de Chile, Brasil o Estados Unidos. Y a continuación, nos acercamos a la quinta edición del Premio Iberoamericano de Educación en Derechos Humanos Óscar Arnulfo Romero, organizado por la OEI, dentro del Programa Iberoamericano de Derechos Humanos, Democracia e Igualdad, unos galardones entregados en Río de Janeiro, en Brasil. Conversamos con la responsable de este programa, Irune Aguirrezabal, de las iniciativas seleccionadas, aunque finalmente fueron tres proyectos de Perú, Argentina y Honduras los ganadores.Escuchar audio
Ana Paula Laborinho, a 1ª diretora nacional da Organização de Estados Iberoamericanos para a Educação, a Ciência e a Cultura, fala dos seus projetos da OEI e da 2ª Noite da Literatura IberoamericanaSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
La tecnología al servicio de la ciencia no es novedad, como tampoco es noticia que la ciencia se inspire en la naturaleza para crear. Por eso -y porque estamos en un tiempo en que las máquinas y las personas conviven con normalidad- ningún obrero se sorprende cuando un robot antropomórfico cumple tareas en la línea de producción poniendo su cuerpo de lata en un rol cuasi maternal. Thelma 2.0, de la marplatense Emilia Vidal, integra el compilado Otras formas de ser humano editado en 2004 por Compañía Naviera Ilimitada. La antología está compuesta por 10 obras de autores iberoamericanos premiados por la OEI en la categoría cuentos sobre Ciencia y Tecnología. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Editó este episodio: DANY FERNÁNDEZ para Activando producciones Seguilo: https://www.instagram.com/danyrap.f/ https://www.instagram.com/activandoproducciones.proyecto/ La ilustración es de Federico Raiman Seguilo: https://www.instagram.com/federicoraiman/ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ¿Te gustaría patrocinar POR QUÉ LEER? Conocé cómo en https://porqueleer.com/patrocina ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Soy Cecilia Bona y creé Por qué leer para promover el placer por la lectura. ¿Ya me seguís en redes? ⚡https://instagram.com/porqueleerok ⚡https://twitter.com/porqueleerok ⚡https://www.facebook.com/porqueleerok/ Qué es POR QUÉ LEER Por qué leer es un proyecto multiplataforma que promueve el placer por la lectura. La idea es contagiar las ganas de leer mediante recomendaciones, reseñas y debates. ¡Cada vez somos más! CECILIA BONA Soy periodista, productora y creadora de contenidos. Trabajé en radios como MITRE, VORTERIX y CLUB OCTUBRE. Amo leer desde pequeña, incentivada especialmente por mi mamá. En Por qué leer confluyen muchas de mis pasiones -la radio, la edición de video, la comunicación- y por eso digo que está hecho con muchísimo amor.
Max is eindelijk weer in Nederland... maar wat een regen... en wat en onweer... ook in Friesland... waar zijn goede vriend Tjaard besloot om toch te gaan zeilen... Oei.
Primera hora de Visión Global que empezamos con nuestro bloque dedicado a la actualidad geopolítica. La Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura (OEI), el mayor organismo de cooperación multilateral entre países de habla española y portuguesa, ha sido galardonada este miércoles con el premio Princesa de Asturias de Cooperación Internacional 2024. El jurado ha destacado el “significativo puente” que representa este organismo para las relaciones entre Europa e Iberoamérica. Y nosotros está tarde queremos saber a qué se dedica este organismo. Hablamos con Mariano Jabonero, secretario general de la OEI. Después, repaso a la prensa internacional. En 'exiliantes' hablamos con Ricardo, es científico y reside en Estocolmo desde hace más de 10 años. Por último, en sector agro hablamos de la ley de restauración de la naturaleza que no termina de convencer al sector pesquero europeo. Hablamos con Daniel Voces, director general de Europeche. .
Hoy en Visión Global nos ha acompañado Mariano Jabonero, secretario general de la OEI para hablarnos del Premio Princesa de Asturias de Cooperación Internacional 2024 que han recibido. La Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos para la Educación, la Ciencia y la Cultura se fundó en 1949 como Oficina de Educación Iberoamericana con la intención de crear un instrumento de cooperación multilateral. Ahora la OEI se ha consolidado como la organización decana de la cooperación entre países iberoamericanos de habla española y portuguesa, alcanzando un volumen de 650 proyectos cada año en promedio y más de 12 millones de beneficiarios anuales de media en los últimos cinco años. Escucha la entrevista completa aquí:
En Hora América, repasamos la actualidad del continente americano y que hoy nos lleva a la Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos (OEI) galardonada con el Premio Princesa de Asturias de Cooperación Internacional 2024, por su labor como puente entre Europa e Iberoamérica. Precisamente hablábamos con su secretario general, Mariano Jabonero, la semana pasada por el 75 aniversario de la institución y hoy volvemos a hablar con él para felicitarle por ese premio que pone en valor esa labor en todos estos años. También hablamos de México, Haití o El Salvador. A continuación, citamos otro destacado galardón, el Princesa de Girona Internacional 2024 que ha sido para la guatemalteca Susana Arrechea por su trabajo de digitalización tecnológica en poblaciones indígenas en su país, en la categoría de CreaEmpresa, y para la argentina Yarivith Carolina González por su trabajo en reciclaje de residuos en la categoría de CreaInvestigación. Escuchar audio
Cruce de reproches en la sesión de control al Gobierno en el Pleno del Congreso, un día después de que se haya conocido el auto del juez de la causa que ha atribuido a Begoña Gómez, la esposa del presidente del Gobierno, la "condición de investigada" desde finales de abril. Mientras tanto, Sanidad será "valiente" con los vapeadores en un momento en que aumentan los problemas de espalda entre los jóvenes; y en una jornada que conocemos el ganador del Premio Princesa de Cooperación Internacional 2024. En la página económica, el gobierno insiste en su rechazo a una hipotética fusión del BBVA y el Sabadell. Y tras echar un vistazo al cierre de mercados y a la previsión del tiempo para esta recta final del mes de mayo, terminamos con el retorno de Taylor Swift a Madrid. Edición: Ismael ArranzRealización: Miguel Gatell See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Analizamos la actualidad del continente americano con las consecuencias diplomáticas y económicas provocadas por las declaraciones del presidente argentino Javier Milei contra el Gobierno español de Pedro Sánchez. También hablamos de Colombia o Panamá. A continuación, entrevistamos a Mariano Jabonero, secretario general de la Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos, con motivo este año del 75 aniversario de la institución. Lo celebran con varias actividades y actos culturales por toda la región, siempre reivindicando la educación como garantía democrática, bajo el lema "Hacemos que la cooperación suceda". Repasamos con él la trayectoria y algunos proyectos de la OEI. Escuchar audio
El conservadurista y considerado delfín del exmandatario Ricardo Martinelli, inhabilitado por corrupción, ha vencido con una amplia diferencia a sus adversarios más directos. Con la ayuda de Martinelli se ha impuesto al actual gobernante Partido Revolucionario Democrático, que ha obtenido el peor resultado de su historia, con menos del 6% de los votos. Miramos a Brasil donde el Gobierno ha establecido la situación de calamidad en la mayoría del estado de Río Grande, en el sur del país, el más castigado por las fuertes precipitaciones caídas los últimos días. Nos referimos también a lo acontecido en las últimas horas con las reacciones del gabinete de Milei, ante las declaraciones del ministro español Óscar Puente. Por último, hablamos de la plataforma online "Voces de mujeres iberoamericanas", una web impulsada por la OEI y la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid creada para proporcionar a organizaciones, empresas, universidades y medios de comunicación, perfiles de mujeres expertas en diferentes disciplinas. Escuchar audio
caso Pegasus, que es el nombre del software instalado en los teléfonos móviles del presidente del Gobierno y de los ministros de Defensa, Interior y Agricultura. Ha sido gracias a la Orden Europea de Investigación (OEI) emitida por las autoridades judiciales francesas que incorpora una investigación realizada como consecuencia, también, de múltiples intervenciones en móviles del país vecino. Es necesario solicitar la ayuda al gobierno israelí utilizando los cauces diplomáticos para que la empresa propietaria de ese software colabore para esclarecer lo sucedido. Es cierto que no es el mejor momento por la guerra contra los terroristas de Hamás y las declaraciones de Sánchez contra Israel, así como el pintoresco e infructuoso periplo en el Falcon para recabar apoyos para reconocer un estado palestino.
