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What happens when a life-changing diagnosis becomes the start of a bigger mission? In Healthy Mind, Healthy Life, hosted by Sayan, Debra Griffin shares how her 1989 breast cancer diagnosis reshaped her faith, identity, and view of healthcare. This episode is for anyone navigating illness, uncertainty, or systems that make people feel small. Debra explores self-advocacy, patient data ownership, and why healing is not only about treatment, but also about clarity, dignity, and voice. About the Guest: Debra Griffin is the founder of PPX Tech, a patient-centered health technology concept focused on healthcare access and data ownership. She also wrote a book exploring Judas, faith, and spiritual awakening. Episode Chapter: 00:03:41 – The moment pain became purpose 00:05:16 – A spiritual awakening after diagnosis 00:07:24 – Why Judas became the center of her book 00:10:22 – Breast cancer in 1989 and the turning point 00:12:00 – Why patient advocacy matters so much 00:13:32 – The vision behind PPX Tech 00:19:47 – Staying grounded when progress feels slow Key Takeaways: Advocate for yourself in healthcare decisions. Medical advice matters, but informed questions matter too. Access to healthcare should be a basic human right. Slow progress does not mean your mission lacks value. Protect your mental health while pursuing hard goals. How to Connect With the Guest: Website: https://debragriffin.com/ Book - https://debragriffin.com/books/ Want to be a guest on Healthy Mind, Healthy Life? DM on PM - Send me a message on PodMatch DM Me Here: https://www.podmatch.com/hostdetailpreview/avik Disclaimer: This video is for educational and informational purposes only. The views expressed are the personal opinions of the guest and do not reflect the views of the host or Healthy Mind By Avik™️. We do not intend to harm, defame, or discredit any person, organization, brand, product, country, or profession mentioned. All third-party media used remain the property of their respective owners and are used under fair use for informational purposes. By watching, you acknowledge and accept this disclaimer. Healthy Mind By Avik™️ is a global platform redefining mental health as a necessity, not a luxury. Born during the pandemic, it's become a sanctuary for healing, growth, and mindful living. Hosted by Avik Chakraborty, storyteller, survivor, and wellness advocate. With over 6000+ episodes and 200K+ global listeners, we unite voices, break stigma, and build a world where every story matters.
Home Based Recovery Executive Director Rob DeClark says he’s spent the last few decades working in the in patient treatment industry. “ The landscape changed considerably in terms of the amount of options and also in terms of the cost of treatment,” he says. DeClark says that when he entered the field, a six week in […]
Three months into 2026 and the Dental A-Team is already clocking how different patient flow is this year. Kiera talks about optimizing your practice for that unique 2026 patient. Episode resources: Subscribe to The Dental A-Team podcast Schedule a Practice Assessment Leave us a review Transcript: The Dental A Team (00:00) Hello, Dental A Team listeners. This is Kiera. And today I hope you're just having the best day. I hope that you're realizing things are so good. Things are amazing. I hope that you are just like on cloud nine. And today I'm really excited because this is a topic that I was like just so jazzed about. Cause I realize our patient flow is something that is different for 2026. Like we have it different. It looks different. And I... I'm just really excited. So if you're new to the Dental A Team podcast, welcome. I'm super excited to be here with you. I hope that you are just jazzed. And I think that, like I said, this is going to be something that is going to be very fun for you. And I hope that you take it on. I hope that you look at it. I hope that you just get excited to like, Hey, amazing. We're going to be able to like fix our 2026 patient flow. So when I look at this, like 2026 is very, very, very different than what it was even like when I started the company back in 2016. I think patients in 2026, they're not more difficult. They're just super aware of their time. It's not just enough to be good at clinical excellence. You know how to be really easy to do business with. And if patients feel like energy's off or the vibe's not there, they're going to possibly just leave without saying anything. And so I just wanted to come on today talk to you about some things that I'm seeing in 2026, things that we're seeing with amazing practices that are doing really, really well to help you all, like let's optimize our patient experience, which I know I've talked so many years about patient experience, but I thought like the patient is different today in 2026, they're more used to everything being online. And I think let's not be foolish. We still sometimes have older patients and we need to make sure that we're not adapting everything and changing, but the new generation of patients are definitely a different breed. than what we had before, which every generation is different. So looking for this, I just want you guys to really like get excited. Welcome to the podcast. I'm Kiera Dent and our job is to help you guys have thriving practices, possibly impacting the world of dentistry and to truly just like make it to where you guys feel like you get tactical practical tips on the podcast. I love hanging out with you. I wanna remind you, you're doing better than you think you are. And if this podcast has inspired you, touch your life in any way. please be sure to leave us a review. Those five stars keep us top of mind for everybody. And also pop us in Facebook groups, us, tag us on Instagram. We will comment, we will respond to you and we always appreciate it because that is your subtle way of being able to help us infiltrate the world of dentistry in the greatest way possible. So with that, I just want you guys to know that like, ⁓ this patient experience flow is going to help everything improve. And it's for our production, our case acceptance, our team energy, patient loyalty, all of that. So. Getting this patient flow, I believe is so important. So I think like really, really, really working on the first 15 minutes of our patient experience because patients are gonna decide about your practice immediately and they're gonna look at Google reviews, they're gonna look at your social media presence and then it's gonna be on how they make the phone call. So what's gonna happen for it? Like how can we optimize this? And I think one thing is how is your like... hello on the phone. So ⁓ even if we need to record it, listen back to it. I put a mirror always with my front office team members. I want them sitting up straight. I want them smiling really, really big, like almost a cheesy grin. People can feel that energy through it. And then I look at like, how can I make it the easiest, smoothest check-in for them to where when they get to my practice, after I won them over the phone, when they come into the office, they feel different. So how can I make sure my check-in is very fast and personable? How can I make sure there's like minimal paperwork that's like just annoying, iPads that don't work. My team is prep, so when they come and get the patient from the waiting room, they are concierge luxury without the like high price tag of that. Like I just want people when they come into the practice, I feel like people care a lot more about how they feel. They care about the experience of it. I mean, you guys have TikTokers, YouTubers, Instagram people, like that's the world we live in and they are walking everywhere around you. And so... we make sure that they're going to want to showcase our practice and feel that way on time, getting seated on time. These are big things. feel like time is people's greatest commodity and feeling like they're important is the second. So when we look at it, I think that as I look at my processes, what can we do to speed up our check-in? What can we do to like make our paperwork that is clunky? Could we review? And I'm not saying like have anything where you're not legal. Like, of course we need to keep our standards there and we want to get our health histories, but Like for me, when I send new patient paperwork, I ask them to send it back to me 48 hours before their appointment to make sure my team can be prepared. Just think of how nice it is for the patient. Like that's how they confirm their appointments. Totally ripped this off of IVF clinics. They're charging me 25 grand plus. And for me to even schedule my first appointment, my paperwork had to be submitted 48 hours before. Like I could not do it, couldn't schedule. And they just set the tone with me. Like this is how they operate. It was fine. I wasn't annoyed by it. Like, great. I got it right back to them. And then when I got there, they knew all of my history. They took me right back on time. I just felt like it was such a different experience versus someone who's like having me fill out paperwork in the waiting room. I've gone to others. I went to a psychiatrist the other day and I was like, fill out the paperwork in the waiting room. It's just versus the IVF clinic where it's all online, it's seamless, it's very easy. It's not clunky. They text it right to my phone. I can fill it in. I don't have to print things out. I just think, how can you make it to where when they walk in, It's the feeling and experience you want them to have. And I also think for a lot of practices, identifying what feelings do we want our patients to have. If you need help, go look at your Google reviews, have ChatGPT help you and say like, are the top five feelings that our patients feel when they come in here? And then look to see, is that what I want them to feel? And if it's not, change it up. Like how I feel when I walk into a spa versus when I walk into a dental office versus when I walk into an amusement park, there are very different feels that they want me to feel. And each of them needs to curate it. So for yourself, how can I do that? Some practices actually have curated scents. So when you go into the practice, all of their practices smell the same. Some people have coffee bars. ⁓ I just think it's, what do want? Do want them to feel like high end luxury? Do you want them to feel like we are your family practice in the neighborhood? All of it's gonna go into effect on your decor, on your paperwork, on your experience, on how we answer the phone. So really making sure that that's dialed in and that's very solid is going to help a lot. The next thing is going to be... Well, and a way to like, just put a nice pretty bow on that is ask yourself, like, where do patients slow down when they, when they come to our practice or when they're trying to schedule, that's going to help you figure out where can we maybe optimize that? Is it through phones? Like we could use a phone center. Where is it that patients slow down when they're trying to get here? Are they trying to arrive? And then where as we, as a team, are we slowing down? What's taking us the longest? That's going to help you like, just really optimize this patient experience. The next thing is going to be on like clinical momentum. You guys have heard us talk. heavy about block scheduling. And I don't just do this for production. I do this for ease and flow of a practice. Like we tell people all the time, a great day for you is a great day for a patient. And they might want the 10 o'clock, but what they really wants to get in and out on time and they want our doctor to do the best work. So we just guide them to the schedule and say like, perfect. So Dr. Mike does crowns at 10 a.m. on Mondays and 2 p.m. on Fridays. Like whatever time you want it to be, but we guide them. So our schedule is there. I'm not kidding because what this does is doctors are not bouncing between room to room. Hygienic is not waiting on a super long exams. Assistants are trying to like get from room to room and then we're out of materials or we're out of equipment that we can't use because we didn't schedule appropriate. We only have one thing for implants. We've got two implants next door to each other. Patients feel that you might feel like you are a duck on water smooth and you're paddling like crazy underneath, but patients can feel when it's tension and chaotic. So how can we put into place block scheduling? How can we like utilize assisted hygiene, use our hygienist to help numb our patients? What can we do for exams? Like we are big on hygienists, all have the exact same exams. So when doctors walk in, we just tell them the same thing. We have the same handoffs. We use route slips, different things. We make sure we've got like, when's our doctor the most optimal at different times? So we build a schedule that's like our doctor's most optimal working time. We build SRPs when we're doing new patients. Like it's, how do we get a good flow and rhythm in the practice? because patients feel that it feels like, wow, I've said it before on the podcast, I'll say it again, people feel perfection. And so how can we make them feel that the practices in sync, that we're flowing, that we're vibing, that we're jiving. And when we found out, a lot of times hygienists are complaining when we work with them and rightfully so, that doctors are taking forever to get to exams. So what we do is we streamline the hygiene appointment, we streamline the hygiene exam. So when doctor comes in, we actually role play these handoffs really clearly. And then we have it set on the handoff with the doctor and also with the front office team. So that way everybody's getting the information as soon as you get in. We make it very easy for the doctor to connect to the patient, very easy for the hygienist and the patient to be very clear on next steps, and then very clear for the front office of what we're going to need to take for that patient. You better believe it's amazing when we get this dialed in, patients literally walk up to the front desk and they say, hey, Dr. Mike wants to see me back in two weeks for a crowd for an hour and a half. I need to get that scheduled. And you just sit back and like. this just happen? The answer is yes. And a patient feels so good because they're clear on treatment. They're clear on where they need to go. I think a lot of times when we're looking at treatment and exam times and that people think it's quantity over quality. When it's like you can have a three minute exam and that patient can feel so seen, loved and heard. If we're clear, we're to sync and like everybody's working in a system and a