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Often, when you go to the doctor or psychiatrist and tell them you're in a funk, or not feeling like yourself, they'll prescribe you a pill or some other type of medicine. However, in some cases, instead of being handed a prescription for an anti-depressant or anti-anxiety medicine, patients are being prescribed visits to local art and culture institutions, like museums, community centers, and the theater. Nichole talks with Erik Holmgren, Manager of Advancement and Strategic Partnerships at the Mass Cultural Council, and Chris Appleton, Founder and CEO of SocialRx, about their efforts to connect more Bay State residents to these life-changing programs.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In Georgia, a family says an 83-year-old man with dementia vanished and returned in a new SUV tied to a nearly $70,000 deal he did not understand. In Florida, crews are tearing down the Pulse nightclub as the city prepares to build a permanent memorial nearly a decade after a mass shooting that killed 49 people. Drew Nelson reports.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A look at the connection betweenn Health Information Exchanges (Like HSX in the Philadelphia Region) and Accountable Care Organizations in improving care across the continuum. Our Special Guest is Emily Brower, President and CEO, The National Association of Accountable Care Organizations.
Julia had been a hospice nurse long enough to recognize the quiet shift that happens in a home when someone is nearing the end.That evening, after weeks of caring for one patient, she knew the moment was close. When Julia finally returned home and fell asleep, she had a vivid dream. In the dream she was standing back in the patient's bedroom. But this time the woman was sitting upright in the bed—peaceful, alert, and smiling. The woman looked at her and spoke.When Julia woke, she glanced at the clock beside her bed. It read 2:14 AM.The next morning, she learned something that made the dream much harder to explain.#AfterMidnightPodcast #RealGhostStories #HospiceStories #ParanormalExperience #DeathbedVisitation #TrueGhostStory #UnexplainedDream #ParanormalEncounter #LifeAfterDeath #MessageFromBeyondLove real ghost stories? Want even more?Become a supporter and unlock exclusive extras, ad-free episodes, and advanced access:
Julia had been a hospice nurse long enough to recognize the quiet shift that happens in a home when someone is nearing the end.That evening, after weeks of caring for one patient, she knew the moment was close. When Julia finally returned home and fell asleep, she had a vivid dream. In the dream she was standing back in the patient's bedroom. But this time the woman was sitting upright in the bed—peaceful, alert, and smiling. The woman looked at her and spoke.When Julia woke, she glanced at the clock beside her bed. It read 2:14 AM.The next morning, she learned something that made the dream much harder to explain.#AfterMidnightPodcast #RealGhostStories #HospiceStories #ParanormalExperience #DeathbedVisitation #TrueGhostStory #UnexplainedDream #ParanormalEncounter #LifeAfterDeath #MessageFromBeyondLove real ghost stories? Want even more?Become a supporter and unlock exclusive extras, ad-free episodes, and advanced access:
HelixTalk - Rosalind Franklin University's College of Pharmacy Podcast
In this episode, we review key updates from the 2026 AHA/ASA Guideline for the Early Management of Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke, including changes to IV thrombolysis, antiplatelet therapy, endovascular treatment, blood pressure goals, and glycemic goals. Key Concepts Tenecteplase (TNKase) is now equally preferred to alteplase (Activase) by the 2026 AHA/ASA guidelines. Tenecteplase has several advantages related to administration and the risk of medication errors. IV thrombolysis can be given in selected patients up to 9 hours after stroke symptom onset depending on brain imaging findings. Patients with symptom onset less than 4.5 hours are still eligible for IV thrombolysis regardless of brain imaging findings. IV thrombolysis should not be given for mild, non-disabling stroke symptoms. A "non-disabling" stroke means the symptoms do not impair activities of daily living or ability to return to work. The criteria for dual antiplatelet therapy (DAPT) has been updated. DAPT can be given for NIHSS of 4 or 5 (not just 3 or less) and can be started up to 72 hours after stroke onset (not just within 24 hours). References Prabhakaran S, Gonzalez NR, Zachrison KS, et al. 2026 Guideline for the Early Management of Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke: A Guideline From the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke. Published online January 26, 2026. doi:10.1161/STR.0000000000000513