Vandaag wil ik je helpen met twee mega waardevolle tips om ontspannen je TO-DO lijst af te krijgen, zonder stress en een gejaagd gevoel, maar JUIST met een goed gevoel! Het onderwerp TO-DO'tjes en "moetjes" kwam deze week vaak terug in de één-op-één sessies met deelnemers uit mijn persoonlijke coachingstraject #ECHTINBALANS. Iedereen heeft dagelijks dingen te doen; het gaat erom wat belangrijk is, wat ertoe doet en vooral HOE je het doet! (www.echtinbalans.nl/programma) Elke keuze die je tot nu toe hebt gemaakt, heeft geleid tot dit resultaat: wie je nu bent, hoe je je nu voelt en wat nu de meeste tijd inneemt in jouw leven. Wie je bent, hoe je je voelt en welke dingen nu belangrijk voor je zijn. Oei, dat is confronterend. En ik weet dat de meesten dit niet helemaal willen horen. Maar als jij van onbewust naar bewust gaat, kun je van uit balans naar een leven ECHT IN BALANS gaan door anders met dingen om te gaan en andere keuzes te maken. Keuzes die VOOR JOU werken en bijdragen aan wie jij wilt zijn en hoe jij je wilt voelen! Wat doe je met de tijd die je gegeven is? 24 uren, hoe deel jij die in? Waar word jij blij van? Waar steek jij energie in? Van wie krijg je energie? In mijn hersteltraject leer ik deelnemers weer de touwtjes in handen te nemen en tijd te maken voor wat HIJ/ZIJ nodig heeft. Vijftien weken lang gaan wij wekelijks bewust aan de gang met jouw tijd, zodat jij weer het gevoel van controle krijgt. En het allerbelangrijkste: ruimte voor jouw herstel! In deze aflevering deel ik twee tips om ontspannen (en met een goed gevoel) je TO-DO lijstje af te krijgen! Meld je hier aan voor mijn #ECHTINBALANS hersteltraject: https://echtinbalans.nl/programma/ Schrijf je NU GRATIS in voor mijn masterclass: 'Grip op je Energie'! https://echtinbalans.nl/masterclass/ Download hier mijn to-do lijst: https://echtinbalans.nl/to-do-lijst/
De hele vriendinnengroep is compleet in deze Moeders of Loeders special! Een extra lange aflevering met Natalie Vijfhuizen en Lizet Greve. Zij schuiven aan tijdens een special met veel shotjes (met dank aan Rebecca), verhalen die Instagram nooit gehaald hebben en Bloosbloepers ingestuurd door onze mannen. Oei. Nu kan iedereen eindelijk horen hoe het er aan toe gaat in onze geheime groeps-whatsapp. ;) Veel luister plezier en schenk maar even een Salmari in voor jezelf.Song credits: Soundright AmsterdamZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Betrap jij jezelf er wel eens op dat je dit zegt? Pfff dát is moeilijk! Oei, dat is wel heel lastig! Luister dan deze podcastaflevering. Wil je met me werken? Kijk op www.praktijkkoneksi.nl/werk-met-mij
Torsten Slok, Apollo Global Management Chief Economist, says the Fed's easing of financial conditions could pose risks to the US economy. Cameron Dawson, NewEdge Wealth Chief Investment Officer, suggests that a potential repricing of rates would be a pain trade. Dan Ives, Wedbush Sr. Equity Research Analyst, says Apple's growth potential makes the stock a 'golden buying opportunity.' Gerard Cassidy, RBC Capital Markets Large Cap Bank Analyst, advises incorporating bank stocks into investor portfolios and believes we'll see further consolidation in the industry. Norman Roule, Center for Strategic & International Studies Senior Adviser, discusses the latest in the Middle East after a senior Hamas official was killed in Beirut. Get the Bloomberg Surveillance newsletter, delivered every weekday. Sign up now: https://www.bloomberg.com/account/newsletters/surveillance Full Transcript: This is the Bloomberg Surveillance Podcast. I'm Tom Keane, along with Jonathan Farrow and Lisa Abramowitz. Join us each day for insight from the best and economics, geopolitics, finance and investment. Subscribe to Bloomberg Surveillance on demand on Apple, Spotify and anywhere you get your podcasts, and always on Bloomberg dot Com, the Bloomberg Terminal, and the Bloomberg Business app. Right now, our conversation of the day. Synthesizing all this together. Torson Stock is chief economist at Apollo Global Management. Torson I'm going to pull in here a whole bunch of threads. The Bloomberg Financial Conditions Index is showing massive accommodation, and yet I look at the old liboard, the news, Sofa, sofr and I'm seeing huge restriction within the short term paper market tensions on Wall Street and the ill liquidity on Wall Street. How urgent is it for the FED to make some direction on a March cut or dare I even say a January first cut? Well, it has a number of different dimensions. First, there is a dimension on the real economy. It's clear that the FED pivot has eased financial conditions dramatically, and this begins to run the risk that we might see a repeat of what happened at the citycon Valley Bank. Remember Chris Waller just said a few weeks ago the easing of financial conditions in Q two that boost the GDP growth to five percent in Q three. Could we see the same now where the easing of financial conditions after the fat pivot might actually be boosting the housing market, the label market, services inflation, goods inflation. We are not out of the woods when it comes to battling inflation. So on the real economy, absolutely, the easing of financial conditions is very supportive. There are some issues when it comes to the plumbing when the tightness as you're highlighting in very short term markets, and the FED for sure has to play this difficult talk of wall between do we want to ease financial condition on the rial side or how much can we ease financial conditions in the very front end of the curve. But this is the challenge for the FED. At the moment that you're highlighting, Torsten, you didn't listen. They didn't respond to the idea of financial conditions. They didn't seem to think it mattered at all at the last press conference. Why should it matter now? I mean we're going to actually hear them come back and say, actually, just kidding about that financial conditions question. Well, they were debating in October and September, well maybe financial conditions have done a lot of the work for us, and now they're saying, well, maybe financial conditions it doesn't really matter because it can fluctuate so much. So I still think that it's a little bit inconsistent what they're saying when that data dependency, it only talks about the real data, whereas the financial conditions impulse. If you take the easy and financial conditions that we've had since the fit pivot and stuff it into furpose the fed's model of the US economy, you will get a boom of up to one and a half percent growth over the next slevel quarters in GDP. It's going to be very supportive as a tailwind to the economic outlook. Although we did have Ganadi on earlier of TD securities, and he said even with this idea that inflation could remain stickier, that we could get this ongoing growth, the FED could still cut rates and still be restrictive. Given the positive real rate. Do you ascribe to that kind of thing or do you think that just means many fewer rate cuts going forward for the Fed. I think that's absolutely right that we have. Of course, for the better part of the last year, we have talked about higher for longer. Now the conversation is more restrictive for longer, because they can still be restrictive if inflation is coming down, because real interest rates is what matters. So if real interest rates are still positive as inflation comes down, the fact and according you also gradually begin to lower rates. But note also that if you look at the outlook for sofa futures, as also Tom was mentioning, you still have that the bottom will still be around three and a half four percent. So one very important conclusion for as an allocation is that we are not going back to zero. We have still higher for longer, in the sense that the level of interest rates, the level of the free rate on page one in your finance textbook, will be significantly higher for the next several years than where it was from the period from twosand and eight to twenty twenty two. Let's try and get to the half of what we're discussing. Care the interest rates sensitivity of the US economy exactly. And now what we've seen over the last two years is rates go up aggressively and not slow down the economy. And what you're suggesting is that as rates start to come in and financial conditions ease, that the economy picks up again. Can you help explain that to people why higher rates haven't slowed the economy down but easy find financial conditions will boost it. Ye. But what's very important in that debate, and that's also taking place on Twitter and X of course here at the moment, is that my lift very critically sophisticate. Important to remember that that is significantly a function of whether you talk about the interest rate sensitive components of GDP or the non interest rate sensitive components of GDP. If you split GDP into the cyclical components and the non signal components, the main component that is sensitive to interest rates is housing. And housing did respond dramatically to higher rates. So this whole idea that the economy didn't respond to higher rates, that's just completely wrong. Of course, the economy responded to rates. It was the interest rate sensitive parts that responded to rates going up. Housing started slowing down. But the non interest rate sensitive components, in this case travel, restaurants, hotels. After COVID had such a long tailwind that that more than dominate the slow down in the housing market. So splitting that debate away from the academic textbook, which we all love, is so important because it becomes so critical to think about did the parts of the economy that are sensitive to interest rates did they actually respond? And absolutely, in particular housing Kapix also of COMMERCIALI state things that are sensus of two interest rates they did absolutely respond to when interest rates window. This is a fantastic explanation. So let's build on it. Let's project this out. What are the forecasts now for you for GDP in the next couple of quarters. We heard from the likes of Max Kanner of HSBC who said, the biggest risk right now is that we have to reprice rates again higher because exactly of what you're talking about, what are you looking for in the data? Well, if I type ECFCG on my Bloomberg screen, I will see that over the next six months we are very close to zero, zero point four and zero point five on GDP for Q one and Q two. So the consensus answer to your question is GP growth is continuously slowing as a result of the fat's campaign of hiking rates. The new risk that has emerged is that because of the fit pivot, that means that the interest rates sensitive components that we're dragging down GDP for the better part of last year, they might now begin to rebound. Housing most importantly, case SHILLA is now up five percent. Case SHILLA is a very important leading indicator for the OEI, meaning the shelter components of the CPI, and shelter makes up forty percent of the index, So that means that if something that makes up forty percent of the index is about to rebound, we could come back to that discussion about maybe the rates markets we'll have to reprise to higher for long gun and more restrictive for longer. I just looked at the two year inflation adjusted yield. I haven't looked at it since time began Nixon was president, and I can use the word never over twenty years, the integran, or the duration of a high two year real rate, we've never seen. We had a spike in eight with a great financial crisis, but these sustained high two year real yields are absolutely unprecedented for global Wall Street. How unstable are we right now? I would say, at least from a fet perspective. If you just take the economic textbook out and think about what matters, it is absolutely as you're highlighting real rates, So real rates being at these levels would tell you that we're still in very restrictive territory. So the challenge here for the FIT is that they still want to have the soft landing, and we all want to have the soft landing. That will be the best outcome, of course, from so many dimensions. But what is beginning to matter is that they have now sucked so much liquidity out. We've gotten to a point where we are beginning to see some strains in the plumbing that you're highlighting. And that's why real rates it has a very significant different impact on the long end and what it means for the real economy relative to what high real rates means for the front end and what it means for financial markets as host. And this has been an absolute Cameron Dawson joins US now chief investment Officer at New Edge Wealth Camic and morning and happy New year, Good morning, Happy nowear are you sitting on the fence because I'm written this first line in your work. It says we could have a scenario where both bulls and hairs are right this year, which one is it? Well, I think that we have to be nimble because I believe that there is going to be a scenario where you could very easily see people get drawn even further into this market. We think positioning is overweight, but not quite as is extreme as it was in times like twenty twenty one or twenty eighteen. So you could see some pain get pulled in. But the other reality is that you could see a rationalization of the fact that sentiment is very extended and that valuations are extended. So it's how you react to market rallies or market corrections, I think is how you will win. In twenty twenty four we mentioned that HSBC. So let's talk about the work coming from Max Kentna this morning. Here's this line, biggest risk another repricing and rights. Do you agree with that one hundred percent? That's the pain trade. The pain trade is that everybody thinks that inflation is fully vanquished and then gets surprised if things like oil prices move higher. Wages end up being stickier than expected rates move higher, and then all of those stocks that rerated in the last two months up thirty forty percent because now they're not worried about their balance sheets anymore. Balance sheet risk becomes an issue again, and you get a reversion of a lot of the names that were lower quality that happened to lead at the end of last year. The modeled out earnings are nine percent ten percent. Dare I say double digit eleven percent earnings growth for this year? Is that in the price now or is that going to develop out in the first half of next year. It is in the price now, and I think that we always have to think about the path of twenty four will be pricing in what actually happens in twenty twenty five. So if a recession looks more likely in twenty twenty five, that's when you'll start to see those earning estements get cut into the out years. The thing that's the biggest challenge for us for earning estments in twenty four is the expectation that top line growth will re accelerate in a year where nominal growth because of inflation is expected to decelerate. Can you see that happen at the same time where we get less inflation, less pricing power, and yet we get a big acceleration in top So away for the romance of Apple and Microsoft. If you