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Rebecca Cheshire and Lisa Blampey from Forrest Road Medical Centre in Padbury, Western Australia join the show as we continue our Clinic Leaders Series. Rebecca, practice manager, and Lisa, a registered nurse, talk about how their practice is set up and run, work life balance, family culture, opportunities for GPs and more. Don't miss any insights - hit subscribe now and follow Living The Australian Dream. Want to work as a GP in Australia? Leading a medical clinic that is hiring GPs? Health Recruitment Australia has opportunities available right now. To find out more and get in touch, visit healthrecruitmentaustralia.com.au Podcast produced with the support of Apiro
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GUEST OVERVIEW: John Padbury joined the British South Africa Police in 1969, aged 17, amidst the Rhodesian Civil War. He progressed from uniformed duties to detective work, eventually becoming a field-intelligence officer with the Special Branch, attaining the rank of detective inspector. Padbury operated across various units, including the BSAP Support Unit, SAS, and RLI. He commanded successful irregular warfare strategies, earning the Commissioner's Silver Baton in 1978. Recognizing the importance of community involvement, he led a pioneering Special Branch operation that could have shifted the course of the conflict, outlining 12 crucial phases for effective counter-insurgency efforts. https://www.battleforhurungwe.com/about
It's been revealed that police have been forced to shoot a naked and bloodied man dead after he charged at them with a knife in Padbury overnight. The shocking incident happened at about 10pm at a house on Macdonald Avenue. On Monday morning Superintendent Tony Flack said the incident took place after police were called to the home by St John WA paramedics, who had earlier been called to the house to treat the 35-year-old man for suspected self inflicted stab wounds. Sunrise correspondent Matt Tinney has the details.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Police were forced to shoot a naked and bloodied man dead after he charged at them with a knife in Padbury overnight. The West's Daryna Zadvirna joins Ben O'Shea live from the scene. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Police are at the scene of a deadly altercation in our northern suburbs overnight. Officers were forced to take dramatic and drastic action when a large, naked man, 35, brandishing a knife and "bleeding profusely" charged at them when they attended the scene. 6PR and Nine News Perth reporter Ezra Holt spoke to WA Police District Superintendent Tony Flack, who said the reasons for why the victim "Having just viewed the body-worn video ... I can only say that a large, naked male running at you with speed with a knife, you have to act quickly and very professionally... they certainly prevented further injury tonight," he told Holt at the scene.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this annual rewind episode, host Sheryl Xue takes a look back at all we've accomplished throughout the Season 3. She gets the LODOWN from our Senior Content Producer, Erin Padbury and our Technical Producer and Editor, Rena Liu. Shout out to all of our Content producers, Chantal Choga, Sandy Iligan, Carrie Liu, and Mustafa Alam. Our Hosts Kashmala Yousafzai, Nabeel Khan, and Efia Wiredu. Our Technical Producers, Kevin Xiao, Sandeep Singh, Chantal Choga, and Shahmeer Mughal. Our Music Producer Sandeep Singh and our Photographer, Alyssa Fraser.
Charlie talks with the co-founder and former CEO of iiNet, Michael Malone. A maths graduate with an early interest in the emerging internet, Michael calculated he needed to sign up 200 clients at $25 a month to allow himself access to the Net in 1993. Working out of his parent's garage in Padbury, he built up one of the largest ISPs in the country with over $1B in sales over the next 20 years, taking on industry giants and even Hollywood studios. One of WA's true tech success stories, Michael is now a non-executive director at Seven West Media and NBN Co, as well as an investor in several startups and tech businesses. "It's pretty special when you're sitting down with an 18-year-old (South African) kid, we were paying 6 times the average national income, youth unemployment was 50% at the time, and that 18-year-old kid can buy his Mum her first house." ~ Michael Malone. For more: https://iinet.net.au/customers/ and https://www.perth.net.au/ ~~ Startup West is recorded at Riff studios in beautiful downtown Perth, Western Australia; produced by Startup News, edited by Carmen Yee Kai Wen and brought to you thanks to support from the New Industries Fund, Spacecubed, Curtin University, RSM, the City of Perth and Dinner Twist. Startup West acknowledges the Whadjuk Nyoongar people, traditional owners of the lands and waters of Perth, where this podcast was recorded, and we pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging.
Intuition is that feeling in your gut when you instinctively know that something you are doing is right or wrong. Kay spoke with April & Kellie Padbury Periodontics, who saved their patient Beverly when they had a hunch that there might be a bigger reason she didn't show up to her appointment. https://www.padburyperio.com/
This episode features Development Executive Dave Padbury who shares a behind-the-scenes look at what happens to your pitch after you leave the room. You’ll also learn: *The #1 thing you as a new creator can bring to the table *The do’s and don’ts of pitching *How to build an enticing story engine More about Dave: Dave joined the Guru development team six years ago to work on "True and The Rainbow Kingdom". Since then, he has helped develop the upcoming Disney Junior series "Pikwik Pack", the CBC comedy "Big Blue", and many other series. Currently, he is focused on supporting creators' visions across all of Guru's upcoming series and finding new voices and perspectives to fill Guru's slate into the future.