Patient advocate Richard A. Lawhern, PhD, discusses the article "U.S. opioid policy history: How politics replaced science in pain care." Richard argues that for decades, public policy on pain treatment has been driven by sociopolitical factors rather than medical science. He traces the history from the "business corruption" phase of pill mills to the current "political phase" launched by the 2016 CDC guidelines. The conversation highlights how anti-opioid zealotry and legal fears have forced physicians to abandon effective pain care, leaving patients to suffer or turn to illicit markets. Richard also critiques the rising reliance on buprenorphine, suggesting it is popular not because of superior efficacy for pain, but because it offers a legal "safe harbor" for clinicians. Discover why Richard believes the confusion between physical dependence and addiction is driving a public health failure. Partner with me on the KevinMD platform. With over three million monthly readers and half a million social media followers, I give you direct access to the doctors and patients who matter most. Whether you need a sponsored article, email campaign, video interview, or a spot right here on the podcast, I offer the trusted space your brand deserves to be heard. Let's work together to tell your story. PARTNER WITH KEVINMD → https://kevinmd.com/influencer SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST → https://www.kevinmd.com/podcast RECOMMENDED BY KEVINMD → https://www.kevinmd.com/recommended
On the Evolving Wellness Podcast, host Sarah interviews board-certified psychiatrist Dr. Josef Dering, who previously worked in the pharmaceutical industry and as an FDA medical officer in psychiatry drug safety. He explains why he now believes psychiatric medications don't work for most conditions and describes how time-pressured, checklist-based care and “chemical imbalance” narratives lead to escalating drug cocktails without addressing root causes. He warns that benzodiazepines may help short term but can worsen anxiety over time, cause interdose withdrawal, degrade sleep architecture, and impair concentration, making them a “Faustian bargain,” and stresses slow, supervised tapering due to difficult withdrawal. Dering outlines non-drug approaches targeting body, mind, and “soul” (health behaviors, skills-based therapies, relationships, and meaning). He also argues high-potency THC cannabis increases psychosis risk and may lead to long recoveries and misdiagnosis.Connect withj Dr Josef - https://www.youtube.com/@taperclinichttps://www.instagram.com/drjosefwittdoerring/ _________Sponsored By:→ Bon Charge | Go to https://boncharge.com/products/demi-red-light-device?rfsn=8108115.26608d & use code SARAHKLEINER for 15% off storewide.→ VivaRays | This episode is sponsored by VivaRays - VivaRays Blue - code YOGI https://vivarays.com/ → Organifi | For an exclusive offer, go to https://www.organifi.com/SARAHK for 20% off your order._________Timestamp:00:00 Benzos Quick Relief00:55 Episode Setup Disclaimer02:29 Podcast Intro Housekeeping03:42 Meet Dr Dering04:30 Why He Questions Meds07:19 FDA Safety Reality Check08:44 Host Story Benzos12:16 Sponsor Red Light14:29 Benzos Faustian Bargain15:48 Body Mind Soul Framework21:42 Sponsor Blue Blockers23:09 Motivation Rock Bottom26:30 Medical Trust Broken29:12 Suicidality on Med Cocktails31:23 Withdrawal Trap and Tapering34:20 PR Narrative Around Antidepressants36:22 Meds and Mass Violence Debate39:27 Gender Ideology in Schools42:57 Cannabis Mental Health Risks44:26 THC Potency and Psychosis Data48:54 Paranoia as Warning Sign51:34 Safe Tapering and Final Advice——— This video is not medical advice & as a supporter to you and your health journey - I encourage you to monitor your labs and work with a professional!________________________________________Get all my free guides and product recommendations to get started on your journey!https://www.sarahkleinerwellness.com/all-free-resourcesCheck out all my courses to understand how to improve your mitochondrial health & experience long lasting health! (Use code PODCAST to save 10%) - https://www.sarahkleinerwellness.com/coursesMy free product guide with all product recommendations and discount codes:https://www.canva.com/design/DAF7mlgZpJI/xVyE4tiQFEWJmh_Xwx8Kbw/view?utm_content=DAF7mlgZpJIFree Webinar on Light & Health (includes free light bulb guide) - https://www.sarahkleinerwellness.com/mycircadianapp-free-webinarGet Early Access to Podcast Episodes & my Seasonal Food Course + UVB+Red Light Therapy course for free - https://open.substack.com/pub/sarahkleinerwellness/p/uvbred-light-protocol?r=5eztl9&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&showWelcomeOnShare=true