look at Staples and discretionary and all, you've got to model out there, what you go back from a six percent wonderment of growth back to four percent revenue growth? Yeah, very likely. And there are idiots and pockets where you're going to see improvement. You know, healthcare had its earnings down almost twenty percent last year, that will flip positive this year just because of easy comps. So that's where we're trying to look outside of just the macro drivers, Staples being a great example of one that can't get away from this inflationary dynamic, and look instead to the more idiotsyncratic opportunities our banks to douse syncratic opportunities. And I ask with JP Morgan at new record high, Yeah, I mean you've seen such a huge rerating. Of course, there's pockets of banks where there is still inexpensive areas. You know, banks do have the tailwind of a less inverted curve, hopefully a reopening of capital markets. But then we have to consider things like BTFP, does it get re extended Basil three in game, all of these things that could be big drivers of bank earnings or at least appetite for bank risk as we go through twenty twenty four. It sounds like you're not buying the rotation story. I am buying the rotation story. Yeah. I think that we have to have an open mind that even great companies with great balance sheets, with monopolies could still underperform simply because positioning is so crowded and because valuations are so elevated. That's the smartest insight I've heard in the last forty eight hours. Are we going to have rotation or not? That's a really, really undersaid cool question. I think that that was really some of the anks behind the sell off that we've seen that was living, that was really led by big tech. We were talking about this yesterday with Apple, and I guess that you know, how much does that have legs versus what we saw last year, which was a headfake and everyone came in saying, all right, this is the year to sell tech, and by the end of the year of them was saying in Nvidia Magnificent seven, it's going to change the world. Kumba Yah it's going to save the United States, I mean, et cetera, et cetera. And what a different setup because at the very end of twenty twenty two you had record outflows from tech ETFs. You look at the course of twenty twenty three, you had forty billion dollars of inflows into technology compared to twenty billion dollars of outflows out of things like energy and financials and healthcare. So really this could just be about positioning and pain trades and the fact that you already re rated tech because now it's already just one turn away from its twenty twenty one peak valuation, so you're hitting a ceiling. Let's put a couple of stories together. You said, maybe the biggest paying trait the risk here is high, right, so reprice give rights again at Lisa brought up banks. How woud the banks respond to that given what we saw last year? Yeah, I mean it would raise balance sheet risk again. It probably puts into sharp focus again issues with commercial real estate because we've all kind of breathed this collective sigh of relief that higher for longer is dead if it's not dead, and the path of the cost of capital instead of the last forty years of being down is actually marching slightly higher and in a choppy path. Could mean that we have to reprice some of the risk in some of these balance sheets. Is it just JP Morgan then everyone else? When we talk about the banks, is that what we're talking about? JP Morgan then everybody else? We actually just are looking very deeply at some of the regional banks. Some of the regional banks are underpriced. We think if we look at the balance sheets, they're not as extended as or as issued as some parts of regional banks that some don't have as much commercial real estate exposure, have great presence in their local areas, so they're trading at very discounted valuations. If we're going down in value, that's one of the areas we're actually looking. Yeah, it's somebody at you know, the last five six, seven days at JP Morgan's capturing one out of five profit dollars in American banking. If that isn't the third or fourth or fifth national bank of the United States, I don't know what is. There is nothing else. It's JP Morgan versus everyone else. That's been a story the last year. I'll refer to our guests done this. But yeah, I mean they're capturing some twenty percent of profits according to the source. I'm sorry you don't have a source in front of me to side. I think it's it's the it's the Bramow newsletter. You know that newsletters. It's a muster r. It's a muster reader. Camic. Thank you got to leave this. It's going to catch up. It's going to say a happy new Year, Cameron Dawson, the new h wel let's get right to it. This is so important right now. Dan Ives joins us. He is a bull on any number of technology companies. We wait for him to come out on controlled data here and with a birecommendation at some point. That's a little bit of history there. Dan Ives with webbush Dan, what's a channel check? What exactly is a channel check? I just I just don't see it. Yeah, and look for us in terms of our easier supply gene checks, really trying to focus on what demand looks like in terms of the suppliers for iPhones. There have been no cuts from an iPhone perspective as of data, and I think that's that's bullets and ultimately that shows demand through howadays season has actually been on part, actually better than expected. And to me, that's what I focus on rather than the haters continue, Okay, but data tell Okay, you've been gracious about this, and they've been gracious about your twenty twenty three ganormous success. But when you do a channel check, are you counting iPhones? Are you over in China guessing the manufacturing line? Are you in the store on Madison Avenue looking at how many people from Lisa's family are buy an Apple loot? What's a channel check? Yeah? All above time. I mean, we feel we're in Apple stores around the country, around the world. We're also talking to suppliers basically trying to triangulate to what we think units is going to look like for the quarter and for the year. And that's how we've done it from the beginning, I mean, over the last decades so. And it's one of you're always gonna have different opinions. You just talk about the Barclays downgrade. We continue to stick with our checks. That that has navigated us, you know, a lot more right than wrong. I think when you look at I from fifty, it's easy to take shots, you know, relative to maybe some of the fears out there, especially fire and a crowd theater first day at the trading you know a year I it's a groundhog day. You know, we saw it last year as well. It's underestimated. Two hundred and fifty million. Is the install based upgrade cycle that's due in that window has an upgrade in four years, Dan, let's get into it. You mentioned Barkleys, Tom mentioned it too. I mentioned this, so let's get to that line. The continued period of weak results coupled with multiple expansion not sustainable in that it is a statement of fact, and then there's an opinion of the end. The statement of fact is iPhone cuts. They haven't been great for the last twelve months. That's the fact. Yet it's been coupled with multiple expansion, also a fact. The opinion piece is they're saying it's not sustainable. Are you suggesting that it is? Yeah, So what I'm suggesting is that the next three to four quarters you're going to have iPhone growth. You have growth coming out in China despite the fears and abs are the bare noise, and I think the most important thing is services, and I think services is going to be teenager type of growth. That's key to the multiples Manson story. And then we go into later this year, there's gonna be more monization from an AI as we talked about. That's gonna be the next layer. I think it all results and this is gonna be viewed as more of a golden buying opportunity rather than the start to hit the elevator exit. How much Dan, is your bullish call predicated on this idea of rate cuts, the idea of rates coming down as much as people think, yeah, look, that's probably five ten percent from multiple perspective. I mean, as we saw twenty two to the disaster twenty three in terms of now popcorn movement, in terms of FED gonna cut in twenty four. Look, it speaks to our overall bull tech thesis, right that the soft landing Killsberry do a boys soft landing. You're starting to see now more and more focus on tech. I do think now. You know, as Pharaoh's talked about multiple expansion twenty three, I think the numbers show it in twenty four. That's the difference. Twenty four is where the numbers come through, and tech twenty three was more than multiple expansion. Well, you mentioned China and how China demand is going to pick back up, But I wonder if it's going to be for iPhones. And I know we've been talking about this for a long time, but yesterday this caught my attention. The Chinese automaker BYD surpassed Tesla in terms of deliveries for the first time. You're seeing that really start to be a main theme. People said that that was never going to happen. People say that it's never going to happen, that Chinese consumers are going to throw out their iPhones. What makes you so confident that we're not going to see the same thing happen in the iPhone cycle that we're seeing right now in the electric vehicle one? Yeah, great question. And look, when you focus on Tesla, I mean that's essentially two horse race between TESTSA and BID. Tests actually beat numbers and China was strong for them. But I think it does speak to look domestically BID they're beast. I mean, they've done a phenomenal job, but Tessa is always going to be aware there in China. When you look at what's happening within the China market from an idphone perspective, it speaks to just a massive and all bays that they built in China. You have one hundred million iPhones in China right now, window of an upgrade opportunity, and the irony is despite geopolitical the last eighteen months, Apples gained three inch books of market share because the average high end, as in middle income Chinese consumer, they want an iPhone despite government basically trying to push WAWE. And I'm so pleased to Lisa brought up the EV comparison because I think that industry right now has the potential to be the industry story of twenty twenty four and beyond byd beyond Tesla. How much of a reality check are we getting for the industry for the likes of GM and Ford, I think a big reality shacka. That's why you've seen Farley. I think Mary they pull back, you know, in terms of a bit from the EV strategy in Detroit. And the problem here is do consumers want EV or they just want to tessel And I think that that's really the issue that's really starting to play out. And at this point, Tesla's doubling down on evs, but no doubt there's been I think much more moderate demand that we're seeing across the board, and you know, I think as that puts out, you're going to see others peel back while others go more aggressively, like the likes of the Tesla. I wonder what you think the endgame actually is. If you speak to the leadership at GM of thought, they've been generous with that time we've had this conversation with them. They talk about a change in execution, maybe not a change in strategy. Would you expect to see a change in strategy this year and what would that look like? I think slight changing strategy where maybe they pull back on some of their long term numbers in terms of EV when they expect to go fully EV you know, as a two thousand and thirty four thirty five. Look, the UAW also put their back against the wall. It's a different cost structure and they're trying right now to it's a tight balancing act that they're trying to get to in Detroit. And I think also it's tough going up against the likes of Tesla and some of these other evs. That's been a big part of the problem that they're focused on, especially now with the UAW. Increase in the cost structure, well said Dan. Going to hear from your happy new year, Sir Dan is Wetbush. Jere Cassidy, Large Camp Bank analyst that RBC Capital markets rights in this. After a tumultuous twenty twenty three, we believe the banks are our positioned for investors to warn outsize returns in twenty twenty four and investors should overweight the sector in their portfolios. Jer Cassidy, I'm pleased to say join us. Now let's go straight to it. Number one question. This is a question for me, and I know it's a question for Lisa. Is this off the back of high yields or lower yields? I would say John that we're expecting that the yields gravitate lower, especially at the front end of the curve when you take a look at what the Fed has done. If we truly are at the terminal rate for FED funds in the past four tightening cycles when they started to cut rates, it's always been a catalyst for bank stocks. And think what we're expecting as the market is that at some point in twenty four the Fed could cut your term interest rates. Is this for bank stops or is this for JP Morgan at least a very good question, because JP Morgan has been the risk off trade and it's been spectacular, as you guys mentioned, record highs. And so if we're going into a risk on environment, which I believe we are, if the FED is finished tightening, then actually JP Morgan is probably going to be a source of funds for many investors. It is a stock that is owned everywhere. It's been a great stock, but risk on may be the better way to go with a Bank America or City Group or others like that a source of funds. I love that it's a euphemism for it gets sold, so that you could raise money to buy something you think is going to return more the fact that you think it's going to be Bank of America. Do you also lean into the Mic Mayo idea that City Group and its whole revamp with some of its streamlining, hutting units, massive job cuts is going to be the real winner over time is going to be certainly an opportunity to be a winner. They've still got a lot of heavy lifting. Jane Frasier's leading the charge here, of course, and I think it's a very big, complicated job. It's turning around the notion liner. There's early progress, a lot of heavy lifting, as I said to do. But if she can succeed in the management, succeed this stock is definitely undervalued and it has great upside, but it's been a value trapped for many years, so we'll have to wait and see. Jarred I went to a seminar once at a firm long ago called Tucker, Anthony and Rlday, and I was lectured that banks are supposed to return nominal GDP plus a little bit. I'm going to center tendency. Is that make an eight, nine, ten percent once in your lifetime? JP Morgan has turned that upside down. You didn't see this coming. You're the expert, nor did anybody else. The returns of ten years, of twenty years or fifteen percent or so. Their thirty year return is solid double digit return. What did Harrison? What did Diamond get right? Tom? It's really Jamie Diamond. I think you could get give Harrison credit, I guess for merging with Bank