"The Doctor's almost as clever as I am." Zoe Heriot may be the Krotons' pet but she must have been expelled from modesty school. Yes, this is The Krotons, a saga of sub-standard scientists, snaky CCTV spies and shouty fridges from another world. The Doctor flunks, Jamie fights and Zoe infuriates while the Gonds lack the gonads to take on their reclusive rulers. Will Beta reveal the secret of transmat to his backward brethren (or is it still at Beta stage)? From which Brummie enclave of Johannesburg do the Krotons hail? Will the Doctor's twanged nipple ever recover? And do Jim and Martin think the story is the work of High Brains or should it be dispersed? Find out here.
"You have returned to us, Doctor. Your travels are over." But thankfully not forever. It was, indeed, a long way from being all over. So Jim and Martin stagger to their century milestone with their biggest story yet, The War Games. It's an epic tale of trials, tribulations, heavily corrected (and impaired) vision, and a Very. Stupid. Voice. The Doctor plays with fridge magnets, Jamie plays the fool, Zoe plays Villa like a violin and the War Lord plays with his real live toy soldiers - and gets a Paddington stare for his trouble. Romans gawp and mince, wigs wander almost as far as the accents, and the scenery is chewed up, gargled and spat out - even when it's as wobbly as a Quark under enemy fire. So do Jim and Martin think this is a worthy end for a very worthy Doctor? Or was it ten parts of terrible tedium? Listen in to find out.
Dr. Kim walks us through the history of cord clamping and examines the evidence behind delayed vs. immediate clamping. feedback@obgyn.fm ACOG, Committee Opinion. Delayed Umbilical Cord Clamping After Birth. (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, 2017). Downey, C., and Bewley, S. Third Stage Practices and the Neonate. Fetal and MAternal Medicine Review 20, 229-246 (2009). Downey, C., Bewley, S. HIstorical Perspectives on umbilical cord clamping and neonatal transition. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 105, 325-329 (2012). Drife, J. The start of life: a history of obstetrics. Postgrad Medicine 78, 311-315 (2002). Loudon, I. General practitioners and obstetrics: a brief history. JR Soc Med 101 (2008). McDonald, S., Middletone, P, Dowswell, T, Morris PS. Effect of timing of umbilical cord clamping of term infants on maternal and neonatal outcomes (Review). Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 1-93 (2013). Mercer, J., Vohr, BR, McGrath, MM, PAdbury, JF, WAllach, M, Oh, W. Delayed Cord Clamping in Very Preterm Infants Reduces the Incidence of Intraventricular Hemorrhage and Late-Onset Sepsis: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Pediatrics 117, 1235-1242 (2006). Mercer, J., Vohr, BR, Erickson-Owens, DA, Padbury, JF and Oh, W. Seven-month developmental outcomes of very low birth weight infants enrolled in a randomized controlled trial of delayed versus immediate cord clamping. Journal of Perinatology 30, 11-16 (2010). Mercer, J., Erickson-Owens, DA, Collins, J, Barcelos, MO, Parker, AB, Padbury, JF. Effects of Delayed cord clamping on residual placental blood volume, hemoglobin and bilirubin levels in term infants: a randomized controlled trial. Journal of Perinatology 37, 260-264 (2017). National Institute for Health and Care Excellence,. Intrapartum care for healthy women and babies, 2014). Paco, C., Florido, J, Garrido, MC, PRados, S, NAvarrete, L. Umbilical cord blood acid-base and gas analysis after early versus delayed cord clamping in neonates at term. Arch Gynecol Obstetric 283, 1011-1014 (2011). Rabe, H., Wacker, A, Hulskamp, G, Hornig-Franz, I, Schulze-Everding, A, Harms, E, Cirkel, U, Louwen, F, Witteler, R, Schneider, H. A randomised controoled trial of delayed cord clamping in very low birth weight preterm infants. Eur J Pediatrics 159, 775-777 (2000). Rabe, H., Reynolds, G. Diaz-Rossello, J. A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of a Brief Delay in Clamping the Umbilical Cord of Preterm Infants. Neonatology 93, 138-144 (2008). Rabe, H., Jewison, A, Alvarez, RF, Crook, D, Stilton, D, Bradley, R, Holden, D. Milking Compared with Delayed Cord Clamping to increase Placental Transfusion in preterm neonates. Obstetrics and Gynecology 117, 205-211 (2011). Rabe, H., Diaz-Rossello, JL, Duley, L, Dowswell, T. Effect of timing of umbilical cord clamping and other strategies to influence placental transfusion at preterm birth on maternal and infant outcomes. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 1-84 (2012). Rabe, H., Sawyer, A, Amess, P, Ayers, S. Neurodevelopmental outcomes at 2 and 3.5 years for very preterm babies enrolled in a randomzied trial of milking the umbilical cord versus delayed cord clamping. Neonatology 109, 113-119 (2016). Speer, H. Obstetrics and Gynecology: A history and iconography. New England Journal of Medicine 352, 844-845 (2005). World Health Organization. WHO recommendations on Postnatal care of the mother and newborn. (2013)
For seemingly every single Doctor Who convention that one or all of the Three Who Rule have ever attended, Wendy Padbury has been there. Standing next to them in lines, walking past them in the hallway, but never, ever a guest on Radio Free Skaro. Until today! Ms. Padbury joins a panel of fine thespians (and Doctor Who companions) Anneke Wills, Deborah Watling, Louise Jameson, and Lisa Greenwood (and all interviewed by our very own Steven) recorded at Chicago TARDIS from this past November! Links: – Class Ep 1 and 2 overnight viewing figures on BBC One – Toby Hadoke’s 2016 In Memoriam video Chicago TARDIS Interview: – Anneke Wills – Deborah Watling – Wendy Padbury – Louise Jameson – Lisa Greenwood
Maria Padbury is founder of the Padbury Group, specialising in helping business solve the problems they can’t see.What does this mean?She helps you with the people, culture, leadership and sales issues that drive the behaviours that are either making or breaking your business.Before starting her own business, she worked as a Learning and Development practitioner, and executive and leadership coach for 17 years and is accredited under the Institute of Executive Leadership & Coaching Maria has just returned from a trip to the Un [...]