In part one of this series, Dr. Aaron Zelikovich discusses the trial design and primary results. Show citation: Solomon T, Hooper C, Easton A, et al. Safety and efficacy of adjunct dexamethasone in adults with herpes simplex virus encephalitis in the UK (DexEnceph): a multicentre, observer-blind, randomised, phase 3, controlled trial. Lancet Neurol. 2026;25(2):136-146. doi:10.1016/S1474-4422(25)00454-5 Show transcript: Dr. Aaron Zelikovich: Welcome to today's Neurology Minute. My name is Aaron Zelikovich. I'm a neuromuscular specialist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City. Today, we'll discuss part one of a three-part series reviewing a recent article titled Safety and Efficacy of Adjunct Dexamethasone in Adults with Herpes Simplex Virus Encephalitis in the United Kingdom (DexEnceph) Study, a multicenter observer-blind randomized phase three control trial published in Lancet Neurology. In the first episode, we'll focus on the trial design and primary results. In part two, we'll discuss the clinical implications for patients with HSV encephalitis, and in part three, discuss the outcomes seen across the trial during and after an acute infection. Overall, the study found that adjunct dexamethasone did not improve outcomes in patients with CSF-confirmed HSV encephalitis. But importantly, it also did not worsen outcomes. Prior research that was non-randomized and retrospective of 45 patients with HSV encephalitis found that patients did not receive corticosteroids had worse outcomes. A different randomized trial looking at dexamethasone and HSV encephalitis was only able to recruit 41 patients and was stopped prematurely due to the lack of recruitment. Prior to the study, there was no clear evidence that adjunct steroids with acyclovir improved outcomes in HSV encephalitis. The Dex and phase three randomized clinical trial performed in the United Kingdom at 53 hospitals recruited patients from 2016 to 2022. They screened over 1,400 patients of which only 94, or 6%, were enrolled. Patients were randomized to either acyclovir only or acyclovir and intravenous dexamethasone. In order to be randomized, patients had to have a febrile illness with new onset seizure or new focal neurological sign or altered mental status as well as a positive HSV type one or two PCR from the CSF. The primary outcome for this study was the Wechsler Memory Scale Type Four Auditory Memory Index Score which was collected at 26 weeks. It had a range of 40, which is the worst outcome, to a range of 160 which was considered normal. 81 patients were included in the modified intention-to-treat analysis. Of the 13 patients, six were lost to follow-up, and seven withdrew consent. There were 39 patients in the dexamethasone group and 42 in the acyclovir-only group in the final analysis. The primary outcome of the Wechsler Memory Scale had similar scores in both groups. 71 in the dexamethasone group and 69 in the control group with a P value of 0.76. The safety profile was similar in both groups, and there were no additional safety signals found in the dexamethasone-treated group. At 26 weeks, there were 12 deaths from HSV encephalitis, six from each group, as well as a similar time to discharge between both cohorts. The DexEnceph clinical trial did not show any clear clinical benefit for dexamethasone with regards to clinical outcomes but also didn't show any increased safety concerns compared to only acyclovir. In part two, we will discuss the implications of this trial in patients with undifferentiated encephalitis and the role that steroids play in patients that HSV encephalitis is suspected. Thank you so much, and have a wonderful day.
The medical spa industry has surged into a $20+ billion market, bringing with it significant challenges around regulation and patient safety. In this episode, we are joined by Dr. Kate Dee, a Yale‑trained physician, breast imaging specialist, author of Med Spa Mayhem, and founder of The Medspa Board. After witnessing widespread noncompliance and risky practices across the industry, Kate set out to create a safer, more transparent standard for both patients and legitimate practices. Learn how emerging industry efforts aim to bring clarity and accountability to the aesthetic industry. Discover how legal compliance, proper medical oversight, and transparent patient education can set your practice apart and protect the future of aesthetics. To learn more about Dr. Kate Dee, visit: https://drkatedee.com/ Chapters00:00 Intro00:45 Banter03:52 Guest background12:50 What is the Med Spa board trying to solve?17:34 How did your experiences lead to your commitment to safety?26:06 What are you optimistic about in the med spa industry?27:28 Access+28:02 Legal Takeaways29:19 OutroWatch full episodes of our podcast on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@byrdadatto Stay connected for the latest business and health care legal updates:WebsiteFacebookInstagramLinkedIn
In today's episode, we spoke with Colin Vale, MD. Dr Vale is an assistant professor in the Department of Hematology and Medical Oncology at the Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta, Georgia.In our exclusive interview, Dr Vale discussed data from a phase 2 trial (NCT03263572) evaluating blinatumomab (Blincyto) plus ponatinib (Iclusig) in patients with Philadelphia chromosome–positive B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia. In addition to underscoring the findings and their clinical significance, Vale expanded on how the combination can improve patient quality of life by helping patients avoid procedures like allogeneic stem cell transplant.