one when Jamie Diamond was their CEO. And of course Diamond has taken over since then, and it's been his steadfast focus on delivering for shareholders, both through expansion and growth, but at the same time controlling expenses. They also have done a very good job in diversifying their revenue. Their consumer banking business, similar to Bank America, is very very profitable. On top of that, they've got a very strong capital markets business. The bear Stearns acquisition, which was very difficult in early years because of the reputational problems that came along with it, has worked out extremely well for them. So I would say the diversity of revenue, Tom and the focus on leading or delivering for shareholders. But back to Andrew Jackson, who you covered, you know years ago, Girardi, I mean, are they the fifth bank of the Uni United States? Over the holidays, somebody said one out of five profit dollars comes to JP Morgan. They're building their palace on fifth on Park Avenue right now. I mean to the Butch Cassidy idea, who are these guys? Are they the Bank of the United States. I don't think they're the Bank of the United States. But they have done a great job in delivering for their shareholders and for their employees and their communities as well. It's been a big growth engine for the company. This economy, the global economy as well. And again it's this leadership that they have under Diamond and his executive management team. And Tom, you know, many of his senior folks have left JP Morgan and are now CEOs of other banks, like Charlie Sharp at Wells Fargo, and so he's got a very deep bench and they execute. And that's the key. Tom. You know, banking is a commodity business. As you well know, it's all about execution. And JP Morgan is that you executed extremely well. What is the business model though, that you want to execute as a big US bank? Chard And this, I think is one of the key questions that we had during last year when the rise of private capital, private equity, private debt really was challenging the capital markets activity of certain big financial institutions. Can the JP Morgans, the Bank of Americas, the city groups get into the private debt world that in some ways has been stealing their lunch? I think it Ken, Lisa, And when you think about it, and you're right, the private equity private debt area is certainly growing much faster than the banks. But believe it or not, the shadow banking industry has been taking the bank's market share for forty years you go back to the early eighties and you look at the market share that the banks had of lending into the United States, it was well over forty percent. The private or shadow banking market was in the low twenties. Today it's completely flip flopped. The bank's market share now is in the low twenties and the shadow banking is in the fifty over fifty percent. So the banks have done it through consolidation. You know, when Tom and I were young, we had over eighteen thousand banks in the United States in the early nineteen eighties. Today there's forty six hundred. JP Morgan has been a big beneficiary of that, and they've been able to create those efficiencies. So yes, they can compete. They will compete, and I don't think that the banks are going to be put out of business, but certainly they don't have the market share that they used to have. But we have to remember too, the economy has grown dramatically in forty years, and they have the smallest slice of the pie, but they're more profitable than ever, not just JP Morgan, but other banks as well. What about the smaller banks, Given the fact that you're talking about a bigger slice of just overall activity. You haven't seen that so much in the smaller banks, and with rates forbading high, you're going to have real commercial real estate pressures as well. It's interesting, it depends on you know how small the bank is and who owns it. I've always maintained this banking system we have in the United States is obviously very polarized. You got the very small banks at one end and the very large banks at the other end. And if it's a non if it's if the owners of the smaller banks, private banks, or mutual savings banks or another group of banks, if their owners are comfortable with earning returns on equities of four or five percent, and they're not going to sell the bank as long as they have FDIC insurance, they're going to remain in business indefinitely. On the other end, if you do have a bank with thirty billion in assets and it's not earning up to what its shareholders want it's to earn, then they're going to have to consolidation. Consolidation is going to continue. We're in a pause right now, but the long term trend has been consolidation in the industry will continue to consolidate in the future and argue, Jared, let's finish on Washington if we can. I was speaking to your colleague Amy with Silverman just yesterday and were reflected on a line that came from Lori Cavasina, who I think described presidential politics in the election on the horizon like staring at the sun. I just wonder if that's what it's like for you. Have you given any thought to changes in leadership in Washington and what might mean for the companies to fall under your cover? John, It's a good question because it's going to be the topic du jour this year, of course, with the election coming. And what we can say is that under the current administration there's been more regulation of banks, particularly with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. We don't know who's going to be running, you know, just yet in November, but if Trump is the candidate for the other party, the Republican Party, and if he was to win, his administration had less regulation for banks. So if that administration was to come back, you would have to expect they would change the heads of different regulatory agencies in twenty twenty five, and it probably would be less regulation for the banks as we move forward, you know, Johnny. I think Bloomberg Radio is missing it today because we're seeing the fireplace with your dacity here on Bloomberg Television talks about inflation South Paris, Maine. Three hundred and twenty five dollars per cord of red oak that's delivered to Shake Cassidy and he's he's popping like eight night cords of winter. He used a thing about that. I mean, it's adding up. It's expensive. But don't you love the smell. The smell's great. The damn dog is over by the fireplace. The smell you know, this dog's called Elizabeth. We won't call Aaron. We want to thank you, Joe Capital of Marcus, Thank you, sir. Let's get to it, and we do it with an authority that we have had through Auto Tournament of the Eastern Mediterranean. Norman rule joins us now senior advisor at the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the courses work for the nation in intelligence. Norman. When I say Lebanon, for all of us of a certain persuasion, we are completely formed by something frankly is stunning forty years ago, which is the Beirut Barracks bombing. When we lost marines at accountable iwo Jima level. Where are we now with Lebanon, with Hesbela, Do we have a relationship? Was it forever fractured forty years ago? That's an excellent point, and I regret I remember that incident well and lost friends. The event of forty years ago actually had a different message for the world. The US pulled out of Lebanon at that time, and Osama bin Laden later stated that watching the withdrawal of the United States from Lebanon was one of the motivators for him to undertake his operations because he realized the West could be pushed back out of the region. Are we being pushed back now? I mean within the multiple fronts at Lisa Abramowitz's outlined this morning Gods of the West Bank and again up to the border with Lebanon as the West is America being pushed out now? No, we have a very different profile, and indeed, diplomacy is likely going to increase in intensity and come out weeks because we need to come up with a way to move. Lebanese has belowed north of the Israeli border so that Israeli citizens can return to their homes. The thousands tens of thousand of Israeli citizens to open their businesses, go to school, and also so that tens of thousands of Lebanese can return south to that border which has become such a flashpoint in recent weeks. Yeah, hundreds of thousands of people have been misplaced or displaced as a result of some of the fighting on both sides. But Norman and I'm curious whether this is an escalation the fact that Israel did attack according to Hamas, but also with a wink, wink, nod nod from Israeli officials to kill this is Mamas executive. Well, to be clear, Israel has stated from the beginning of the October seventh massacred that it would eradicate the Hamas leadership responsible for that action, and therefore this is no surprise. I think what you have to look at is this drone attack, which Israel has not admitted but is understood to have undertaken, took place in an incredibly secure, prey conscious neighborhood, and it demonstrates an exquisite and dynamic intelligence capacity. So as Hesbula thinks about it's connor its response to this, it's got to think about what is known around us and what can we get away with and what will happen to the people who might be involved in that attack against Israel. Do you have any sense, Norman, of what the conversations are like with Hamas, with Hesbelah, with the Iranian leadership, given the fact that a lot of people think that they're taking some cues from Iran, that there has been funding from Iran, that you have the Iranian warship going to the Red Sea, and the huthis also Iranian fact making noise and trying to interrupt Western shipping lines. Iran It's proxies have no strategic drivers to involve themselves more fully in this conflict. It would impact multiple strategic equities for a game that is uncertain that they have multiple incentives to continue and perhaps raise the intensity of attacks against Israel to show that they have skin in the resistance game. I should also note that today, the January third, is the fourth anniversary of the killing of Cossum Solomoni, and that's a day when one would expect Iranian proxies to attack US or Israeli versus just for that symbolic anniversary. Exactly where I wanted to go normally let's talk about it, the assassination of the major General. It's easy to forget that it ever happened because several weeks later, many weeks later, we were all drowning in a global pandemic. What has happened since then with the relationship between the United States and Iran, between two different white Houses, very little. The indirect engagement that took place did produce the possibility of some sort of engagement, a hostage released by the Iranians in exchange for the release of personnel. But Iran's regional activities did not change, and I don't think the White House expected them to change. More So, Iran's nuclear program has continue to expand. And here's the important point. Iran is now producing enriched uranium at level that no state that is not pursued a nuclear weapon has ever produced. It has no civilian use for the nature of its current enrichment. So you have to ask yourself the question, has the West de facto recognized the Iranian military nuclear program? The White House would say no. The facts do raise the question. Norman a tough way to Segui here, but I'm going to do it as one final question. Taiwan continues to come up within our first of the year conversations. Do we have good intelligence on mainland China? The United States intelligence program against China, has stated by Central Intelligence Agency had Bill Burns, is robust and works significantly. I won't comment on those operations to the extent that I know of them, but I will say that this remains such a priority that it's an all source intelligence programs at all imagery and a variety of different aspects. We're going to have a good understanding of some of China's activities that will provide the warning policy maker's need for the update. You're insights so valuable, Norman Roll there for the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Thank you, sir. Subscribe to the Bloomberg Surveillance podcast on Apple, Spotify and anywhere else you get your podcasts. Listen live every weekday starting at seven am Eastern. I'm Bloomberg dot Com, the iHeartRadio app, tune In, and the Bloomberg Business app. You can watch us live on Bloomberg Television and always I'm the Bloomberg Terminal. Thanks for listening. I'm Tom Keen, and this is BloombergSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Het circus komt en met een echte tijger. Oei, oei, oei...! Uitgegeven door ShortStories Spreker: Eltjo Herder
Oei, ik groei! In deze podcastreeks breng ik samen met Officient de meest voorkomende groeipijnen op gebied van HR bij KMO's in kaart, want groei gaat altijd gepaard met pijn. 5 afleveringen waarin ik, samen met Maarten Decroos, marketing lead bij Officient, inzoom op groeipijnen waar KMO's mee worstelen naarmate ze groter worden. En dit is de laatste aflevering in deze reeks. Twee dames zijn er ondertussen bij komen zitten: Stéphanie Béchet en Marie Auquier. Beiden zijn ze aan de slag bij Monizze, die we natuurlijk kennen van de maaltijdcheques en ecocheques. We gaan het in deze podcast hebben over de hick-ups die ze ervaren hebben in de professionalisering van hun HR beleid, over employer branding en retentie en hoe uitdagend dat is voor een jong innovatief bedrijf in een traditionele sector, over innovatie en over het belang van interne communicatie. Veel kijk- en luisterplezier!+++Honger naar meer? SCHRIJF JE IN VOOR DE NIEUWSBRIEF LEES DE ARTIKELS ABONNEER JE OP HET TIJDSCHRIFT And don't forget: it's a great time to be in HR!+++Opgenomen op de #ZigZagHR Kantoorboot
Conversamos con Luis Scasso, director de la Organización de Estados Iberoamericanos en Argentina y coordinador de la Cátedra de Integración Iberoamericana de la OEI que ha organizado este lunes en Madrid la actividad "Los pilares necesarios para construir la integración de Iberoamérica", en la que han intervenido los expresidentes Ernesto Samper (Colombia), Vinicio Cerezo (Guatemala) y Leonel Fernández (República Dominicana) junto a expertos en la materia. Repasamos después la actualidad, comenzando en Argentina y el último debate de los dos candidatos a la presidencia del país, el oficialista Sergio Massa, de Unión Por la Patria, y el ultraderechista Javier Milei, de La Libertad Avanza, antes de la segunda vuelta de las elecciones del próximo domingo. Avanzamos la cuarta edición de la Pasarela de Moda Latinoamericana en el Museo de América del Madrid, del 14 al 17 de noviembre, y conocemos el restaurante Secretos de Lola, en Madrid, con una decoración especial inspirada en Disney y cocina argentina.Escuchar audio
Carlos Zuluaga Pardo, exdirector de la OEI, respondió a Eduardo Díaz a propósito de las polémicas declaraciones del presidente Gustavo Petro, quien aseguró que el programa de sustitución de cultivos del gobierno Santos fue un “antro de corrupción”.