process, they feel it. And doctors are more focused, hygiene's more on time and the team stress drops. This is what happens. Like we're not adding extra. We're just doing it in a different flow. And so I would just say like, you can look at yesterday and figure out where was it most chaotic. Look back at the last couple of weeks. Where did we get into those traffic jams and what could we do to change this? Could we change up our hygiene exams? So that way every time doctor walks in hygienist, you're all different shades. So we need to like make sure that doctor, when he comes into hygiene room, one, two, three, four, or she, each doctor, that it's at least something similar and consistent because hygienist just like you. like doctors need to give you the same type of exam, doctors need the same type of handoff no matter which hygienist they're working with. So look at that to see where can we figure that out? Where can we make our clinical momentum even easier with block scheduling, with hygiene exam consistency, with correct handoffs? Patients feel that and they love that. And then the next piece is like, this is tricky of like, what's gonna cause a patient? Like, okay, we figured out how to make it speedy when they come in. We figured out how to make it more flowing throughout their appointment. Now what's going to happen at the end of our appointment that they're going to remember. And what I found is people don't like to wait. People don't like a lot of follow-ups. People like to have it very like tied with a bow and people want to move on with their life. say every time when people are in the office or thinking about dentistry outside, good luck. It's a free for all. So I think when you look at it, what's going to turn a patient off will be waiting a long time to get out the building, like they're done, get me out. So how can we streamline our checkout? I sometimes call it like the HOV lane, like that's just fluoride payments. Sometimes we can even put that in the back versus we need to schedule you for a treatment plan and like go through more in depth. So can we have speedy checkouts for easier patients? Easy way to do it. What about like our treatment plan, making sure that handoff is really clear and then our treatment coordinators are super, super, super thorough and it's like, perfect, we schedule you. We go through your questions, we present clean financials and we make it very easy for scheduling, very easy for financials, very easy for patients to get the treatment done that they want without a lot of headache. I coach a practice of five locations. We do multi, multi, multi millions. I will tell you those treatment coordinators are top, top, top notch. I work with them constantly two times a month and we have this dialed down to where it is so smooth and we close patients and we have been reviewing, we've been doing this for almost six years. And I just want you to know that type of like reps on your checkout process, A patient experiences like bookends, the beginning and the end or what they're going to remember the middle. It can sometimes make or break, but usually it's the beginning and the end. So what can we do to make it where it's like an amazing, like I left you with a huge warm hug. You felt so loved, so valued, so appreciated, and I send you on your way, but I'm very efficient with that too. It's not taking me like 30 minutes to get there, but I want to make sure you're thorough. So that's going to be, I think convenience is no longer impressive. It's expected. And I think when we realized that like, We used to think we're going above and beyond when we make it convenient and we have online scheduling and online bill pay. It's expected now. So I think when you ask yourself like, at the end of our appointment, is it easy for our patients to move through? Do they feel like they left our practice with like a warm hug? Is there anything that we could do to make it more convenient for patients that they might be expecting? If you're not taking online payments, online scheduling, you need to update that. Like that's, it's no longer an option anymore. We're not taking checks anymore. We need to have online payments for patient. And so I think it's a, we're not just competing with other dental practices. We're competing with every other experience. So we're competing with Chick-fil-A, we're competing with Target. We're competing with Amazon. We're competing with anything that people are using day in and day out. Like I love working with Amazon. If I ever have an issue, I just message them and I get my refund and I don't have to worry about it. Like that's great. I'm going to shop with them a lot more versus hotels.com is super annoying to me. And anytime I have an issue, it's never fixed. It's never done. Now back. prior to 2020, they were amazing. Now they're just junk and I don't want to work with them. Not because they're not great, but because they're just not easy to work with. Airbnb, VRBOs, like airline places. Everyone wants to make it as easy as possible. People get very frustrated. And I don't think we have a culture as rigid or as willing to like, I don't know, like almost plow through the noise like we used to. They want it to be decisions are easy. I felt loved. I felt welcomed. I felt cared for. I felt like I got the best dental experience ever and I'm going to go on my way. So I think it could be a really great benefit for maybe you guys have a secret shopper, have a family member come through and give feedback on it. Maybe one of you goes through like call and make an appointment. How hard was that? How easy was that? And don't be nice because we're friends. Like we're genuinely wanting to give feedback so we can be the best practice. And how was my appointment? How was me sitting in the chair? How was checkout? How was follow up? where could we make those just a little bit easier and make it to where we can still be so personable and really connected to our patient, but very efficient and convenient as well. So I think as a quick recap, looking through this of how do I make my bookends? Like what's my like first impression and arrival experience? Then what's our middle, like the clinical momentum and the experience and our handoffs. And then the end is how can I like minimize the lack of convenience, the inconvenience, the taking a long time? we... separate our patients out and have a different exiting flow? Can we make it to where it's just a simpler process? Can we schedule it in the back more? Thinking of all these areas because it's not about moving faster, it's about being more intentional and making patients just feel like almost like this invisible thread where it was like seamless to go to the dentist and it was fun and it was enjoyable and whatever you want them to feel, helping patients have that. And so when people feel comfortable, when they feel wanted, when they feel seen, when they feel heard, They actually say yes to treatment more. it's a double win. Not only are they going to like, leave you great star reviews, but they're also going to want to say yes to treatment because they like you. People say yes to people that they like. People say yes to experiences. People want to come back when they enjoy being there. And you have an opportunity because most people don't like the dentist. So even just doing a smidge of this is going to make you stand out. But I really think like, look at your 2026 experience. Look to see where are we maybe not serving the clientele as we had. Be careful because you can accidentally get outdated very quickly if you're not willing to adapt, but make sure you're adapting to your culture, your experience that you want. Really have that as a clear core value, vision statement, mission statement. Here's how we want patients to feel when they come in. With Dental A Team, we want you to feel like it's easy. We want you to feel like you're loved. We want to make sure it's fun for you. We want to make sure that like, you know, that we're always going to do the right thing. That's Dental A Team. Like I'm not here to create like one off raving fans. I want you to be lifetime. I want you to like love it. I want you to feel like we just got a review the other day and they said you're one of the greatest parts of our entire team and we're such a value to have you on our team. That's what Dental A Team is. It's because we make it easy. We make it fun. make it where it's like there's like we're your little fairy godmothers. We know where to take you. We know how to drive you. That's what I want in our core values like fun, ease, ownership, do the right thing. Those are all part of it. Grit. You figure it out. That's our culture. and that's what I people to feel when they work with us. So if we can help you optimize your patient experience, optimize your practice, just be a, sometimes even having an outside, like literally I was paid a ton to go into an office and just fix their exit flow. That was their number one pain point that they didn't know they had. I watched it and I saw it, we fixed it. Case acceptance radically went up, patient experience radically went up, reviews radically went up. Small, simple things because you don't know what you don't know. You also can't see because you live there. So. I'd love to help you out. team would love to help you reach out. Hello@TheDentalATeam.com. Go to our website, TheDentalATeam.com book a call. I'd love to work with you. And as always, thanks for listening. I'll catch you next time on the Dental A Team podcast.
Tinnitus care is no longer just about masking sound—it's about treating the whole person.This week, Shari Eberts speaks with Dr. Maren Stropahl, Senior Director of Holistic Hearing Care and Head of Audiology for Sonova's retail organization, about why tinnitus requires a broader, more integrated approach.Dr. Stropahl explains that tinnitus is not simply an “ear problem,” but a complex interaction between auditory perception, emotional response, stress, and lifestyle factors. The discussion explores the brain's role in tinnitus distress, the concept of the vicious circle, and why habituation is possible when care moves beyond sound alone.The conversation highlights how modern tinnitus management brings together hearing aids, sound therapy, cognitive behavioral strategies, digital therapeutics, and—critically—education and counseling. Technology can support relief, but effective care depends on trained professionals who understand how to personalize treatment and empower patients with self-management tools.The message is clear: tinnitus care is evolving. When clinicians combine evidence-based technology with holistic counseling and data-informed strategies, patients no longer have to hear that “nothing can be done.”For more on the SilentCloud app, visit: https://silentcloud.comFor more details on Phonak's hearing aid portfolio, visit: https://www.phonak.comBe sure to subscribe to our channel for the latest episodes each week and follow This Week in Hearing on LinkedIn, Instagram and X.- https://x.com/WeekinHearing- https://www.instagram.com/thisweekinhearing/- https://www.linkedin.com/company/this-week-in-hearingVisit us at: https://hearinghealthmatters.org/thisweek/
In today's fast-paced world, we often find ourselves grappling with impatience and the desire for quick resolutions. In this post, I'll share insights from Hebrews 10, exploring the concept of patient endurance and how it can transform our approach to life's challenges. As someone who has faced numerous transitions, I hope my reflections resonate with you and provide encouragement in your own journey.
Life is full of situations -- and people -- that try our patience, from a standstill traffic jam to an obstinate preschooler who won't put on her shoes. Sarah Schnitker, PhD, talks about why patience can be so hard to come by; whether modern life and modern technology have made us less patient; the difference between patience and passivity; and cognitive strategies to build up your ability to be patient. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to Resiliency Radio with Dr. Jill Carnahan, where today's episode revisits one of the most complex and misunderstood areas in integrative medicine: toxic mold illness and the highly sensitive patient. Dr. Jill is joined by renowned functional medicine pioneer Dr. Neil Nathan, author of Toxic: Heal Your Body and The Sensitive Patient's Healing Guide, for a powerful and deeply insightful conversation on environmental toxins, limbic dysfunction, mast cell activation, and healing chronic inflammatory illness. In this episode, Dr. Jill Carnahan and Dr. Nathan explore why many highly sensitive individuals struggle with conventional detox protocols—and how healing requires safety, precision, and a stepwise approach. This discussion offers both clinicians and patients a roadmap for navigating mold illness, nervous system overload, and sensitivity syndromes with greater clarity and compassion. ✨ Like, subscribe, and share to help more sensitive patients find safe and effective pathways to recovery.
"Don't rush the process." In this episode, we sit down with Kim Burket, Executive Director of Goodness Village, to discuss a side of the cancer journey that often goes overlooked: the need for a true home. Goodness Village provides affordable housing in Little Rock, Arkansas, for patients and families traveling for life-saving medical treatment.Kim shares her 20 years of hospitality experience and how she's applying it to healthcare to ensure families can stay together, cook their own meals, and find a safe haven during their hardest chapters. Whether you are a patient, a caregiver, or a healthcare leader, Kim's "sage wisdom" on resilience and accepting help is a must-listen.In this episode, we discuss:
In this inspiring conversation, host Ashutosh Garg speaks with Sophie Shah, the 16-year-old founder of Chronically Me. Sophie is a speaker, researcher, and patient advocate whose work spans healthcare innovation and global equity.She shares her personal journey with chronic illness, the challenges of navigating an often isolating healthcare system, and how she transformed her experiences into a platform that empowers thousands of patients worldwide.Discover how Sophie built a distributed ambassador network across five continents, developed a patient-centric health app, and continues to champion health equity. She also shares valuable lessons on leadership, scaling impact, and staying true to one's mission.In addition, Sophie offers practical advice for young people who want to turn their lived experiences into meaningful systemic change.Don't miss this thought-provoking episode filled with leadership insights and real-world impact.