Do your patients feel cared for — or are you just taking care of them? In this episode, Kirk Behrendt interviews Dr. Bryan Laskin, dental author, tech entrepreneur, and patient-advocacy leader, about why dentistry is losing patient trust and what to do about it. You'll learn how private equity and spreadsheet-driven decisions can quietly degrade the patient experience, why “clarity” is the biggest lever for rebuilding trust, and how simple systems and technology can help patients feel listened to, informed, and confident. Listen to Episode 1022 of The Best Practices Show!Main Takeaways:Taking care of people is different than making people feel cared for, and patients primarily feel listened to, communicated with, and given clarity.Private equity has accelerated aggregation in dentistry, and tighter margins can increase the risk of decisions that ignore how patients experience care.Patients may still trust their own dentist, but broader trust in dentists is eroding, making transparency and clarity more important than ever.Building “care more, make more” requires systems that create connection, reinforce clarity, and build confidence to improve recall and referrals.Treatment plans are often accepted at the kitchen table, so practices need to share information that patients can review after leaving the office.Removing human variability by automating “robotic” tasks frees the team to do what humans do best: welcome, connect, and care.When evaluating technology, the first question should be how it makes people feel, because patient experience drives growth.Snippets:00:00 Huge difference between taking care of people and making people feel cared for.00:03 Bryan's background: practice ownership, CAD/CAM training, scaling a patient engagement solution, and standards work.00:05 “Care more, make more” and the clarity, confidence, connection framework.00:06 Why dentistry's recurring hygiene model attracted private equity and accelerated DSO growth.00:09 What spreadsheets miss: the patient experience and the “silent killer” of lost confidence.00:10 “Patients still trust their dentist, but patients don't trust dentists.”00:14 The biggest problem: patients are confused, and confusion destroys confidence.00:16 Transparency as the flip side of trust and why everyone “Googles” their care.00:22 New patient intake as a systems problem and how automation improves the human welcome.00:25 The pathway to trust: connection, clarity, then confidence.00:31 The technology question: “How does it make people feel?”00:32 Where to learn more: cair.net, toothapps.com, and Bryan's books.Guest Bio/Guest Resources:Dr. Bryan Laskin has spent over two decades at the intersection of healthcare, technology, and patient advocacy. As a practicing dentist, he witnessed firsthand the artificial barriers separating dental and medical care despite their profound connections. As a healthcare technology entrepreneur, he's developed innovative solutions to improve care coordination, enhance patient communication, and increase healthcare transparency.Resources mentioned:Cair (patient-facing): https://cair.net/ToothApps (practice side): https://www.toothapps.com/Brian's website: https://bryanlaskin.com/Books: The Patient First Manifesto https://bryanlaskin.com/patient-first-manifestoMore Helpful Links for a Better Practice & a Better Life:The Best Practices Show: https://www.actdental.com/podcast/Best Practices Association: https://www.actdental.com/bpaUpcoming Events & Workshops: https://www.actdental.com/events/Smile Source: https://www.smilesource.com/Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.comSubscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com
The ideal future of dentistry is providing patients with immediate care. Imagine if you could eliminate the need for second appointments, avoid lengthy appliance delivery times, and do everything today. This is quickly becoming a reality with SprintRay's advancements in 3D printing. Dentists and teams are now able to provide a wide array of services faster and easier (all while maintaining top quality, which is most important). Today on The Double Your Production Podcast, we're sitting down with John Cox to hear about the innovations at SprintRay. From retainers to dentures to mouth guards and more, you'll learn how new technologies are allowing practices to capture more opportunity in every appointment. Added convenience and fewer appointments make for happier patients whose dental care fits seamlessly into their busy lives. If you are looking to give patients a faster, more cost-effective experience in your office and help them finally say yes to the care they need, don't miss this episode!
HOW MUCH DO DENTAL IMPLANTS COST!? Access the FREE Guide to Dental Implants Here: https://bit.ly/4b1pOGPWant to know if you may be eligible for Permanent Teeth in 24 Hours? Take the 60-Sec Quiz Here: https://bit.ly/4cG6tMz▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ Contents of this video ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬Disclaimer: Nuvia Dental Implant Centers are locally owned and operated by licensed dental practitioners. These locally owned and operated practices are part of a professional network of dental implant centers operated by prosthodontists, oral surgeons, and restorative dentists. Each Nuvia Dental Implant Center has a business affiliation with Nuvia MSO, LLC, a Dental Support Organization that provides non-clinical support to each center.Nuvia Dental Implant Centers are able to provide patients with a bridge made with an FDA approved permanent material, zirconia, in 24-hours. No temporary denture. Not all those who come in for a consultation are medically cleared to receive permanent zirconia teeth in 24-hours. Follow up appointments are required to confirm implant integration and make adjustments if necessary. Results may vary in individual cases. Patients represented in videos are actual NUVIA patient(s) and may have been compensated for their time in telling their story.While soft foods immediately after surgery are generally approved by our clinical team, the local surgeon may give individual instruction on dental implant aftercare according to the specific circumstances applicable to each case.From 2022 through 2024 Nuvia had a documented 99.18% dental implant success rate. During a documented pressure test Nuvia's 24Z teeth withstood 2330 Newtons of Force before breaking.Copyright 2024. Nuvia Dental Implant Centers. All rights reserved.