Dit keer een minder voor de hand liggend onderwerp: participatie bij aanbestedingen en tenders. Oei, oei, die zijn toch saai, ingewikkeld, duur? En alles moet strak volgens de regeltjes. Want het is top secret. Maar wat als het proces netjes verloopt, maar je krijgt niet wat je zocht? Sommige opdrachtgevers ondervangen dat door inwoners of eindgebruikers te betrekken bij de aanbesteding en hen te laten adviseren. Moet je dat eigenlijk wel willen? Of kun je dat beter overlaten aan de inkoopexperts? Daar praten we dit keer over met Susanne Siebers van de gemeente Utrecht, inwoner Emiel van Ekert die veel tijd en energie stak in een van deze projecten en adviseur Michelle Rozenhart Rodenburg. Hoe kijken zij aan tegen het betrekken van leken?
Iedere ouder kent ze wel: de sprongen van Oei, ik Groei (The Wonder Weeks). Xaviera Plooij is het gezicht achter het merk. Haar ouders kwamen in onderzoek de sprongen tegen, schreven het op en vroegen Xaviera om het merk neer te zetten. Zij bouwde het uit tot een miljoenen business dat wereldwijd bekend is. Vorig jaar verkocht ze Oei, ik Groei. Ze vertelt over het ontstaan van Oei, het succes, de verkoop, het moederschap, oma worden en de helse periode waar ze afgelopen twee jaar in zat / nog in zit. Een vechtscheiding met fysiek geweld, ouderverstoting vanuit twee van haar dochters en heel veel leugens. Voor de 16.000 anders ouders die ouderverstoting meemaken, vertelt ze nu haar verhaal. Herken jij jezelf in dit verhaal? Neem gerust contact op met ons. Heb je suïcidale gedachten? Bel dan de zelfmoordpreventielijn van 113. Meer weten over Oei, ik Groei en de sprongen? Bekijk hier de website: https://www.oeiikgroei.nl/ Meer weten over Zakenmama of ons supporten? Abonneer je op onze podcast en ons YouTube kanaal! Volg ons op instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zakenmama.nl/ En doe inspiratie op op de website: https://www.zakenmama.nl/
Frailty and Flavonols Episode 1141 JUN 2023 Other subclasses showed no association (P values range: 0.12–0.99), but every 10 mg/d of higher quercetin intake was associated with 35% lower odds of frailty onset (OR: 0.65; 95% CI: 0.48–0.88). #Frailty #quercetin #flavonols Oei, S., Millar, C. L., Nguyen Lily, T. N., Mukamal, K. J., Kiel, D. P., Lipsitz, L. A., Hannan, M. T., & Sahni, S. (2023). Higher intake of dietary flavonols, specifically dietary quercetin, is associated with lower odds of frailty onset over 12 years of follow-up among adults in the Framingham Heart Study. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajcnut.2023.04.013 Frailty, falling, weakness, quercetin, flavonols, osteoporosis, sarcopenia. kaempferol , myricetin, aging, elderly, fisetin, strength, balance --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ralph-turchiano/support
De markt van kunstmatige intelligentie is binnen nu en 10 jaar goed voor een bedrag van 1300 miljard dollar. Althans, dat blijk uit een analyse van persbureau Bloomberg. Die markt is nu nog 'slechts' 40 miljard dollar. Ondertussen gaat alles dat ook maar een beetje met de technologie te maken heeft omhoog op de beurs. Hoe zorg je dat je scoort als belegger en niet besmet raakt met de AI-koorts? Ook hebben we het over de afgelopen beursweek. Het was me het weekje wel. Aandeelhouders van Amerikaanse oliereuzen stemden massaal tégen klimaatplannen en die van Netflix gunnen de eigen directie hun beloningspakket niet. Ook daar werd het een voorstel weggestemd. Moet je als belegger dat soort ondernemingen mijden? Verder natuurlijk alles over het Amerikaanse schuldenplafond. Zowel het Huis als de Senaat stemden in met het plan. Goed voor de Amerikanen, maar moet je een financiële junkie eigenlijk wel geld geven? Ook gaat het over: De Amerikaanse centrale bank. Beleggers denken dat Jerome Powell en consorten even op de pauzeknop drukken. Nvidia. Is de rally voorbij? Banken. Die mogen van DNB wat minder streng toezien op witwassen. Jamie Dimon, een van de rijkste bankiers, binnenkort president van de VS? En tot slot weer een vooruitblik op de beursdag van maandag!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Im Kampf um den Erhalt des Dorfes Lützerath war er eine prominente wissenschaftliche Stimme: Pao-Yu Oei, Professor für Nachhaltige Energiewende Ökonomie an der Europa-Universität Flensburg und Leiter des Studiengangs „Energie- und Umweltmanagement“ (EUM). Gemeinsam mit Kolleg*innen hat er berechnet, dass es die Kohle unter Lützerath nicht braucht, um die Versorgungssicherheit von Deutschland mit Strom zu garantieren. Der Abbau der Braunkohle unter Lützerath war weder energiewirtschaftlich sinnvoll noch klimapolitisch zu rechtfertigen, sagt Pao-Yu Oei. Für ihn ist Lützerath deshalb ein Symbol für eine verfehlte Energie- und Klimapolitik: Das ist eine Politik, die den betriebswirtschaftlichen Profit eines einzelnen Unternehmens wie etwa RWE höher gewichtet als die volkswirtschaftlichen Kosten für die Gesellschaft durch die fortschreitende Klimakrise. Diese Krise ist die Wand, auf die wir zu Zeit noch wenig abgebremst zurasen, sagt Oei, und argumentiert für einen schnellen Ausbau der Erneuerbaren Energien. Ein kompletter Kohleausstieg sei bis 2030, ein Umstieg auf 100% Erneuerbare bis 2040 technisch und ökonomisch machbar. Warum die Angst vor einer Deindustrialisierung Deutschlands durch Erneuerbare unbegründet ist, warum weder LNG-Terminals noch Atomkraftwerke Schritte in die richtige Richtung sind, welche politischen Maßnahmen es stattdessen benötige und warum Pao-Yu Oei das gesellschaftspolitische Engagement für eine Energiewende für vereinbar hält mit dem Neutralitätsgebot der Wissenschaft – darüber spricht das Mitglied der „scientist for future“ mit EUF-Pressesprecherin Kathrin Fischer in der siebzehnten Folge der „Gespräche über den Zustand der Welt“. Siebzehnte Folge der Reihe "Gespräche über den Zustand der Welt" (Staffel 3, Folge 2). Auch als Video auf YouTube verfügbar: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YillGDnrerU
The new year year kicked off with another report analyzing the failures of the nursing home system during COVID-19, this time from the HHS Office of the Inspector General. But while understanding the mistakes of the past is important, the time for retrospective reports has long since passed – and policymakers have the tools to effect real change today. Join CFI communications director Alex Spanko and health care policy expert Anne Montgomery for a conversational look at a variety of evidence-based solutions to the problems that plague eldercare in America, from HUD lending changes to a federally authorized person-centered care pilot program. If you've ever felt anger or frustration at the way nursing homes are run or overseen, tune in for fuel for your next conversations with lawmakers, policymakers, provider peers, and other changemakers! Read the OIG report: https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/OEI-02-20-00491.pdf Read CFI's response to the OIG report: https://thegreenhouseproject.org/press-releases/as-oig-calls-for-significant-changes-to-nursing-homes-small-homes-are-the-answer/
Zoe Russell discusses ankle sprain assessment and treatment, and how to return your patients to sport. You'll discover how to help your ankle sprain patients fully recover as quickly as possible, and avoid long term issues, such as chronic ankle instability, osteoarthritis or other lower limb injuries. Zoe is a Specialist Sports Physiotherapist (FACP), APA Titled Musculoskeletal and Sports Physio, as well as a Clinical Edge Senior Educator and Presenter, and in this Physio Edge podcast hosted by David Pope, we discuss the latest evidence and practical strategies for ankle sprains, including: Assessment Common issues therapists face when rehabilitating ankle sprain patients. Questions you need to ask your ankle sprain patients. How a previous history of ankle sprains impacts your assessment & treatment. Why patients with inversion injuries may have medial ankle pain. How to avoid stirring up patients pain during your assessment. Diagnosis Common mechanisms of injury, and how this guides your diagnosis. Structures that are likely to be injured with different ankle injuries. Treatment 10 key elements to include in your assessment & treatment. How to help reduce swelling quickly after an ankle sprain, and why this is important. Immediate sideline management for ankle sprains at sporting events. Whether manual therapy has a role in acute ankle injuries or persistent ankle pain and swelling. How to explain ankle sprains, recovery & rehab to your patient. What you're looking to achieve with your early rehab. How to set rehab targets or goals with your patients. The role of taping in ankle rehab. Taping compared to bracing. Whether long term taping or bracing is a useful long term injury prevention strategy. The latest surgical procedures for patients with chronic ankle instability (CAI). Links Zoe Russell David Pope on Twitter Improve your musculoskeletal and sports injury assessment & treatment results with a free trial Clinical Edge membership Explain acute and persistent pain to your patients, without giving them the message “It's all in your head” with the Making sense of pain training module Comprehensive low back pain assessment & treatment training module David Pope at Clinical Edge References CLICK HERE to download the article associated with this podcast Bestwick-Stevenson, T., Wyatt, L. A., Palmer, D., Ching, A., Kerslake, R., Coffey, F., Batt, M. E., & Scammell, B. E. (2021). Incidence and risk factors for poor ankle functional recovery, and the development and progression of posttraumatic ankle osteoarthritis after significant ankle ligament injury (SALI): the SALI cohort study protocol. BMC musculoskeletal disorders, 22(1), 362. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12891-021-04230-8 Delco ML, Kennedy JG, Bonassar LJ, Fortier LA. Post-traumatic osteoarthritis of the ankle: A distinct clinical entity requiring new research approaches. J Orthop Res. 2017 Mar;35(3):440-453. doi: 10.1002/jor.23462. Epub 2016 Nov 8. PMID: 27764893; PMCID: PMC5467729. Herzog MM, Kerr ZY, Marshall SW, Wikstrom EA. Epidemiology of Ankle Sprains and Chronic Ankle Instability. J Athl Train. 2019 Jun;54(6):603-610. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-447-17. Epub 2019 May 28. PMID: 31135209; PMCID: PMC6602402. van Ochten, J. M., de Vries, A. D., van Putte, N., Oei, E., Bindels, P., Bierma-Zeinstra, S., & van Middelkoop, M. (2017). Association between Patient History and Physical Examination and Osteoarthritis after Ankle Sprain. International journal of sports medicine, 38(9), 717–724. https://doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-109554 Chapters: 03:47 - Untreated ankle sprains 05:27 - Latest evidence 07:04 - Subjective questions 09:45 - Common mechanisms of injury 11:47 - Plantarflexion/inversion injury with medial ankle pain 15:22 - Dorsiflexion eversion injuries 15:54 - Swelling 21:11 - Objective tests 26:32 - Irritability 26:47 - Figure of 8 taping technique 28:56 - Inferior and superior tib-fib joint assessment 32:14 - Treatment 42:41 - Change of direction 43:17 - Tape or brace? 50:06 - Mobilise or immobilise?