Hoang's World | Helping Occupational Therapist Become Experts
Your rates are your rates, here's what you can say in response to someone who is trying to negotiate your therapy prices.
Today's episode of Out of Patients welcomes Dr Pamela Buchanan, an emergency room physician with over 20 years inside American medicine who refuses to sugarcoat what the job demands and what it destroys. She worked straight through COVID as protocols changed by the day and deaths arrived faster than anyone could process. She logged 80 to 100 hour weeks. She isolated from her family to avoid bringing the virus home. Over time, survival began to feel negotiable.Dr Buchanan speaks openly about burnout as emotional flatline and about physician suicide as a predictable outcome that leadership prefers to ignore. She describes the ER as the catch all for a broken system and explains why chronic care collapses there by design. She shares the reality of trying to access mental health care while still practicing medicine, calling dozens of therapists, getting nowhere, and spending $10,000 to $15,000 out of pocket just to stay alive and functional.Listeners will hear how neurodivergence shaped her career in emergency medicine, how race and trust intersect inside hospital walls, and why doctors are leaving in waves. This conversation carries clarity, anger, humor, and hard earned truth from someone who stayed long enough to name the damage.RELATED LINKSDr Pamela BuchananStrong MedicineDr Pamela Buchanan on LinkedInDr Pamela Buchanan on InstagramEmotional Flatline articleKevinMD essay by Dr Pamela BuchananFEEDBACKLike this episode? Rate and review Out of Patients on your favorite podcast platform. For guest suggestions or sponsorship email podcasts@matthewzachary.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
It's In the News, a look at the top headlines and stories in the diabetes community. This week's top stories: Stem Cell Islet Therapy Partnership, "Lyla's Law" Type 1 Testing Debate, Patient-Led Insulin Dosing for Gestational Diabetes, $3 Semaglutide Manufacturing, FDA GLP-1 Compounding Crackdown Announcing Community Commericals! Learn how to get your message on the show here. Learn more about studies and research at Thrivable here Please visit our Sponsors & Partners - they help make the show possible! Omnipod - Simplify Life All about Dexcom All about VIVI Cap to protect your insulin from extreme temperatures The best way to keep up with Stacey and the show is by signing up for our weekly newsletter: Sign up for our newsletter here Here's where to find us: Facebook (Group) Facebook (Page) Instagram Check out Stacey's books! Learn more about everything at our home page www.diabetes-connections.com transcript with links: Welcome! I'm your host Stacey Simms and this is an In The News episode.. where we bringing you the top diabetes stories and headlines happening now. A reminder that you can find the sources and links and a transcript and more info for every story mentioned here in the show notes. I am definitely feeling better – that lingering cold is gone – but whew still recovering from non stop travel for the past five weeks. I have a great strech of time her at home, then going to Vegas for Brekathorugh T1D at the end of the month and we have two club 1921 events in April – Atlanta and Philly. Before we jump into the news – I need your community commercials! These have been a lot of fun, I announced them late last year – your voice on the show. All the instructions it's very easy in the show notes. Okay.. our top story this week: XX A biotech company developing stem-cell treatments for type 1 diabetes has announced a new research partnership aimed at improving the survival of transplanted insulin-producing cells. NewcelX, a clinical-stage company based in Switzerland, said it will work with Eledon Pharmaceuticals to study a combination approach. The goal is to help transplanted cells survive longer in the body by reducing the immune response that often leads to transplant rejection. If successful, the strategy could support longer-lasting islet cell replacement and move the therapy closer to becoming a functional treatment for people with type 1 diabetes. However, the companies have not yet released any safety or effectiveness data on the combination treatment, and financial details of the partnership were not disclosed. The research agreement is focused on exploring whether combining stem-cell-derived islets with targeted immune therapy can lead to longer-lasting cell transplants and improved outcomes for people with type 1 diabetes. https://www.stocktitan.net/news/ELDN/newcel-x-announces-strategic-collaboration-with-eledon-d10l1vqdofls.html XX Debate this week in the UK on whether testing for type 1 diabetes should become mandatory when children present with symptoms. The Westminster Hall debate, scheduled for 9 March, will consider calls for routine testing of babies, toddlers and young children who show signs associated with the condition. It follows a petition backing the move, dubbed 'Lyla's Law', which passed 121,000 signatures in December 2025. The campaign was launched by John Story after his two-year-old daughter, Lyla, died from diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) on 3 May 2025, 16 hours after being diagnosed with tonsillitis. https://www.nursinginpractice.com/clinical/diabetes-and-endocrinology/diabetes-community-urged-to-call-on-mps-to-attend-lylas-law-debate/ XX A new study suggests that people with gestational diabetes who adjust their own insulin doses may reach healthy blood sugar levels faster than those whose doses are adjusted by clinicians. Half of the participants were assigned to adjust their own insulin doses using a simple rule: increase the dose by two units if fasting blood glucose was above 95 mg/dL, decrease it by two units if it dropped below 70 mg/dL, and keep the same dose if levels fell in between. The other half had their insulin adjusted by clinicians through weekly reviews. By the end of pregnancy, both groups had similar average fasting glucose levels before delivery: about 89 mg/dL in the patient-led group and 90 mg/dL in the clinician-led group. However, those adjusting their own insulin reached their blood sugar targets more quickly, averaging 1.8 weeks compared with 2.5 weeks for those managed by clinicians. The study also found lower risks of certain complications among the patient-led group. https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/self-insulin-dosing-leads-control-gestational-diabetes-2026a1000729 XX A blockbuster anti-obesity and diabetes drug could cost as little as $3 per month to manufacture once it goes off patent later this month, researchers said Friday, providing a major opportunity to boost health in low and middle-income countries. Semaglutide, the active molecule in Novo Nordisk's Ozempic and Wegovy will lose patent protection in countries such as Brazil, China, and India later this month, and researchers identified 150 countries where it was never patented. These researchers estimated it will cost as little as $3 to produce a month's supply of semaglutide, which in its branded form sells for around $200 a month in the United States. Another of the study's authors, Professor Francois Venter at the University of Witwatersrand in South Africa, said drugs to treat HIV, TB, malaria, and hepatitis are now available at prices close to production costs but still sufficient for generic manufacturers to operate. https://www.sciencealert.com/weight-loss-drugs-could-cost-just-3-a-month-to-make-as-patents-end XX Here in the US the FDA is stepping up its efforts to combat widespread GLP-1 drug compounding. In its latest offensive, the agency has unleashed a fresh set of 30 warning letters targeting telehealth companies it says make "false or misleading" claims about compounded versions of popular obesity drugs. The FDA says Compounded drugs can be important for overcoming shortages or meeting unique patient needs—but compounders should not try to compound drugs in a way that circumvents FDA's approval process." https://www.fiercepharma.com/pharma/fda-ramps-crackdown-glp-1-drug-compounders-fresh-batch-30-warning-letters XX Check your infusion sets for an issue: Unomedical, a subsidiary of Convatec and a supplier of insulin infusion sets to diabetes tech firms, has received a warning letter from the FDA. Inspectors raised concerns with leaking infusion sets, following a regulatory assessment of Unomedical's facility in Reynosa, Mexico, last summer. Unomedical supplies infusion sets to insulin pump makers including Medtronic, Tandem Diabetes Care and Beta Bionics. In a Feb. 3 statement, Convatec said the letter focuses on reporting procedures and quality protocols and does not place restrictions on producing, marketing or distributing any of Unomedical's products. Unomedical told the FDA in its responses that it plans to conduct a retrospective review of complaints involving serious injury or death by January and conduct additional training on complaint handling by May. https://www.medtechdive.com/news/fda-warns-insulin-infusion-set-maker-unomedical-over-leaks-mishandled-comp/813503/ XX Nearly four in ten people with type 2 diabetes do not take their medications as prescribed, according to a new research review published in Diabetologia in November 2025. Researchers examined existing studies on medication adherence, including how often patients miss doses, why it happens, and what strategies may help. They estimated that about 38% of patients with type 2 diabetes are not fully adherent to their medications. Adherence rates vary depending on the type of medication. About 63% to 68% of patients take oral glucose-lowering drugs as directed, while adherence drops to 43% to 54% for injectable GLP-1 medications and 41% to 64% for insulin. Poor adherence can lead to serious consequences. One retrospective study cited in the review found that patients who consistently took their glucose-lowering medications had a 31% lower risk of hospitalization or emergency department visits. The review also highlighted ways to improve adherence. Simplifying medication routines can help, such as using fixed-dose combination pills, which combine multiple drugs into a single tablet. Studies show these combinations are linked to better adherence and improved blood sugar control. Pharmacists can also play an important role by providing education, reviewing medications, setting up reminders, and helping patients organize their treatment plans. The researchers noted that support should be tailored to each patient. Older adults may benefit from simpler systems and caregiver support, while younger patients may respond better to digital tools like app-based reminders. The authors also found that measuring adherence is challenging and recommend using multiple methods, such as pharmacy records, patient interviews, and objective tests when possible. Overall, the review concludes that personalized, multi-step approaches lasting at least three months are most effective in helping people with type 2 diabetes stay on track with their medications. https://www.pharmacytimes.com/view/type-2-diabetes-medication-adherence-rates-remain-low-and-pharmacists-can-help XX New clinical trial shows metformin does not directly reverse insulin resistance in people with type 1 diabetes. Instead, it lowers the total amount of insulin required to keep blood glucose levels within the recommended range. The findings, published in Nature Communications, challenge long-held assumptions about how metformin works in type 1 diabetes. The results may help physicians refine treatment strategies and reduce the daily demands placed on people who rely solely on insulin therapy. "Insulin resistance is a growing problem in type 1 diabetes. Not only does it make regulating blood sugar levels difficult, but it is an underappreciated risk factor for heart disease, which is one of the biggest causes of health complications and deaths in those with type 1 diabetes," says Dr. Jennifer Snaith, endocrinologist and co-lead of the study. https://scitechdaily.com/groundbreaking-trial-reveals-unexpected-benefit-of-metformin-in-type-1-diabetes/ Tech news ahead, including updates from Sensonics, Dexcom & Tandem.. right after this…. Back ot the wnews.. XX Sensonics shares that it's secured FDA investigational device exemption (IDE) for its self-powered, battery-enabled Gemini sensor. It enrolled the first patients in the IDE trial and expects to complete that in the second half of 2026. Gemini builds on the implanted CGM to put the transmitter under the skin as well as the sensor. https://www.drugdeliverybusiness.com/senseonics-q4-2025-ide-gemini-cgm/ XX Medtronic Diabetes is now officially MiniMid, a stand alone public company. Medtronic acquired MiniMed 25 years ago announed last May that it would spin its diabetes business off. In their statement the company points out that MiniMed is the only diabetes tech company to sell both insulin pumps and continuous glucose monitors. https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/medtronics-diabetes-unit-minimed-valued-at-53-billion-as-shares-fall-in-nasdaq-debut-4547518 XX Kevin Sayer heads back to Dexcom.. The former CEO is back in his position as executive chair of the Board, he'd stepped away for a medical leave. Dexcom (Nasdaq:DXCM) announced today in an SEC filing that former CEO Kevin Sayer has returned from his leave of absence. Sayer's return to the board comes just days after Dexcom announced a new board member. Last week, the company announced that it added Google SVP, Platforms and Devices, Rick Osterloh, to its board as well. https://www.drugdeliverybusiness.com/kevin-sayer-returns-dexcom-board-chair/ SAN DIEGO - DexCom, Inc. (NASDAQ:DXCM) announced the appointment of Rick Osterloh to its Board of Directors, effective today, according to a press release statement. Osterloh serves as Senior Vice President, Platforms & Devices at Google, where he oversees Android, Google Play, Chrome, and Google's hardware portfolio including Pixel phones, Google Nest devices, and Fitbit wearables. He has held this position since 2016. https://www.investing.com/news/company-news/dexcom-appoints-google-executive-rick-osterloh-to-board-93CH-4529662 XX Sequel Med Tech announced broad national availability of its twiist™ Automated Insulin Delivery (AID) System powered by Tidepool. After U.S. FDA clearance in 2024 and a controlled launch to optimize the twiist experience, the system is now fully available nationwide. The release says: Built on Sequel's proprietary iiSure™ Technology, the system enables earlier detection of delivery issues, alerting users to blockages up to nine times faster than other AID systems1, potentially reducing the risk of unexplained high glucose and giving you time to take action before experiencing severe high blood sugar or DKA2. Designed to expand access to automated insulin delivery, twiist is available through pharmacy channels with a flexible access model, XX Tandem Diabetes Care's Mobi automated insulin delivery system is now available with Android devices. In November, Tandem announced that it received FDA approval for the Android version of its Mobi mobile app. The pump, which pairs with Tandem's Control-IQ+ algorithm, previously worked with iOS software. At the time of the clearance, it said it would commence a limited rollout before the full launch — now underway — this year. Tandem launched Mobi in the U.S. in February 2024. It initially received FDA clearance for people with diabetes ages six and up in July 2023. The system then received expanded clearance for pediatric indications in April 2024, then later won CE mark in May 2025. Mobi features a 200-unit insulin cartridge and an on-pump button to provide an alternative to phone control for insulin boluses. It comes in at less than half the size of the flagship Tandem pump system, the t:slim X2 pump. Mobi can fit in a coin pocket, clip to clothing or go on the body with an adhesive sleeve. https://www.drugdeliverybusiness.com/tandem-diabetes-care-launches-mobi-android/
The conversation around T3 is one of the most confusing — and divisive — topics in thyroid care. Conventional medicine often ignores T3 entirely. Integrative and functional medicine frequently treats free T3 as the number that must be optimized at all costs. Patients are left stuck in the middle, unsure who to trust, what their labs actually mean, and whether a "low" free T3 is something that needs to be fixed. In this episode of Thyroid Answers, Dr. Eric Balcavage breaks down what free T3 really represents, where T3 actually comes from, and why lower free T3 is often an adaptive, protective response, not a sign of failure or deficiency. You'll learn: Where T3 actually comes from — and why most of it isn't made by the thyroid The difference between thyroid homeostasis and thyroid allostasis Why the body intentionally reduces T4-to-T3 conversion under strain How free T3 and total T3 tell different stories — and why both matter Why raising free T3 can feel better short-term but worsen physiology long-term When lower free T3 is actually the body's solution, not the problem How to ask better questions instead of chasing numbers This episode is not about protocols or "optimizing labs." It's about understanding state, adaptation, and recovery — so you stop fighting your physiology and start working with it.
Want to fill the gaps in your patient schedule this week? In today's episode, I'm sharing a quick and easy tip for keeping your practice booked. Plus, I'll provide you with tips for exactly what to say!Review full show notes and resources at mollycahill.com/podcastMentioned in this Episode:Copy/Paste Email Scripts To Grow Your Instagram: mollyacahill.kartra.comThe Go-To Practitioner - Fill Your Clinic With Local Patients Using Instagram: holisticmarketinghub.com/masterclassEpisode 124 Email Marketing 101 for Local Health Pros with Kate Matheson: mollycahill.com/email-marketing-kate-mathesonEpisode 49 Email Marketing 101 for Your Wellness Practice: mollycahill.com/49-email-marketing-tipsInstagram Post Mentioned: https://www.instagram.com/p/DUB2uOGEd6l/Connect with Molly:Holistic Marketing Hub holisticmarketinghub.com/enrollInstagram: instagram.com/mollyacahill
Host Michael Blankstein, MD chats with paper author Michael DeRogatis about the findings of his research: "Periprosthetic Femur Fractures in Hemiarthroplasty Are Correlated With Stem Type: An Analysis From the American Joint Replacement Registry " in the first part of the episode. In the second part, Dr. Blankstein discusses study findings with paper author Héctor J Aguado, MD, PHD, from the paper entitled: "Proximal Femur Cut-Out Management, Re-Fixation or Arthroplasty, Which Yields Better Outcomes? Insights from 143 Patients from the PIPPAS Study." Live from the 2025 OTA Annual Meeting. For additional educational resources visit OTA.org
Every chiropractor knows the signs.Appointments get pushed out.“I'll check my diary.”“Let's just see how I go.”They haven't left.But they're already walking toward the door.In this episode, Martin breaks down what's really happening when patients start fading in commitment.Spoiler: it's not about scheduling.It's about belief.Specifically:• Pain vs prevention health beliefs• Why people see care as a cost instead of an investment• The mistake chiropractors make when they ignore the early signals• Three simple questions that can shift perspective before patients disappear• How to pre-frame the experience if they do drop outBecause retention isn't about pressure.It's about helping people see the bigger picture.And sometimes the right question at the right moment can change the entire trajectory.Check out the Retention Recipe https://insideoutpractices.thinkific.com/courses/retention-recipe-2-0To learn more about Aligned Practicehttps://insideoutpractices.thinkific.com/products/communities/aligned-practiceTo learn more about Reactivate to Accelerate https://insideoutpractices.thinkific.com/courses/reactivateLearn more about Daily Visit Communication 2.0https://insideoutpractices.thinkific.com/courses/daily-visitEmail me - martin@insideoutpractices.com
PodChatLive 220: Do fungal infections influence Diabetes risk, and what actually matters to patients after bunion surgery?Contact us: getinvolved@podchatlive.comLinks from this episode:Can Foot Dermatophyte Infections Signal Future Diabetes Risk?What outcomes matter to patients having surgical treatment for symptomatic hallux valgus?
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In this episode, fertility expert Gabriela Rosa reveals one of the biggest blind spots in modern fertility care: many couples are pushed toward treatments like IVF before receiving a true diagnosis. She breaks down how fertility clinics often operate, why infertility is frequently misunderstood, and how underlying issues such as thyroid dysfunction, insulin resistance, and PCOS can significantly impact reproductive outcomes. Gabriela shares powerful patient stories, including Renee's own experience, to illustrate how personalized investigation and root-cause medicine can dramatically shift fertility trajectories. She also explains why fertility is a “team sport,” outlining her strategic approach to improving egg quality, hormonal balance, and metabolic health while interpreting key tests like AMH and follicle development timelines. The conversation concludes with practical guidance on nutrition's role in fertility, her “Three Rocks” framework for treatment, and a thoughtful decision tree to help women determine when egg freezing may or may not be the right choice. Gabriela Rosa, DrPH (Candidate, Harvard), is a Harvard-awarded fertility specialist, founder of The Rosa Institute, and author of Fertility Breakthrough: Overcoming Infertility and Recurrent Miscarriage When Other Treatments Have Failed. She pioneered telehealth-based, integrative fertility care, making evidence-based solutions accessible worldwide.Gabriela also created and hosts The Fertility Challenge, a free online program that reaches tens of thousands globally each year. Her F.E.R.T.I.L.E. Method® has supported more than 204,000 people across 111 countries, with published research demonstrating a 78.8% live birth rate among patients in her signature program—even after years of infertility, recurrent miscarriage, and failed treatments.SHOW NOTES:0:39 Welcome to the show!2:43 About Gabriela Rosa3:35 Welcome her to the podcast!4:47 The biggest blindspot in fertility9:05 How fertility clinics operate10:56 What does infertility mean?11:52 Getting a proper diagnosis12:36 Patient story16:26 IVF industry goals18:48 Miscarriage & Thyroid21:19 Renee's story23:35 IUI incentives & results25:19 Who benefits from IVF?27:50 *APOLLO NEURO*29:50 *CALOCURB*31:00 Who gets turned away from her clinic35:39 Who she does work with37:30 Fertility is a team sport40:05 Her strategy for improving fertility43:16 Timeline of eggs & follicles45:45 AMH testing & optimal ranges51:14 PCOS & Insulin Resistance55:04 Infertility and all-cause mortality1:01:03 Research on correlation between nutrition & fertility1:05:38 The 3 Rocks1:11:09 Egg Freezing decision treeRESOURCES:Apollo Neuro - code: BIOHACKERBABES for $90 offCalocurb - code: RENEE10Website: fertilitybreakthrough.comIG: @dr.gabrielarosa, @fertilitybreakthroughFB: FertilitySpecialistGabrielaRosaX: gabrielarosaTikTok: @gabrielarosafertilityPodcast: Talk Sex with Gabriela RosaSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/biohacker-babes-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Case acceptance is one of the biggest challenges for dentists—especially early in your career. In this episode of The Dental Download Podcast, Dr. Haley Schultz breaks down the patient psychology and communication strategies that help patients move from hesitation to confident treatment decisions.You'll learn how patient mindset, trust, and clear communication play a critical role in treatment planning and case acceptance. In part one of this series, Dr. Haley shares practical ways dentists can build confidence with patients, explain treatment effectively, and overcome common objections without feeling pushy or sales-focused.Whether you're a new dentist or an experienced clinician, improving your patient communication skills can dramatically increase treatment acceptance while strengthening patient relationships and improving overall dental health outcomes.In this episode, we discuss:How patient psychology impacts treatment decisionsBuilding trust and confidence during treatment planningCommunication strategies that improve case acceptance in dentistryHow to navigate patient resistance and objectionsSimple ways to make patients feel comfortable saying “yes” to treatmentIf you want to improve dental case acceptance and patient trust through your treatment communication, this episode will give you actionable strategies you can start using in your practice immediately.** Get Started with a Free Consult with Twinleaf Financial Advisors: https://www.twinleafadv.com/ or text 321-521-3133
In the first episode of 4theRecord, Tyler Kemp of Marketing4ECPs explores what it takes to build a memorable brand patients trust. Joined by Sarah Nwaerondu and Kevin Wilhelm, the conversation highlights how consistency, emotional connection, and patient experience help eye care practices stand out and grow.