"Isobel... where are yoooouuu?" Come to that, where is Scooby Doo? Shouldn't he be with those crazy kids in the Big Smoke's syewers (sic) trying to take shots of scary Cyberm'n (one of them's sick). It's all because of The Invasion, masterminded by perma-winking Tobias Vaughn and his woefully inept sidekick (and arse-kick), Packer. The Doctor has an eye for a photo opportunity, courtesy of our snappy flapper, but Jamie proves not to be as photogenic as Zoe's spangly bottom, despite his family-friendly weighted kilt. And the jury's still out as to whether his dirk is more impressive than Jimmy's chopper. Does Cyber-Plan B make any sense? Why hasn't Vaughn killed Packer several times by now? And should we petition Philip Morris to recover those missing action sequences? See if anything "has been agreeed" by Jim and Martin in this mammoth episode. You'll need the stamina of a Cyberm'n to listen to it all.
The newly published Budget Audit, Padbury Mining's problems, Rolls Royce's opening, the Houston Mayoral visit, Nigel Satterley's breakfast talk and Universities all come under the microscope this week with James Lush from Lush Digital talking business news with Mark Pownall and Mark Beyer.
The newly published Budget Audit, Padbury Mining's problems, Rolls Royce's opening, the Houston Mayoral visit, Nigel Satterley's breakfast talk and Universities all come under the microscope this week with James Lush from Lush Digital talking business news with Mark Pownall and Mark Beyer.
WA is still the best economy in Australia, with NT in second place; the main feature this week looks at infrastructure projects, who is winning the major contracts, the upcoming WA budget and Padbury Mining's attempt to develop Oakajee. James Lush discusses the week's business news with Mark Beyer and Mark Pownall. A joint Business News and Lush Digital production.
WA is still the best economy in Australia, with NT in second place; the main feature this week looks at infrastructure projects, who is winning the major contracts, the upcoming WA budget and Padbury Mining's attempt to develop Oakajee. James Lush discusses the week's business news with Mark Beyer and Mark Pownall. A joint Business News and Lush Digital production.
It's audio commentary time yet again and this week it's part 2 of our commentary for The Krotons, the fondly remembered fan favourite (I mean the story, not part 1 of this commentary. That was last week by the way.) that nobody really remembers very fondly. So this week they continue with episodes 3 and 4 and struggle manfully with walking cheese graters with Brummie accents and a man dressed as a tortoise. No that wasn't one of Tony's "facts", that it is what they are watching. So tune in to listen to 3 grown men sitting in silence for long periods of time and only coming alive when something exciting happens or when they get a sniff of beer. And there's no news this week as they couldn't be bothered. No not really, not a lot happened to be honest.
It's that time of the month when the Who's He? Podcast look to providing you all with an audio commentary and for your delectation, they have selected The Krotons! So thrill as Phil, Paul and a returning Tony sit down and suffer episodes 1 and 2 of this fondly remembered fan favourite (was the sarcasm filter working there?). During this episode they ponder the existence of Brummie sounding South Africans, glam rock gods and whether or not you can still buy Cadbury's Smash. And in the news this week, Doctor Who scoops a few awards, Phil gets disappointed at The Web of Fear DVD, an update on Christmas Log the lonely K9 knockoff and in Omega's Tat Corner the new 12th Doctor action figure is discussed and compared to an obscure 1970's pop star and a night light that is billed as some kind of personal attack button.
Matthew and a tired and drawling Will reflect on their experience in Patrick Troughton's last season, kilts and all, before asking the Randomiser to do its job and considering which story to watch when it decides to bring them much more up-to-date...