Vandaag is het 1 november 2022 en alle schappen in de supermarkten liggen vol met al het Sinterklaas lekkers. Oei, dat wordt elke keer tijdens het boodschappen doen jezelf sterk houden en er heel hard voorbij lopen. Hoe blijf je in balans de komende weken of hoe blijf je on track naar jouw doel? Meld je hier aan voor mijn programma "Grip op je ENERGIE" inclusief 1 op 1 coaching: https://charlies-kitchen.nl/ENERGIE/ Je kan mij hier volgen op Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/charlie_s_kitchen/?hl=nl
This fall we are offering a menopause Advanced Training Course for our members of the Confident Clinician Club. Our focus is on cardiovascular disease, bone and mental health and will support non-prescribers to support patients beyond HRT. We are limiting our seats to 40 nonmembers to join our 500-member community for this live workshop. You can learn more about it here. [https://discover.theconfidentclinicianclub.com/menopause-intensive-1] This podcast is about the (lack of) research on Vitamin K for osteoporosis and why we have a difficult time recommending this solution for our patients based on the current literature. Have a listen, and here are the references shared: Salma et al. Effect of Vitamin K on Bone Mineral Density and Fracture Risk in Adults: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Biomed 10, 1048 (2022). Shiraki, M., Shiraki, Y., Aoki, C. & Miura, M. Vitamin K2 (Menatetrenone) Effectively Prevents Fractures and Sustains Lumbar Bone Mineral Density in Osteoporosis. J Bone Miner Res 15, 515–521 (2000). Rønn, S. H., Harsløf, T., Oei, L., Pedersen, S. B. & Langdahl, B. L. The effect of vitamin MK-7 on bone mineral density and microarchitecture in postmenopausal women with osteopenia, a 3-year randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial. Osteoporosis Int 32, 185–191 (2021).
Show Notes:I've been trying to lean in to the openness to the not knowing more generally in life these last many months. It's not my knee-jerk – I'm pretty hardwired toward planning, perseverating, anxiety and hyper-controlling. Settling in to the unknown and trusting that I'll have what I need whenever I end up needing it – trusting that I have done what I can and allowing the rest to fall where it may – is not usually in my comfort zone. Yet, I'm finding it to be my saving grace lately. Curiosity and trust. Those are the muscles I am exercising a lot more regularly, and it's been really cool to see how this allows me to relax into uncertain situations without sacrificing any of my capacity to be meaningfully involved or capable. I don't think I'm alone in trying to micro-manage and control things in an effort to make everything be ok – my hunch is you might be in the same boat. Given that, you may also understand how uncomfortable it can be to try to shift from that mode to something less vigilant and “on top of things”. But it's been simpler. Calmer. Nicer in a lot of ways. And it has allowed me to consider and explore ideas I wouldn't normally have even allowed space to exist. Now, that has been true in my world and life generally but also as it relates to my work and the topic we're kicking off with for Season 3 of Behind the Line. A few months ago we had a guest on the show, you might remember, Kelsi Sheren from Brass & Unity. As a quick recap, Kelsi is a retired artillery gunner with the Canadian Armed Forces. She shared her story of experiencing PTSD and struggling with treatment resistance to traditional or conventional therapeutic interventions. I so valued this conversation and her calling out of the limitations of many conventional therapy models – because the truth is that they don't work for everyone. And I really appreciated that she brought up a topic that in my profession is still pretty controversial, but I believe is really important, and that is the topic of psychedelics for PTSD treatment. When she brought it up I honestly had a moment of shock – not because of what she was sharing but because I realized that we had not yet spoken of this in a year and a half of this show existing. We did a whole series on therapy in the fall of 2021, and somehow I missed talking about some key pieces. As soon as I got off the interview with Kelsi, I reached out to 2 colleagues and asked them to schedule interviews for a new series I wanted to do to kick off season 3, and so here we are and we are jumping in talking about alternative treatment modalities for those who are struggling to find the right fit in conventional therapy.Over the coming weeks I am going to introduce you to two amazing clinicians and the ways that they work outside of the conventions of traditional talk therapy to support healing and change. You'll hear from my friend and colleague, Claire Weiss who specializes in Psilocybin-Assisted Psychotherapy, as well as my colleague, Michael Mariano who specializes in neurotherapy. You'll also hear from me about non-verbal trauma processing approaches like EMDR which stands for Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing; and OEI which stands for Observed Experiential Integration. For today, I want to start by talking about why talking doesn't always work. Let's start with this. As a therapist, I may be biased, but I genuinely believe therapy works. I have witnessed time and time again the incredible power of the therapeutic process, including the influence of talk therapy in shaping or reshaping how we think, feel and engage in the world. I have had so many opportunities to watch people make substantial shifts and live lives more aligned with their core values. I have seen people re-write their internal narratives and discover freedom from the stories they were handed. I have myself been shaped by therapy, growing from the opportunity to look more closely and intentionally at myself, my choices, my ways of perceiving, and considering alternative ways to going about it to be more the person I want to be. I want to be clear that I am not saying that talk therapy isn't helpful – on the contrary, it can be incredibly helpful and consequential in changing someone's life. That said, it has it's place and it has it's limitations, and chief among it's limitations is in the processing and healing from trauma.We have talked on this show a number of times about how traumatic experiences get encoded into our brains. We've talked about how the regions of the brain associated with trauma memory as unique and struggle with things like time and context. One of the other things these regions struggle with is language. That's right, when we store traumatic memories, we store them in a part of the brain that doesn't have particularly keen access to our language center. Our brain has to work hard to connect the memory to words to describe it, and often when people share about their traumatic experiences they find that they stumble trying to find the right words, or randomly blank on words. The part of our brain that is awesome at language is our frontal lobe, which is also where we do our really good thinking, decision making, learning, and so on. As we've identified in many other episodes, the frontal lobe part of your brain essentially gets turned off when trauma happens, and this also occurs when we go into memory recall of traumatic events. Whenever we are putting demand on the part of our brain that manages stress and stores trauma, our brain recalibrates itself to give more resources to the stress center and less resources to other parts of the brain including our frontal lobe. So think about that for a minute – if you are going for therapy to work on traumatic experiences or the impact of trauma over time, and you are being asked to recall or share about the impact trauma has had for you – the act of doing what needs to be done means that language is automatically reduced. Which means that talk therapy is going to have a MUCH harder time accessing what it needs to, and supporting you in navigating what you need to move through, in an effort to rewire how your brain has stored that traumatic information. Talk therapy for trauma can feel very slow and very difficult, as it leaves people sitting in their traumatic experiences with minimal equipping to move through and out of it. It rests heavily on talking being the tool that gets us through, but the part of the brain that connects with that isn't likely to be online. Unfortunately when people have tried talk therapy and found it ineffective in helping them with their trauma and symptoms, they tend to scrap therapy altogether. But what if there are other ways at getting to your brain that don't rely so heavily on a skill that isn't online? What if we can find some workarounds that get us there through some sneaky back doors?For decades now trauma therapists around the world have been searching for the back doors. We have been working to be creative and emerging brain science has helped move us forward in better understanding how we can access and reprogram trauma. I won't say that we have all the answers, because man alive, the brain is a complex thing and I'm not sure we've even scratched the surface of all that there is to know about how it works. But I will say that we have learned a lot and that we're taking what we're learning and working really hard to find better ways to provide support to people who don't find conventional therapy to be doing the trick. I remember about 6 years ago I went to a training by one of my psychology idols, Bessel van der Kolk. Dr. van der Kolk is known as a trauma expert. He has been at the forefront of the most significant and consequential research related to trauma, he has acted in roles of leadership within the most significant bodies related to trauma work, and if you do what I do, you have read everything he has ever written and admire his dedication to serving people better. He shared during this training about his work before learning about EMDR. He talked about the limitations he kept running into and the “treatment resistance” he observed in so many trauma clients. He shared about the lack of outcomes in treatment research, or outcomes being really limited and hardly passing a level of significance. He shared about how he started hearing about this thing called EMDR and that he thought it sounded like nonsense. There's no way anything could give the results EMDR had been found to offer. Then he shared about his experience with a specific client who he could not figure out what to do with. Nothing was working. All of his best work wasn't touching this persons trauma. So he sent her to a colleague who did EMDR, and the gains this client made were so substantial that he couldn't deny the efficacy of this intervention. He got trained in EMDR soon after and has since been one of the most considerable contributors to research related to EMDR and PTSD. Now, we'll get into the specifics of EMDR later in this series, and I'll be clear that I don't think EMDR is a universal answer to trauma either – but the point I'm trying to make is that we need to be open to the possibility that the problem isn't that our trauma can't be helped, but rather we need to get curious about whether the intervention that's being used is the best way to work at helping our trauma. What if, instead of calling it quits after a few unsatisfying talk therapy sessions, and feeling like we aren't fixable, we instead asked questions about other options, and sought out alternatives that could bring different relief? Let me say really quick that this requires you as the consumer of a service to know that there are more options available. …And that kind of sucks. It shouldn't have to be your responsibility to know and seek out alternatives – I think this should be made more easily available and accessible, but we live in a managed care system that does ask more of you than it should. Advocating for yourself and not giving up will fall to you. I hate that that's true, because often when we're struggling with something like PTSD we don't have the sense of capacity to do more for ourselves, we just need help. Yet, this is where we're at, and I hope that at minimum, episodes like this help you feel more aware and discerning as you seek support and equip you with questions to ask, things to watch for, and the ability to pull the plug on something that isn't working to find something that will if you aren't getting your needs met. Over the coming weeks we will talk about three specific treatment interventions offered by specialized clinicians and practitioners. My hope is that you might hear something you gravitate towards and that you'll be inspired to continue seeking support and ensuring your wellbeing. Your wellness is critical. We are living in a time where we need every person, every person who is able to contribute to making the world a better, safer place. We need you, and we need you well. We need you to keep helping, in whatever role or capacity that might be, because goodness knows the world has been in an increasingly tough spot. Investing in you can't be optional, we need you too much for that. So I hope you'll continue listening over the coming weeks and that you'll take something away that will shape how you invest in you.Episode Challenge:Take 5 minutes to complete our listener feedback survey!! Help shape the future of Behind the Line to ensure that it is meeting your needs and covering topics that matter most to you. If you complete the survey before September 30th you will be entered to win a $50 amazon gift card!Complete the Behind the Line Listener Feedback Survey, here.Reflect on where you're at and what you might need by using our free Beating the Breaking Point Indicators Checklist & Triage Guide. Additional Resources:Enter to win a $50 Amazon Gift Card by taking 5 minutes to complete our Behind the Line listener feedback survey, here.Connect, Rate, Review, Subscribe & Share!Connect with me on Facebook and Instagram, or email me at support@thrive-life.ca. I love hearing from you! Subscribe and share this podcast with those you know. I appreciate every like, rating and review – every single one helps this podcast to be seen by other First Responders & Front Line Workers out there. Help me on my mission to help others just like you to not only survive, but to thrive – both on the job and off.