God's patience is far greater than we often expect. In this parable, Jesus shows a God who tends, nurtures, and gives space for repentance and growth. Yet patience is not permission to remain unchanged. God's kindness invites a response that leads to real transformation and lasting fruit.⚫CONNECT WITH US:
The Journal of Arthroplasty: The Cut brings you another very special episode based on Knee Society Proceedings that highlight important research about knee arthroplasty. In this episode of The Cut, our hosts Kimberly K. Tucker, MD and Nathanael D. Heckmann, MD welcomed guests Neil P. Sheth, MD, FACS and Rafael J. Sierra, MD to discuss all things on hip replacements in patients that are early in adulthood (30 or less). Our hosts begin the podcast discussing Dr. Sheth’s study that included patients less than 21- years old, but with a median age of 16 who underwent full hip replacement surgery. What results looked like after a five year follow up – favorable or not, how he determines to perform a full hip replacement versus hip preservation and how does a full hip replacement in young patients compare to those done with older adults? While Dr. Sheth's study showed that modern THA can succeed in teens, Dr. Sierra study focused on how those results transition into early adulthood when activity demands increase. Dr. Sierra's study included patients less than 30 – years old (median age of 23) with a seven-year follow-up. Survivorship in this study shocked even Dr. Sierra. Our guests also discuss how they approach the conversation of a total hip replacement with parents – what shared decision-making looks like, how they acquire consent from them and how they rely on them to monitor activity levels with the child. I think you’ll find this podcast extremely helpful, especially if you’ve encountered a younger patient with hip complications. Enjoy and thanks for listening to The Journal of Arthroplasty: The Cut! In This Episode: Nathanael D. Heckmann, MD Neil P. Sheth, MD, FACS Rafael J. Sierra, MD Kimberly K. Tucker, MD The post Total Hip Arthroplasty in Young Patients first appeared on AAHKS.
Russ Branzell, President and CEO of CHIME, sits down with Abdul Shaikh, Global Leader for Digital Health at Amazon Web Services, for a forward-looking conversation on what it takes to scale artificial intelligence responsibly across healthcare. Drawing from global experience advising health systems, payors, and governments, Dr. Shaikh shares insights on how leaders can move from AI pilots to accountable, enterprise-level impact while ensuring technology adoption strengthens both care delivery and confidence in the health system.Key Takeaways:How to recognize the moment AI shifts from isolated innovation projects to enterprise-wide operational exposure requiring formal governance and executive oversight.The foundational infrastructure, cloud architecture, interoperability, and cybersecurity capabilities needed to scale AI safely across health systems.What true workforce readiness looks like as AI reshapes clinical documentation, operational workflows, and decision-making responsibilities.The critical questions executives and boards should ask about AI performance, bias, transparency, and long-term accountability.Why patient trust is the ultimate measure of success for AI in healthcare—and how leaders can ensure transparency and confidence as AI becomes embedded in the care experience.
Dans cet épisode de Cheminements enregistré en public, nous explorons une aventure collective qui fait bouger les lignes de la prévention solaire. Comment passer des discours médicaux classiques à une communication qui "passe crème" auprès des jeunes ? À travers trois projets concrets. Du programme Student Voices au jeu de 7 familles pédagogique, jusqu'à l'outil MySun Experience, nos invitées dévoilent les coulisses d'une collaboration inédite entre une association de patients et un laboratoire dermatologique. Un échange riche sur l'importance de la co-construction pour transformer des messages de santé en véritables réflexes de vie.Les intervenantes :Pascale Benaksas : présidente de l'association France Assos Cancer et Peau, patiente engagée pour le dépistage précoce.Céline Decarpigny : chef de projet expérience patient au sein du Groupe Pierre Fabre.Catherine Baissac : docteur en pharmacie et responsable expérience patient (Patient Advocacy) chez Pierre Fabre.Les sujets abordés dans l'épisode :Les nouveaux codes de communication : pourquoi parler de vieillissement cutané et d'esthétique touche plus les jeunes que le discours sur le cancer.L'effet "daronne" : comprendre les freins psychologiques et sociaux à l'application de la crème solaire entre amis.Le danger des cabines UV : le combat pour l'interdiction des "machines à cancer" en France.Le jeu comme outil de soin : comment un jeu de 7 familles peut transformer les enfants en ambassadeurs de la prévention.L'algorithme du vieillissement : présentation de MySun Experience, l'outil qui calcule l'impact réel de vos habitudes solaires sur votre peau dans 15 ans.Crédits :Écriture : Marguerite de RodellecProduction : MedShake StudioCet épisode à été enregistré durant la première édition de la Journée Patients & Pharma, un événement pour créer un véritable espace de dialogue entre représentants de patients et industrie qui a eu lieu le 4 décembre 2025, à la Maison A. Trocadéro. Chers auditeurs, je vous informe que d'autres épisodes exclusifs du podcast Cheminements ont été enregistrés en direct, pour donner la parole à des binômes patients / laboratoires qui sont venus raconter leurs collaborations, leurs défis, et parfois même… leurs histoires d'amour professionnelles. Alors si ce sujet vous parle, rejoignez-nous.Ressources :https://patientspharma.com/En ouvrant le dictionnaire, on apprend que "cheminement" désigne une progression graduelle, un mouvement, une avance graduelle.➡ Retrouvez tous les épisodes sur https://www.cheminements.co/❤️ Soutenez-nous gratuitement :Abonnez-vous !Laissez 5 étoiles et un avis sur Apple Podcasts ou Spotify ⭐Cheminements, le podcast santé des femmes, dans vos oreilles chaque semaine.Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Why do some plastic surgery procedures require an overnight recovery stay? In this episode of Plastic Surgery 90210, Ariel and Dr. J. Timothy Katzen discuss why certain surgeries benefit from professional post-operative monitoring and specialized aftercare facilities. From major body contouring procedures like 360 lower body lift surgery and thigh lift surgery to facelifts and neck lifts, Dr. Katzen explains how overnight recovery care helps improve patient safety, manage pain, monitor vital signs, and support optimal healing.Dr. Katzen also explains what happens during the first 24–48 hours after surgery, why nurses monitor drains, blood pressure, and mobility, and how early walking and proper nutrition can reduce complications. Patients often underestimate how challenging the first night after major surgery can be, which is why a professional recovery center can provide an extra layer of care.You will also learn how recovery centers support healing with services like hyperbaric oxygen therapy, professional nursing care, medication management, and assistance with early ambulation. Dr. Katzen shares why these resources are especially helpful for patients undergoing larger procedures such as body contouring after major weight loss.If you are considering plastic surgery in Beverly Hills, understanding the recovery process is just as important as the surgery itself. This episode helps patients prepare for a smoother, safer recovery.
"This came from an experience with a patient. It was early in my analytic training, and I was working with a supervisor who I really admired, and worked with her for a number of years. She was post-Kleinian, and was great at interpretation, formulation, and she was really helpful with just starting to guide me towards a lot of this work. I remember describing to her a patient session, and I was going through my process notes, and I said, 'I feel like the patient is inside of me. I feel like they want something that's in me, and I don't know what it is, and I can't quite access my own self, I don't know what to do'. It was through this initial experience where I really felt why analytic training versus other less intense training, we were also right at the time doing infant development, offered so much. It was early in my training and she suggested I think about an infant or even a toddler when they want something from their parents - they want something from their mother. The mother kind of feels this kind of gripping or this yearning from them, the baby wanting something. I started to think of my patients, not as infants or babies, but that what I was feeling was that there was something that the person I was working with needed, and they didn't have words yet to tell me what that was." Episode Description: We begin by recognizing the unique journeys that lead clinicians to become psychoanalysts. Pam shares with us her initial exposure to dynamic thinking but felt that she was missing some awareness of what was happening in herself and in the patients she was working with - "I was curious...I wanted to go deeper, to know more." This led her to enroll in full-time analytic training. She shares with us her understanding of the 'difficult to reach patients' that she was treating and presents a fictionized case that represents the many countertransference struggles she faced. She noted that "instead of the patient realizing that she wanted something from me, she instead felt attacked by me." Supervision was essential in helping her make sense of her experiences and of learning to 'listen to the music'. We close by noting her open-ended curiosity and interest in learning more - lifelong attributes of analysts who continue to take pleasure in our work. Our Guest: Pamela Polizzi, LCSW maintains a full-time private practice in New York City. She specializes in working with patients struggling with eating disorders, complex personality struggles, anxiety, depression, relational trauma, and life transitions. She earned her Master of Social Work (MSW) in Advanced Standing Clinical Practice from Fordham University at Lincoln Center in 2011. Currently, she is an Advanced Candidate at the Psychoanalytic Training Institute of the Contemporary Freudian Society (CFS) in Manhattan, working toward becoming a psychoanalyst. She completed a 2015 Two-Year Advanced Psychodynamic Psychotherapy Certificate in the Integrated Treatment of Eating Disorders from the Institute of Contemporary Psychotherapy (ICP), Center for the Study of Anorexia and Bulimia (CSAB). She also completed the Contemporary Freudian Society's (CFS) Two-Year Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Program in 2019. Recommended Readings: Readings for Psychoanalytic Candidates: Bach, S. (2011). The How-To Book For Students of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy. Karnac. Busch, F. (2021). Dear Candidates: Analysts From Around The World Offer Personal Reflections on Psychoanalytic Training, Education, and The Profession. Routledge. Readings on Clinical Practice with the Patient who is Difficult to Reach: Bollas, C. (1996). Borderline Desire. Int. Forum Psychoanal., (5)(1):5-9. Joseph. B., Feldman, M., & Spillius, M. (1989). Psychic Equilibrium and Psychic Change: Selected Papers of Betty Joseph. New Lib. of Psycho-Anal., (9):1-222. (on Pep-web). Joseph, B. (1975) The patient who is difficult to reach. Joseph, B. (1982) Addiction to near-death. Joseph, B. (1983) On understanding and not understanding: some technical issues. Riesenberg-Malcolm, R. (1999). On Bearing Unbearable States of Mind. Routledge. Steiner, J. (1993). Psychic Retreats: Pathological Organizations in Psychotic, Neurotic and Psychotic Patients. Routledge. Winnicott, D.W. (1974). Fear of Breakdown. Int. R. of Psycho-Analysis. 1: 103-107.