This week Jeremy talks to Mark Schoenbaum about his struggles getting medically necessary care through his Medicare Advantage Program and then turns to Peggy Lighe, a health care advocate who is helping to lead the fight to pass legislation to modernize Medicare Advantage help reduce delays in care for beneficiaries.Learn more about the Regulatory Relief Coalition's work to pass the Improving Seniors' Timely Access to Care Act at regrelief.orgFind the Inspector General's report on prior authorizations at https://oig.hhs.gov/oei/reports/OEI-09-18-00260.aspThis episode is brought to you by The ALS Association in partnership with CitizenRacecar.
Las noticias del día con César Vidal y María Jesús Alfaya. Ayúdanos a seguir en emisión, participa en el Crowdfunding de La Voz de César Vidal: https://www.cesarvidal.com/dona En el informativo de hoy hemos tratado los siguientes temas: - El Síndic de Greuges de Cataluña pide que se revise el modelo residencial y se apueste por la vejez en casa. - Los sindicatos de RTVE gastaron más de 400.00 euros en dietas en los dos años de Covid. - Agenda 2030: Educación y la OEI premiarán escuelas que fomenten los “Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible” en Iberoamérica. - Agenda 2030: Telefónica y el Banco de desarrollo de América Latina han revalidado su colaboración mediante un nuevo Acuerdo Marco de Cooperación que permitirá acelerar aún más los Objetivos de Desarrollo Sostenible. - La Unión Europea pacta un rearme conjunto urgente frente a la amenaza rusa. - Canadá despenalizará las drogas duras en la provincia de Columbia Británica como parte de un proyecto piloto.
David Ximenes, o último resistente "português" em Timor. A importância da ilha sueca de Gotelândia. Livro póstumo de Carlos Santos Pereira. Entrevista com Mariano Jabonero, líder da OEI. Edição de Mário Rui Cardoso.
Dr Ronaye Calvert and Bindi Heit from LIVE Treatment Concierge Services are joined by special guest, Karen Connelly to discuss Body talk - opening doors to healing old wounds through somatic healing. Our guest: Author of eleven books of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, Karen Connelly is a writer, educator and therapist in private practice. In her online institute The Courageous Writers' Academy, she teaches professional editing techniques and trauma-informed self-care in a supportive communal environment. As a therapist, she specializes in trauma, creativity, and spirituality, and often uses the somatic and brain-based psychotherapy called Observed and Experiential Integration (OEI). In this fascinating episode, we explore: What is somatic therapy? How do you know you have the right trauma therapy? What is OEI and how does it work? Why holistic therapy including the brain, body and spirit together can get greater results How you know you have the right therapist Songs - Physical by Olivia Newton John - Somewhere I belong by Linkin Park - After All by Dar Williams Listen via Spotify playlist - GET REAL with Dr Ronaye Meditation - Let go of what you know This podcast is brought to you by Ethical Change Agency. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Scottsdale is home to some incredible small businesses. Which is why we are excited to launch Small Business Saturday with Scottsdale Vibes. We will feature a small business owner's story on his/her path to success. This week we have Dr. Okky Oei of Hope Clinic. Located in North Scottsdale, Dr. Oei at Hope Clinic is an alternative place for pain management. Dr. Oei and his staff practice pain healing from the inside out. Going to the root of the problem rather than just medicine injections. Tune in to hear his story of how his own skiing accident led to a life of healing other's pain.
Scottsdale is home to some incredible small businesses. Which is why we are excited to launch Small Business Saturday with Scottsdale Vibes. We will feature a small business owner's story on his/her path to success. This week we have Dr. Okky Oei of Hope Clinic. Located in North Scottsdale, Dr. Oei at Hope Clinic is an alternative place for pain management. Dr. Oei and his staff practice pain healing from the inside out. Going to the root of the problem rather than just medicine injections. Tune in to hear his story of how his own skiing accident led to a life of healing other's pain.
Gate.io Podcast | Bitcoin & Crypto News | Altcoin News Podcast
Gate.io Altcoin Gems EspañolEl primer producto de PsyOptions es un protocolo de opciones al estilo americano construido sobre la blockchain Solana. Los principios que han guiado la arquitectura y el desarrollo del núcleo del protocolo son la flexibilidad y la componibilidad. PsyOptions pretende aportar una experiencia TradFi a DeFi mediante la construcción de una plataforma de servicios financieros descentralizada, sin permisos y de propiedad comunitaria. $PSY es puramente un token de gobernanza. Colectivamente, los titulares de $PSY tienen el poder de actualizar el protocolo como lo consideren oportuno, sólo limitado por los controles y equilibrios de la DAO. Esto permite a los titulares de $PSY crear incentivos para recompensar la participación e impulsar el uso del protocolo.El suministro máximo de $PSY supera los 1.000 millones, mientras que el suministro en circulación supera los 62.000.000. En concreto, el desglose de los tokens $PSY es el siguiente: el equipo/contribuyentes/asesores representa el 15%, las rondas privadas el 12%, la OEI el 3%, la tesorería de la DAO el 60%, el fondo de contribuyentes externos el 8% y las provisiones de liquidez de $PSY el 2%.La Startup de Gate.io lanzará PsyOptions ($PSY) el 18 de enero de 2022 a las 04:00 AM (UTC).StartupLink: https://www.gate.io/startup/375/*Descargo de responsabilidad: La información presentada en este podcast es sólo para fines informativos. El comercio de criptomonedas conlleva grandes riesgos, así que asegúrese de hacer su propia investigación antes de comprometer su capital en cualquier inversión.Música: BGM (Pixarbay)Gate.io Twitter: https://twitter.com/gate_ioGate.io Telegram: https://t.me/gateio
On this episode of The Innovators Podcast, we interviewed former ISURP intern, Abigail Miller. Abigail graduated from Iowa State University in May, 2020 with a Bachelor's degree in marketing. She is currently working at Ag Certain Industries as business analyst and talent coordinator and at OEI as a community coordinator. In this episode, we talked about Abigail's past internships along with her current work experience. She has had some incredible opportunities and many of them have stemmed from her time as an intern here at the Park. Enjoy this podcast and hearing from one of the many Iowa State University Research Park success stories.
Show Notes:HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!! I prefer giving over receiving, so for my birthday week I declare a blitz giveaway of my full resilience training program, Beating the Breaking Point, designed specifically for First Responders and Front Line Workers!! Go to the page and click to register before 11:59PM on Monday October 18th. Use code BIRTHDAY to get this 7-part online training program for ONLY $99!Today we're continuing our series on therapy 101 – focusing today on where to look for a counsellor; what to look for in a counsellor; what to ask a potential counsellor (and how to go about doing that); and what to expect from counselling (particularly early on). Where to look for a counsellor: Different people stumble into counselling through different routes, and it's important to acknowledge that there are lot's of ways to find a professional support person. - Google, how did we ever live without it?? The great thing about google is the ability to find someone conveniently located to you or to search for someone who specializes in a particular area of need. The downside to google and scanning clinicians' websites is that it doesn't disclose a lot about the persons personality and whether they'll be a fit for you.- Online counselling-specific directories, tend to ask specific fill-in-the-blank questions that allow prospective clients to compare and contrast clinicians skills, interests and so on a bit more side-to-side. - Professional association directories, offer some amount of safety in knowing that the clinicians represented on the directory meet some minimum criteria for education, training and experience. ** NOTE: I know I shared at length in last week's episode about how counselling is not regulated in many areas, so this might seem confusing. Professional associations are not the same as regulatory colleges – professional associations are run by the group they represent. An example of this is the BC Association of Clinical Counsellors – I register with them, meeting their inclusion criteria, and I pay them annually to be allowed to represent myself as a Registered Clinical Counsellor (RCC). They have an ethical guideline that I am required to abide by to remain a member in good standing, but the guidelines are formed and enforced within the group, and the only ultimate outcome of failing to abide is to be barred from membership but can't strip me of my ability to continue to practice since the profession overall is unregulated where I live and work. A regulatory body is intended for public safety to ensure that practitioners meet expectations and offers recourse if expectations are not met including being barred from continuing to practice altogether. Professional associations role is to support their members, but they do offer a layer of protection to the public in having some specific criteria for acceptance. **- A referral from your GP - Word of mouth referral from a friend or someone you know- Other professionals who are often connected to counsellors they've worked in parallel with – like lawyers, chiropractors, naturopaths, or other para-medical professionals tend to know clinicians whom they trust to refer to.- Non-profit or government funded agencies can offer referrals or direction including crime victim assistance, ministry of child and family development, community mental health, legal aid, and first nations health. These groups tend to be well-connected to their respective community organizations and privately operating mental health professionals and can suggest who might be a good fit for your needs. What to look for when looking for a counsellor: 1. Education. The main professional associations across Canada require that their counsellors have a Masters Degree in psychology. Individuals who have completed this level of education will have done a four year undergraduate Degree as well as a Masters program typically between two and three years in length. These programs include training in assessment, treating psychological disorders, working with individuals/couples/families/children, and working with a variety of wellness concerns including relationship issues, work issues, addictions concerns, grief and loss, etc. These programs also include intensive practicum/internship experiences where students complete a given number of hours directly counselling clients under the supervision of a professional.2. Registration with a Professional Association (if not in a regulated area). You want to see letters after their name. In areas that are regulated, this is taken care of for you. But for those in unregulated areas, look for registration with a professional association which helps to protect the client. Finding a registered counsellor acts as a bit of a safeguard – you know they had to pass specific criteria to get registered which means that they have the fundamental things they need to effectively help you. Belonging to a professional association requires your counsellor to abide by specific ethical guidelines and it gives clients a place to voice any concerns/complaints. In addition, belonging to an association means that your counsellor is getting regular information about training, resources, and other information that allows them to be even better at their job.3. Be specific about what you want. a. First, be clear about what kind of clinician you are looking for. Check with your extended medical coverage to see what credentials they cover, and look specifically for someone who meets that. It stinks to go see someone and connect with them only to discover that you can't get reimbursed for those sessions after the fact. Clinicians do not know which medical programs cover which credentials, so you have to do this piece of diligence to ensure that you are finding someone who will be covered. b. Second, be clear about what you are needing counselling for and find someone who specializes in that area. Just like there are GP's who are generalist medical practitioners, and then there are specialists who focus on a specialized area of medical practice, therapists similarly have generalists who work with a range of needs but aren't necessarily deeply versed or trained in any given one, as well as highly specialized clinicians who invest in dedicating themselves to a specific area of treatment. So if you're looking for relationship counselling, don't go to someone who tends to focus on depression. If you're looking for counselling around a recent or past trauma, don't go to someone who prefers to do career counselling. If your work factors in as a significant aspect of what you hope to work on in therapy, I would really encourage you to seek out someone who has a specialization in working with trauma, as well as experience working with other First Responders and Front Line Workers, as you are a somewhat unique demographic and tend to benefit from someone who gets your unique challenges.Alright, you've narrowed your search down and found a few counsellors who you feel pretty good about. What comes next? Well, next I want you to anchor to WHO YOU ARE in this process. As you navigate into contacting counsellors and setting up initial sessions, I want you to remember that in this process you are the consumer of a service. This service is personal and intimate and you have a right to be choosy, to be informed and to make choices that are right for YOU. Questions to ask a therapist you are considering booking with:Practical questions:- what level of education do you have? - where did you go to school? - how many years of experience have you had?- are you registered? with which association are you registered?- how much do you charge? - how long are sessions? - do you bill to insurance companies? - how do you expect payment? - where are you located?- do you offer telehealth sessions? - if you are seeking a counsellor who uses a specific kind of therapeutic approach (e.g. EMDR, OEI, body therapies, play therapy, etc.) you will want to ask about their specific training in the approach as many of these require additional training to a Masters degree.Professional questions:- ask about their counselling style (for instance, are they really directive or do they collaborate with you; do they do a lot of teaching skills or do they focus on processing feelings, etc.). - ask about their theoretical orientation…now the answer to this question may feel a bit over the heads of some people who aren't into psycho-babble, but you can say something like “can you tell me a bit about how you shape your treatment, in a user-friendly kind of way?” The answer to this question will tell you a lot about what you can expect from the counsellor in your work together. - Another way to approach this is to tell the counsellor about what problems you are experiencing and ask for an idea of how they would approach these issues.- It's ok to ask the therapist whether they have background working with first responders or with the specific type of concern you're coming with, like PTSD for example. - You can ask about what additional training they have to support your specific concerns, and ask about what kinds of successes and challenges they've had with other clients with similar concerns. If there are any other questions you would find helpful to feel clear about expectations or would promote your sense of safety with this person on an ongoing basis as you work together, don't hesitate to ask. They work for you, you get to have a voice in that space, and actually need to for the process to really work for you. Did you know that research has shown that “therapeutic alliance” is THE strongest determinant of the successful outcome of therapy? Therapeutic alliance is the connection between client and counsellor and is defined by 3 main pieces: agreement on therapeutic goals (ie, why you are coming for therapy); agreement on the tasks that make up therapy (ie. the steps toward the goals); and the quality of bond between therapist and client. When these 3 pieces work together, the likelihood of success is far greater and is the strongest predictor of success in therapy.What to ACTUALLY expect when you start going to counselling:Now, every counsellor approaches things a little differently, but on the whole you should be able to expect a few key things. If these things are not present, ask questions. - In your first session, you should expect the counsellor to present you with some kind of contract or agreement that outlines the counsellors expectations (i.e. payment, what will happen if you no show or cancel at the last minute, etc.) as well as the rights you have to confidentiality and the limits to confidentiality. Your rights are to have your information kept confidential except when there is a risk (or suspected risk) of harm to a child, when there is a threat of harm to yourself or to someone else (e.g. threatening to commit suicide or homicide, but not restricted to these alone), and where required by law which becomes a factor if you are involved in an active court case (or will be) as counsellor notes are able to be subpoenaed. Besides the confidentiality agreement, many counsellors will also use the first session to discuss any other stakeholders in your care (e.g. physician, psychiatrist, mental health, social worker, etc.) and may discuss with you the possibility of filling out a form that will allow your counsellor to have contact with these other professionals in order to provide the most effective care possible.- Once these formalities are complete, the remainder of the first session is often an information gathering time. The counsellor may take notes while you talk, or may have an intake form with specific questions they require to have answered. These questions may include information regarding past counselling, other stakeholders (it can be helpful to bring a list of names and contact information for these people), medications (it's a great idea to bring a list of medications you are on and the dosage), family (i.e. kids, spouse, etc.), and questions regarding the presenting concerns that brought you to counselling. If you are receiving counselling through an insurance company or other funding, you will likely have a specific number of sessions being paid for which you will also want to discuss with your counsellor so they can tailor treatment to your timeline. This may also be the time when the counsellor will tell you a bit more about themselves and their approach, and is a great time to ask any other questions you may have.- After the first session, subsequent sessions will typically follow a basic pattern of checking in regarding how things have been going, and then moving into the specific work/goals you have outlined. You can expect that you counsellor will continually check in with you regarding how your goals are being met. You can also expect your counsellor to refer you to other resources/supports as they see fit in order to provide you with optimal care. - You can expect that your counsellor will act respectfully but will challenge you to make changes that may not always be comfortable. Above all else, you should expect yourself to assess your own progress and be aware of whether you are making the gains you are wanting to make. If it seems like you are not making progress or have stalled, try discussing this with your counsellor, or consider finding another counsellor. - If your therapist is trained in specific treatment interventions like EMDR (eye movement desensitization and reprocessing), Neurofeedback, OEI (observed experiential integration), and so on, you can expect them to discuss this treatment with you and walk you through how they would apply it in their work with you before they begin applying these skills. Do ask for additional information and ask questions about any treatment intervention – they should be able to clearly identify why they think this would be helpful for you, how it will look, what to expect and should be able to point you to additional resources where you can learn more. You are allowed to decline interventions that don't feel like a fit for you, or to try an intervention and then ask to stop if you are finding it is not helpful to you. - Your clinician is skilled at lots of things, but we're not mind-readers and your feedback is really important to help guide the process and ensure that we're tailoring your treatment to meet your needs. Don't hesitate to speak up.Episode Challenge:Check out our one week Birthday special of Beating the Breaking Point. Register before end of day on Monday October 18th to get the 7-part online resilience training program that I developed specifically for First Responders and Front Line Workers for only $99 using coupon code BIRTHDAY. Sign up for our waitlist to be notified when the Self-Care Dare 5 Day Challenge for First Responders and Front Line Workers is re-opening for registration in ONE WEEK! Registration opens October 19th and will close November 1st at 11:59PM. The dare kicks off on November 2nd. Registration is only $10 and includes 5 days of video lessons around 5 key domains for self-care; bonus resources and worksheets to develop a bombproof and sustainable self-care plan; access to our private facebook group to connect, problem solve and hone our skills; and fun prizes along the way to keep you pushing forward. If you are needing to up your self-care game, join us and take the dare. Additional Resources:Check out these directories to help connect with a counsellor/psychologist/social worker who can help support you:- The BC Association of Clinical Counsellors - The Canadian Counselling & Psychological AssociationConnect, Rate, Review, Subscribe & Share!Connect with me on Facebook and Instagram, or email me at support@thrive-life.ca. I love hearing from you! Subscribe and share this podcast with those you know. I appreciate every like, rating and review – every single one helps this podcast to be seen by other First Responders & Front Line Workers out there. Help me on my mission to help others just like you to not only survive, but to thrive – both on the job and off.
Join us in this episode, as we reflect on and celebrate the life, and legacy of Dr. Orr, and share personal accounts of his impact on our lives and our Community. With guest appearances from Dr. Winslow, Dr. Mohr, and Dr. Oei.
During this episode of Why Change? co-hosts Karla and Jeff discuss the connections between interpersonal and community-die connections and wellbeing. Karla interviews Inès Sanguinetti, founder and artistics director of Fundación Crear Vale la Pena in Argentina; they discuss the concept of social transformation and how creativity and culture can lead to systems change. Karla and Jeff conclude with ideas about turning these concepts into everyday actions. In this episode you'll learn: About the concept of social transformation and what Latin America can teach the rest of the world; How one organization institutionalized love for collective creation; and How rest and interpersonal connections impact our work Please download the transcript here. ABOUT INÈS SANGUINETTI: Co-founder and president of Fundación Crear Vale la Pena. Artistic Director for the Creative Environments Program (Art and Creativity to transform life projects in schools and communities in vulnerable contexts), that has reach more than 65.000 people from Argentina and the world, and has been recognised as one of Latin America's 13 most pedagogic innovative experiences by the BID, the OEA and the OEI. Member of the board at International Teaching Arts Collaborative (ITAC).Today, her task in Argentina and the world is to transfer creativity and wellbeing methodologies applied to improve teaching and learning processes as well as socio-cultural management for artists, teachers, social workers and businesses. WHERE TO FIND Inès: Website: https://bit.ly/crearvalelapenaenglish Instagram: @sanguinetti.ines Instagram: @crearvalelapena This episode of Why Change? A Podcast for the Creative Generation was powered by Creative Generation. Produced and Edited by Daniel Stanley. For more information on this episode and Creative Generation please visit the episode webpage and follow us on social media @Campaign4GenC --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whychange/support