Patients want clearer pricing, clinics want operational sustainability, managed care wants predictable cost control……and everyone wants more transparency.This epiosde centers on the groundbreaking Journal of Assisted Reproduction and Genetics (JARG) paper on Activity-Based Costing in IVF and what it actually costs.We're joined by Pinnacle CFO Shruti Sood, The Fertility Partners CEO Heather Stark, and Chartis Partner Bret Anderson to discuss:Why IVF costs have not been accurately accounted forHow activity-based costing could reshape pricing modelsThe real impact of payer consolidationWhere clinics confuse capacity problems with volume problemsWhether different prognosis patients should be priced differentlyHow managed care pressure will change IVF economics
Send a textWhat if the biggest driver of a healthy pregnancy isn't found in a chart, but in a bus schedule, a work shift, or a zip code? In this episode, Cara and Missi pull back the curtain on social determinants of health and talk candidly about why late or no prenatal care rarely means a patient doesn't care—and how midwives can meet these barriers head-on.We break down the big five domains—economic stability, education, healthcare access, neighborhood and environment, and social context—and connect them to preterm birth, preeclampsia, and low birth weight. You'll hear real stories from triage to community clinics that reveal why “proximity” isn't the same as “access,” how immigration fears suppress visits, and how chronic stress leaves a physiologic mark. Then we get tactical: validated screening tools like PRAPARE and the AAFP Social Needs Screening Tool, the three fast questions that catch most needs, and scripts that normalize sensitive topics without stigma.From there, we move into action. Warm handoffs, bedside calls, and referrals that put the follow-up burden on the system—not the patient—turn intentions into impact. We dig into practical documentation with Z codes that make populations visible, and we frame advocacy as a clinical skill that spans workplace notes, hospital policy, and conversations with legislators. Along the way, we draw a bright line between equality and equity and share simple ways to right-size support: flexible hours, interpreters, transportation help, and trauma-informed consent.If you're ready to turn empathy into outcomes, this conversation will give you tools you can use on your next shift. Subscribe, share with a colleague, and leave a review with the biggest barrier you see in your community—and how you're tackling it.
She shot her husband five times in the face and never spoke another word. Today, we're unpacking the shocking twists of The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides!Join Uncle AK, TZ, Barbara, and Nora on the Stick in the Middle (SITM) podcast as we go full spoiler mode into one of the most talked-about psychological thrillers. We discuss the deeply unreliable narration of Theo Faber, the symbolism behind Alicia's silence and her final painting "Alcestis," the questionable ethics of Christian at The Grove, and of course, that jaw-dropping timeline twist. Whether you read it in one sitting or are just looking to make sense of the ending, grab a drink and join the debate.Timestamps- Intro, Setup & Spoiler Warning - First Reactions & Reading Experience - Characters, Trust & Unreliable Narration - The Grove & Christian's Ethics - The Dual Timeline & The Twist - Who is to Blame for Gabriel? - Final Ratings (Out of 10) - Next Book Reveal (Year of Yes) & OutroDon't forget to like, subscribe, and drop your book rating out of 10 in the comments below!_______Panel: @uncleak_ | @barbie_taku | @terez_of_the_most_high | @NoraKong **************************************** Email: palmwinecentral@gmail.com | sitmpodcast237@gmail.com | Website: www.sitmpodcast.com | Instagram & Twitter: @pwccast @SitMPplatform
Today, we're putting The Tonearm's needle on Michael Graves, a five-time Grammy-winning mastering engineer and the founder of Osiris Studio in Los Angeles.Michael's work is restoration as archaeology—pulling performances off deteriorating tapes, damaged acetates, and obsolete formats, then deciding how much intervention is too much. He's done this for recordings by Hank Williams, Aretha Franklin, Stax songwriters, and field recordings from Cambodia, Sudan, and Mississippi. His most recent Grammy came in 2024 for Written in Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos.The deeper question his work raises is curatorial: where does restoration end and revisionism begin? What gets rescued, and what stays buried?—Dig Deeper• Michael Graves and Osiris Studio:Visit Michael Graves at osirisstudio.com and follow Osiris Studio on InstagramMichael Graves — Osiris Studio: AboutMichael Graves (sound engineer) — Wikipedia• Key Projects Discussed:Written in Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos — 7-CD box set on Craft Recordings (2023), Grammy Award for Best Historical Album (2024)Blondie: Against the Odds: 1974–1982 — box set via Numero Group and UMe (2022)Chris Bell: I Am the Cosmos — definitive reissue on Omnivore Recordings (2017)Chris Bell: The Complete Chris Bell — 6-LP box set, Omnivore Recordings (2017)• Labels:Omnivore RecordingsNumero GroupDust-to-DigitalAnalog AfricaCraft RecordingsRhino Records• Artists and People Referenced:Chris Bell — Big Star co-founder; I Am the Cosmos recorded in the mid-1970sBig Star — Memphis power pop band co-founded by Chris Bell and Alex ChiltonGeoff Emerick — engineer and producer; produced and recorded Chris Bell's post-Big Star sessionsEddie Floyd — Stax recording artist and songwriter; known for "Knock on Wood"Johnny Mercer — American lyricist, songwriter, and Capitol Records co-founder; his archive is held at Georgia State UniversityLeonard Cohen — Canadian singer-songwriter; Graves worked on his personal archive• Institutional Archives and Collections:Johnny Mercer Collection — Georgia State UniversityAlan Lomax and George Pullen Jackson Collection of Sacred Harp Music (1942) — Library of CongressSacred Harp singing — WikipediaStax Records — WikipediaStax Museum of American Soul Music• Professional Organizations:The Recording AcademyAssociation for Recorded Sound Collections (ARSC)Audio Engineering Society (AES)The Dust-to-Digital Foundation (Graves is a board member and technical advisor)• Other References:Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (MoFi) — audiophile reissue label referenced in the source tape discussionThe Sacred Harp Publishing CompanyGrammy Award for Best Historical Album—Dig into this episode's complete show notes at podcast.thetonearm.com—• Did you enjoy this episode? Please share it with a friend! You can also rate The Tonearm ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ and leave a review on Apple Podcasts. • Subscribe! Be the first to check out each new episode of The Tonearm in your podcast app of choice. • Looking for more? Visit podcast.thetonearm.com for bonus content, web-only interviews + features, and the Talk Of The Tonearm email newsletter. You can also follow us on Bluesky, Mastodon, YouTube, and LinkedIn. • Be sure to bookmark our online magazine, The Tonearm! → thetonearm.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Message from Cam Potts on March 8, 2026
The Book of James deals a deck of wisdom, guiding us to live with faith, love, and discernment through actionable teachings, inspired by Proverbs and the Sermon on the Mount. Like a dealer laying out cards, James introduces God's wisdom as a gift, always there during trials, when we need guidance, and when tempted to be selfish or petty. Join Horizon for James: LIVE AND LOVE WISELY, a verse-by-verse study.
The ‘CHATGPT' Of Oncology: How AI Is Bridging The Gap In Cancer Care A person's life expectancy should never be determined by their zip code, yet access to top-tier cancer centers remains a major factor in survival rates. To bridge this gap, a new AI-driven platform is providing patients with expert breakdowns of their specific diagnosis. Our experts this week discuss how this new tool is ensuring all patients have access to the most effective and up-to-date care strategies available. Guests: Simone Jensen, founder & CEO, Radical Health Elisabeth Drabkin, board member, Radical Health's Patient Advisory Board Host: Elizabeth Westfield Producer: Kristen Farrah The Patient Playbook: Navigating Billing Systems And Reducing Medical Debt Do you know that you should never pay a medical bill as soon as you receive it? This is just one of many common mistakes patients make that's losing them a lot of money. Our expert this week breaks down how to take control of your financial health and get rid of unnecessary medical debt. Guests: Caitlin Donovan, senior director, Patient Advocate Foundation Host: Greg Johnson Producers: Kristen Farrah Facebook: ingoodhealthpodX: @ ingoodhealthpodIG: @ingoodhealthpodYouTube: @ingoodhealthpodSpotify Apple Podcast In Good Health PodcastSubscribed to the newsletterFull ArchiveContact UsBecome an Affiliate Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Are you tired of answering the same questions at every consultation? Do you find that prospective patients “go away to think about it” and never return? In this episode of the OMD TV & Podcast Show, Huyen reveals why the secret to faster conversions isn't pushing harder—it's educating smarter. You'll learn how high‑quality, pre‑consultation education turns curious browsers into confident bookers using video explainers, FAQs and compelling testimonials. What You'll Learn Why Pre‑Consult Education Matters: Discover how 70 % of patients make their decision before ever contacting your clinic—and how filling that knowledge gap can dramatically increase bookings. Creating Engaging Video Explainers: Tips for producing 2–5 minute videos that walk viewers through your most popular procedures, answer top questions and showcase behind‑the‑scenes footage. Building a Robust FAQ Library: Learn how to organise and update answers to your most common questions, improve your SEO and help patients self‑qualify. Leveraging Social Proof: Strategies for capturing and sharing patient testimonials (both video and text) to reassure prospective patients that they're in good hands. Designing a Pre‑Consult Education Workflow: Step‑by‑step guidance on automating emails, texts and content delivery so every lead receives the right information at the right time. The Results Clinics Are Seeing: Real-world examples of practices that have doubled their conversion rates, shortened consultation times and boosted patient satisfaction by educating early. Key Takeaways Educated patients convert faster because they arrive informed, confident and ready to proceed. Video, FAQ pages and testimonials are your most powerful tools for building trust before the first consultation. A simple automated workflow (enquiry → thank-you email/SMS → video/FAQ/testimonial sequence → live call) can nurture leads while you focus on delivering care. Clinics that embrace pre‑consult education report higher quality enquiries, more efficient consultations and happier, better‑prepared patients. Resources & Links Ready to build your own pre‑consult education system? Book a free strategy call with OMD: [Discovery Call Link] Learn more about Online Marketing for Doctors _________________________________________
Today, we're putting The Tonearm's needle on Michael Graves, a five-time Grammy-winning mastering engineer and the founder of Osiris Studio in Los Angeles.Michael's work is restoration as archaeology—pulling performances off deteriorating tapes, damaged acetates, and obsolete formats, then deciding how much intervention is too much. He's done this for recordings by Hank Williams, Aretha Franklin, Stax songwriters, and field recordings from Cambodia, Sudan, and Mississippi. His most recent Grammy came in 2024 for Written in Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos.The deeper question his work raises is curatorial: where does restoration end and revisionism begin? What gets rescued, and what stays buried?—Dig Deeper• Michael Graves and Osiris Studio:Visit Michael Graves at osirisstudio.com and follow Osiris Studio on InstagramMichael Graves — Osiris Studio: AboutMichael Graves (sound engineer) — Wikipedia• Key Projects Discussed:Written in Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos — 7-CD box set on Craft Recordings (2023), Grammy Award for Best Historical Album (2024)Blondie: Against the Odds: 1974–1982 — box set via Numero Group and UMe (2022)Chris Bell: I Am the Cosmos — definitive reissue on Omnivore Recordings (2017)Chris Bell: The Complete Chris Bell — 6-LP box set, Omnivore Recordings (2017)• Labels:Omnivore RecordingsNumero GroupDust-to-DigitalAnalog AfricaCraft RecordingsRhino Records• Artists and People Referenced:Chris Bell — Big Star co-founder; I Am the Cosmos recorded in the mid-1970sBig Star — Memphis power pop band co-founded by Chris Bell and Alex ChiltonGeoff Emerick — engineer and producer; produced and recorded Chris Bell's post-Big Star sessionsEddie Floyd — Stax recording artist and songwriter; known for "Knock on Wood"Johnny Mercer — American lyricist, songwriter, and Capitol Records co-founder; his archive is held at Georgia State UniversityLeonard Cohen — Canadian singer-songwriter; Graves worked on his personal archive• Institutional Archives and Collections:Johnny Mercer Collection — Georgia State UniversityAlan Lomax and George Pullen Jackson Collection of Sacred Harp Music (1942) — Library of CongressSacred Harp singing — WikipediaStax Records — WikipediaStax Museum of American Soul Music• Professional Organizations:The Recording AcademyAssociation for Recorded Sound Collections (ARSC)Audio Engineering Society (AES)The Dust-to-Digital Foundation (Graves is a board member and technical advisor)• Other References:Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab (MoFi) — audiophile reissue label referenced in the source tape discussionThe Sacred Harp Publishing CompanyGrammy Award for Best Historical Album—Dig into this episode's complete show notes at podcast.thetonearm.com—• Did you enjoy this episode? Please share it with a friend! You can also rate The Tonearm ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ and leave a review on Apple Podcasts. • Subscribe! Be the first to check out each new episode of The Tonearm in your podcast app of choice. • Looking for more? Visit podcast.thetonearm.com for bonus content, web-only interviews + features, and the Talk Of The Tonearm email newsletter. You can also follow us on Bluesky, Mastodon, YouTube, and LinkedIn. • Be sure to bookmark our online magazine, The Tonearm! → thetonearm.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This episode of VHHA's Patients Come First podcast features Tammy Albright, Vice President and Chief Executive Officer for Behavioral Health Services at Ballad Health. She joins us for a conversation about the work to enhance access to behavioral health and substance use treatment across the Appalachian Highlands, including a recently announced Strong Futures residential treatment program for women and families in Norton, VA. Send questions, comments, feedback, or guest suggestions to pcfpodcast@vhha.com or contact on X (Twitter) or Instagram using the #PatientsComeFirst hashtag.
In this episode, Ericka Powell, MD, Vice President of Medical Affairs at WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital within WellSpan Health, discusses reducing length of stay variation, strengthening physician engagement, and using data driven care pathways to improve quality, workforce stability, and value based performance.
Clinics are feeling the pressure. And one year after the PGT class action lawsuits, the ripple effects are still unfolding.We're back with another Fertility Field Overview, and this one looks at what's happening across patient finance, IVF benefits and third-party reproduction, genetics and diagnostics, and the evolving self-pay landscape.We discuss:Whether IVF benefits managers are helping clinics (or squeezing them)Which lending institutions and loan programs are positioned to rise to the topWhy some say the third-party IVF experience is getting worseWhat's changed in genetics and diagnostics since the PGT lawsuitHow clinics are reducing workload through at-home testing solutionsHow fertility compares to the broader self-pay healthcare marketDive deeper into any of these topics through our Inside Reproductive Health Digest Articles:Patient Finance, Third Party IVF, Genetics, Diagnostics
The Patient Playbook: Navigating Billing Systems And Reducing Medical Debt Do you know that you should never pay a medical bill as soon as you receive it? This is just one of many common mistakes patients make that's losing them a lot of money. Our expert this week breaks down how to take control of your financial health and get rid of unnecessary medical debt. Guests: Caitlin Donovan, senior director, Patient Advocate Foundation Host: Greg Johnson Producers: Kristen Farrah Facebook: ingoodhealthpodX: @ ingoodhealthpodIG: @ingoodhealthpodYouTube: @ingoodhealthpodSpotify Apple Podcast In Good Health PodcastSubscribed to the newsletterFull ArchiveContact UsBecome an Affiliate Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Welcome to another episode of TWIRx – This Week in Pharmacy, where we break down the most important developments impacting the pharmacy profession. This week's show features leaders from across community pharmacy, health systems, healthcare advocacy, and international patient engagement. From PBM reform to patient-centered care and health system growth in Western Pennsylvania, this episode brings together voices shaping the future of pharmacy. Sponsored by Sykes & Company, P.A. Accounting, tax strategy, and advisory services dedicated exclusively to independent pharmacy operators. Segment 1 Austin Murray Communications and Marketing Director – Sykes & Company, P.A. We kick off TWIRx with Austin Murray from Sykes & Company, discussing the NCPA Consumer Marketing Campaign designed to educate the public about the value of community pharmacies. Austin shares insights on: • The importance of telling the community pharmacy story directly to consumers • Why independent pharmacies remain essential healthcare access points • The evolving state of independent pharmacy nationwide • Continued momentum around PBM Reform • Strategic accounting and tax advantages pharmacy operators should understand in today's challenging reimbursement environment Austin also explains how pharmacy-focused accounting firms like Sykes & Company help owners navigate reimbursement pressure, tax planning, and business strategy. Segment 2 Mark Duman Pharmacy 50 Award Winner – United Kingdom International healthcare thought leader Mark Duman joins TWIRx to discuss one of the most important principles in healthcare transformation: The patient must come first. Mark shares his perspective on: • Why healthcare systems must remain patient-centered • How pharmacy can lead the way in improving patient outcomes • Lessons learned from patient engagement initiatives in the UK healthcare system • Why meaningful healthcare innovation always begins by focusing on the patient experience Mark emphasizes that when healthcare professionals keep the patient as the constant focus, better pharmacy care and stronger health systems follow. Segment 3 Dr. Laura Mark, PharmD Vice President of Pharmacy – Allegheny Health Network Next, we welcome Dr. Laura Mark, Vice President of Pharmacy at Allegheny Health Network (AHN), who shares exciting news about new pharmacy operations facilities recently built in Butler County, Pennsylvania. Todd and Laura also reflect on their shared roots growing up in Butler County, while discussing how AHN is investing in the future of pharmacy. Topics include: • The new pharmacy operations infrastructure in Western Pennsylvania • How AHN is expanding pharmacy services across the Greater Pittsburgh region • The role of health system pharmacy in improving access to care • Strategic positioning for future healthcare growth and integration AHN continues to strengthen its pharmacy operations as a key component of coordinated patient care throughout the region. Segment 4 Eric Pusey Independent Pharmacy Owner – Pennsylvania Closing out this week's episode, pharmacy owner Eric Pusey joins TWIRx to discuss the latest updates on PBM Reform in Pennsylvania. In 2024, Pennsylvania enacted Act 77, a landmark law aimed at increasing oversight and fairness in pharmacy benefit management. Eric explains how the law: • Grants new regulatory authority to the Pennsylvania Insurance Department • Restricts PBM patient steering to pharmacies owned or affiliated with benefit managers • Improves transparency requirements for PBM operations • Establishes payment protections intended to level the playing field for community pharmacies Patient steering practices have long limited competition and reduced patient choice. Eric shares why these reforms represent an important step toward protecting both patients and independent pharmacy providers across the Commonwealth. Listen & Subscribe Stay informed on the business, policy, and innovation shaping the pharmacy profession. Follow TWIRx – This Week in Pharmacy on the Pharmacy Podcast Network, featuring conversations with the leaders and advocates advancing pharmacy practice.
"The disease is increasingly managed as a chronic condition rather than a diagnosis with an immediate terminal outcome. Particularly, with earlier and more effective and sustained treatment options, we can make this disease a very chronic, long-term, livable condition. I want to make sure that patients are aware that this is not a death sentence. This is something that patients can live with for the long term," Ann McNeill, RN, MSN, APN, nurse practitioner at the John Theurer Cancer Center at Jersey Shore University Medical Center in Neptune, NJ, told Lenise Taylor, MN, RN, AOCNS®, TCTCN™, oncology clinical specialist at ONS, during a conversation about long-term multiple myeloma considerations for oncology nurses. Music Credit: "Fireflies and Stardust" by Kevin MacLeod Licensed under Creative Commons by Attribution 3.0 Earn 0.5 contact hours of nursing continuing professional development (NCPD) by listening to the full recording and completing an evaluation at courses.ons.org by March 6, 2027. Ann McNeill is on the speakers' bureau for Pfizer. This financial relationship has been mitigated. All other planners and faculty for this episode have no relevant financial relationships with ineligible companies to disclose. ONS is accredited as a provider of nursing continuing professional development by the American Nurses Credentialing Center's Commission on Accreditation. Learning outcome: Learners will report an increase in knowledge related to management of long-term side effects related to multiple myeloma and treatment. Episode Notes Complete this evaluation for free NCPD. ONS Podcast™ episodes: Episode 401: Multiple Myeloma Treatment Considerations for Oncology Nurses Episode 398: An Overview of Multiple Myeloma for Oncology Nurses Episode 339: A Lesson on Labs: How to Monitor and Educate Patients With Cancer Episode 201: Which Survivorship Care Model Is Right for Your Patient? ONS Voice articles: Effective Care Transitions Are Essential for New Multiple Myeloma Treatments Infection Prevention for Oncology Nurses Multiple Myeloma Prevention, Screening, Treatment, and Survivorship Recommendations Nurse-Led Survivorship Programs Sexual Considerations for Patients With Cancer Oncology Nursing Forum articles: A Qualitative Study of the Experiences of Living With Multiple Myeloma Changes in Health-Related Quality of Life During Multiple Myeloma Treatment: A Qualitative Interview Study ONS book: Multiple Myeloma: A Textbook for Nurses (third edition) ONS Huddle Cards: Pain Management Sexuality Survivorship Care Plan ONS Learning Libraries: Hematology, Cellular Therapy, and Stem Cell Transplantation Survivorship ONS Symptom Intervention resources: Chronic Pain Fatigue Peripheral Neuropathy American Cancer Society: Living as a Multiple Myeloma Survivor Blood Cancer United: Resources for Healthcare Professionals International Myeloma Foundation: Resources and Support for the Myeloma Community Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation: Empower Patients and the Community To discuss the information in this episode with other oncology nurses, visit the ONS Communities. To find resources for creating an ONS Podcast club in your chapter or nursing community, visit the ONS Podcast Library. To provide feedback or otherwise reach ONS about the podcast, email pubONSVoice@ons.org. Highlights From This Episode "We do consider myeloma an incurable hematologic malignancy, even though we have had improvements in survival. But just like for any malignancy, our goal is to maximize survival. We want to eliminate as many myeloma cells as we possibly can. And subsequently, we want to improve the quality of life for these patients in the long term. So those are basically our treatment goals. That's what we think of when we're treating patients all throughout their treatment journey." TS 1:39 "It is very typical for patients along their journey to have received several lines of therapy. I think it's important to realize that the cells acquire new mutations, making them more resistant to these further subsequent lines of therapy. We see quicker, more aggressive relapses in those patients with multiple prior lines of therapy. We can see an increase in the CRAB symptoms, which are the calcium elevations, the renal dysfunction, profound anemia, and even bone disease. We can see a rapid rise in the monoclonal protein in the labs or even a very rapid rise in the involved light chain in that serum free light chain assay, so it's important to monitor these labs." TS 9:14 "All oncology nurses are focusing on these survivorship plans now. And I think that's a great thing when you think about a diagnosis of cancer and a survivorship plan, because it means these patients are living a longer time. We still look at long-term health maintenance guidelines depending on the patient's sex and their age. ... I think preventing infection is always going to be something absolutely on the forefront in our survivorship plan with myeloma. I mean, myeloma is an immune system malignancy. The treatments that we have given patients can sometimes, especially in later life therapies, further compromise the immune system. So, we're always looking to prevent serious infection." TS 12:46 "Patients get treatment, especially induction therapy. They may or may not get transplant. They may have been on a very minor maintenance schedule, depending on their age. And they feel really well. And then they decide not to return for their follow-up because they feel so good. I think nurses are critical in the communication aspect of the patient-provider aspect. So, nurses are really the key means of communication. The providers are absolutely important—the physicians, the nurse practitioners and every other member of the team—but I think the nurses have a really special rapport with patients. They're usually the ones providing the education on the treatment regimens. They're managing the toxicity profiles. They're doing all the coordination of care between visits. They are really going to be the ones telling the patient, 'Hey, you're going to feel good and that's a wonderful thing, but you still need to come once a month or once every six weeks or once every two months for your labs.'" TS 15:17 "It has been amazing. The science, the research, the treatments, the approvals from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Survivorship has improved dramatically. Let's take the first few years of the new century, right? The five-year survival rate was about 38%. If you then jump to 2015–2019, which is still seven plus years ago, it has doubled. So, we're talking about anywhere from 60%–80% over a five-year survival. So that's an amazing improvement in their five-year survival rate for myeloma." TS 23:28 "Survivorship in myeloma begins at diagnosis, not just after treatment. And I think that because it is managed as a chronic, often relapsing disease, it does require lifelong evolving care. Patients should realize that they will know us for the rest of their lives. We will know everything about you. I always tell them, 'I will know everything about your hobbies, your children, your grandchildren, what you love to do on the weekends.' It's very important that that point is made right at diagnosis, not just after so many lines of treatment. It's very important that we are going to follow these patients throughout their journey." TS 28:18
JAMA Medical News Director Jennifer Abbasi and Lead Senior Staff Writer Rita Rubin discuss "Are AI Tools Ready to Answer Patients' Questions About Their Medical Care?" Related Content: Are AI Tools Ready to Answer Patients' Questions About Their Medical Care?
If you've ever thought, “Why didn't anyone prepare me for this?” — this episode is for you. So many women are doing all the “right” things, yet still feel exhausted, inflamed, foggy, or just off in ways they can't quite explain. Too often, we're told it's simply part of aging. In this episode of HEAL with Kelly, I'm joined by Dr. Amy Shah, whose work — and new book, Hormone Havoc — is helping change the conversation around women's health. We talk about why women's health has been historically overlooked, how nutrition has been left out of critical medical education, and why so many women feel dismissed when they seek real answers — especially during perimenopause and menopause. Dr. Shah explains how hormonal shifts affect the brain, gut, metabolism, mood, and nervous system — and why symptoms like hot flashes, night sweats, brain fog, cravings, and poor sleep are signals, not failures. We explore simple, science-backed ways to support hormones through food, movement, and lifestyle, including walking, strength training, gut health, stress resilience, and why alcohol affects women differently in midlife. We also talk about purpose, community, and connection, and why women are evolutionarily wired to thrive in this next phase of life. If you've been searching for clarity, validation, or a more compassionate roadmap for this chapter, this episode offers exactly that. Key Moments You'll Love ✨:
Dr. Barbara Paldus is the Founder and CEO of CODEX Labs, the sponsor of this episode.She grew up around Nobel Prize winners, built biotech manufacturing equipment for vaccines and cancer therapeutics, and then sold her company after an 8 year old threatened suicide.Her son's severe eczema pushed her into an unregulated $100,000,000,000 skincare market where parents are told to trust labels that nobody verifies. She explains how corticosteroid ladders leave patients with years long withdrawal, why U.S. ingredient oversight lags Europe, and how chemotherapy destroys the same skin and gut barriers seen in inflammatory disease.The conversation tracks the real stakes behind “clean” marketing: a child's immune system, hospital infections like MRSA, and patients trying to survive treatment without new damage. She also details the research path from Irish medical manuscripts to microbiome science and why sick populations become the only reliable regulators when policy fails.RELATED LINKSBarbara PaldusCodex LabsSekhmet VenturesDr Peter LioFEEDBACKLike this episode? Rate and review Out of Patients on your favorite podcast platform. For guest suggestions or sponsorship email podcasts@matthewzachary.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
An unassuming house in Southeast Portland’s Buckman neighborhood was recently added to the National Register of Historic Places. Once known as “Juniper House,” the building served as one of the first end-of-life care homes for AIDS patients in the Pacific Northwest in the late 1980s. An OPB documentary at the time explored the lives of some of the patients in Juniper House and the neighboring Assisi House, which provided a range of care for patients with HIV/AIDS. Jan Weyeneth is one of the co-founders of Juniper House. Cayla McGrail is a former associate project manager for Portland’s LGBTQ+ Historic Sites Project, which sponsored the house’s listing. We first spoke with Weyeneth and McGrail in April 2025 about Juniper House and the importance of documenting queer history in Portland.
What if a warm welcome and a personal touch could be the most powerful tools for growing your dental practice?In this episode, Dr. Allon reveals how her journey from corporate dentistry to solo practice was powered by a desire for meaningful patient relationships, family support, and a relentless commitment to hospitality. She shares the step-by-step systems her Clear Lake office uses to maximize comfort and efficiency, from five-minute patient intake to comprehensive 90-minute new patient exams and personal follow-up calls after treatment. Dr. Allon also reflects on the behind-the-scenes grit required to launch her practice: navigating unexpected DIY build-out challenges, winning initial patients through strategic signage and ground marketing, and fostering a collaborative, no-ego team culture that attracts both patients and staff. Whether you're considering the leap into private practice or want inspiration on building trust and visibility, you'll find practical insight and encouragement in Dr. Allon's candid story.What You'll Learn in This Episode:The transition from corporate dentistry to starting a solo practiceHow to design a hospitality-driven patient flow that stands outWhy thorough new patient visits build lasting trust and referralsStrategies for marketing your practice with visibility (not just ads)Practical tips for juggling practice ownership with family lifeLessons learned from running your own office build-out on a tight budgetThe impact of personal follow-up calls and ground marketing techniquesHow to foster a team culture without egos or micromanagementOvercoming unexpected challenges during a post-pandemic openingWhy investing in patient relationships leads to rapid growthJoin us for a behind-the-scenes look at how real, patient-focused dentistry can transform your practice and your community!(This episode originally aired on 1/18/2024)Sponsors:Oryx: All-In-One Cloud-Based Dental Software Created by Dentists for Dentists. Patient engagement, clinical, and practice management software that helps your dental practice grow without compromise. Click or copy and paste the link here for a special offer! https://thedentalmarketer.lpages.co/oryx/Net32: Founded by a dentist, for dentists. Net32 is the leading online marketplace for dental supplies, helping dental and medical professionals save on high-quality products for over 25 years. Start saving today at: https://www.net32.com/dentalmarketerGuest: Dr. Liel AllonPractice Name: DentAllon DentistryCheck out Liel's Media:Practice: https://www.dentallondentistry.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dentallon_dentistry/Host: Michael AriasJoin my newsletter: https://thedentalmarketer.lpages.co/newsletter/Join this podcast's Facebook Group: The Dental Marketer SocietyLove the Podcast? Subscribe on Your Favorite App! https://lnkfi.re/TDMPod
See if you qualify for our 100% Done-For-You YouTube service: https://go.healthpreneurtraining.com/youtube?el=growpractice-youtubeIf you're growing your practice on referrals alone, you're one dry spell away from struggling.The #1 way to grow a private practice in 2026 has nothing to do with networking, Google ads, or Instagram.It's YouTube. And most practitioners are completely ignoring it.I've been building health businesses online for 20 years. My first was built on a 300,000-subscriber YouTube channel. It helped half a million people, led to a NYT bestselling book, and put me on The Doctors and Dr. Oz. As CEO of Healthpreneur, I've helped thousands of practitioners scale to 6, 7, and 8 figures. Here's why I'd go all-in on YouTube if I were starting a practice today.⏱️ Timestamps:00:00 The #1 way to grow your private practice in 202600:37 Why referral-dependent practices become the best-kept secret00:57 The trust recession: why patients don't know who to trust01:40 Reason #1: How YouTube builds trust faster than any other platform02:43 YouTube vs. Instagram/TikTok: 40-minute sessions vs. 15 seconds05:11 The best expert doesn't win. The best known expert does.06:56 Reason #2: YouTube users have the highest household income of any platform07:50 The stats: 87% of US YouTube users earn $70K to $100K per year09:03 Reason #3: The YouTube Health Source Certification advantage10:47 How the certification gives licensed practitioners priority in search12:41 Why Google AI and Gemini reference YouTube as the #1 health source14:23 How YouTube videos compound into a 24/7 patient acquisition flywheel❓ QUESTIONS ANSWEREDQ: How do I grow my private practice without relying on referrals?A: Build a YouTube channel around the conditions you treat. Patients searching for those problems will find you and trust you before they ever reach out. (01:40)Q: Why is YouTube better than Instagram or TikTok for a health practice?A: YouTube sessions average 40 minutes vs. 15 seconds on TikTok. No one chooses a practitioner from a short reel, but they will after watching several of your videos. (02:43)Q: What is the YouTube Health Source Certification for practitioners?A: Licensed practitioners who reach 1,500 watch hours can apply for a verified badge. It gives their content priority over unqualified influencers in health searches. (09:03)Q: Are YouTube users actually good prospects for a health practice?A: Yes. 87% of US YouTube users earn $70K to $100K per year and 89% hold a college degree. It's the most educated, highest-income audience on any social platform. (07:50)Q: How long does it take for YouTube to start bringing in patients?A: It builds like an asset. Early videos get little traction, but over time they create a 24/7 flywheel of patients finding and trusting you. (14:23)
In this episode of The Thriving Dentist Show, Gary Takacs and Naren Arulrajah tackle one of the biggest hidden profit leaks in dentistry. Unscheduled treatment plans. They explain why many dental practices have thousands of patients in their database but only a small number who move forward with recommended care. You will learn why patients say no to treatment, how to create real interest instead of pushing solutions, and why showing clear photos can increase case acceptance. Gary shares simple text message scripts that work better than phone calls, how far back you should go when following up on incomplete treatment, and why every practice needs a weekly system to track and schedule pending dentistry. If you want to increase treatment acceptance, boost production without adding more new patients, improve patient follow up, and build a stress free dental practice with strong systems, this episode gives you clear, practical steps you can use right away. For a complimentary Marketing Strategy Meeting visit ekwa.com/td and for a Coaching Session with Gary visit thrivingdentist.com/csm