Title: Faith As Patient Endurance Text: James 5:1-12Chris HefnerThree Reminders that Display Genuine Faith Heed the warning against self-indulgence. Hoarding Fraud Self-indulgenceMurder Hear the invitation to patient endurance. Be patient like the farmer. Establish your heart. Do not grumble. Look to past examples. Look to the mercy and compassion of the Lord. Honor the truth with your promises. Please reach out to us via email at info@wilkesborobaptist.org
The Nurses Report on America Out Loud with Gail Macrae, BSN, RN – A nurse and grieving father expose troubling hospital practices, questioning protocols, incentives, and patient rights during COVID-19. Their conversation explores systemic failures, legal battles, and faith, urging awareness of healthcare power structures and the human cost behind controversial medical decisions...
Teresa Baglietto has lived through the kind of compounded harm that exposes how thin the safety net really is. In this episode she walks through a life shaped by medical neglect, personal violence, and the exhausting labor of self advocacy. She nearly died after a C section when hospital staff failed to confirm she had urinated before discharge, spending 15 days hospitalized and separated from her newborn while facing the possibility of permanent damage. In 2013 she discovered an aggressive breast cancer and waited weeks for test results and surgery while administrators stalled and passed responsibility. Care only moved forward after she threatened public exposure. Teresa also speaks openly about surviving rape in high school, losing her father to cancer at age 48 when she was 10, and growing up without reliable adults in the room. She explains why it took 7 years to write her book, why she launched a podcast, and how sales grit becomes a survival tool when patients must fight systems designed to delay them. The conversation stays specific, unsentimental, and grounded in consequence.RELATED LINKSTeresa Baglietto on LinkedInThe Ripple Effect by Teresa BagliettoIn Shock PodcastIn Shock Podcast on InstagramCanvas Rebel interview with Teresa BagliettoFEEDBACKLike 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.
March is Women's History Month, and today's episode is more than medicine…It's a story of science, courage, and the voices of women who changed everything.For decades, women were told that survival required sacrifice —not just of the breast… but of identity.Radical surgeries.Permanent disability.No questions asked.But something powerful happened.
This week we are discussing the rise of a new type of health care where the patients play a vital role in their medical care. Patients as partners in care are at the heart of shared decision making (SDM), a model where clinicians and patients deliberately work together to choose tests and treatments that fit both best evidence and the patient's values and life context. What shared decision making means SDM is a collaborative process in which clinicians contribute clinical expertise while patients contribute their goals, preferences, and lived experience. Core elements include at least two participants (patient and clinician), information sharing in both directions, building a shared understanding of options, and aiming for agreement on what to do next. From paternalism to partnership Historically, medical care was strongly paternalistic, with clinicians deciding and patients expected to comply, but from the 1970s onward, growing emphasis on autonomy and patient‑centered care began to challenge this model. The term "shared decision-making" appeared in ethical discussions in the 1970s and early 1980s and gained momentum in the 1980s alongside evidence that patients increasingly wanted to participate in decisions. Why patients as partners matters SDM is associated with improved patient knowledge, more accurate risk perception, reduced decisional conflict, and treatment plans that better reflect what matters most to patients. Studies link SDM to higher satisfaction, better adherence, improved quality of life, lower anxiety, and in some preference‑sensitive conditions, less invasive and sometimes less costly care.
Running a dental practice—or any service-based business—can be both rewarding and overwhelming. In this episode of The Story Engine Podcast, Kyle Gray sits down with serial entrepreneur and marketing expert Ridgely Goldsborough to explore how dentists can attract better patients, grow their practices efficiently, and create lives with more freedom and less stress. Ridgely shares his personal journey from running 45 companies to helping elite dental practices scale with smart marketing, AI, and systems that actually work. They dive into the unique challenges dentists face: balancing full schedules with financial growth, handling moral dilemmas around patient care and pricing, and navigating the competitive, fast-changing world of marketing. Ridgely also shares lessons from his own experiences with pandemic disruptions, business setbacks, and the transformative power of putting the right systems and team in place. Whether you're a dentist, a health practitioner, or an entrepreneur wanting higher-paying, higher-quality clients, this episode provides practical insights and actionable strategies to thrive in your practice and your life. In This Episode 00:54 Ridgely's background: 45 companies, serial entrepreneurship, and lessons from failure 02:27 Why Ridgely focuses on dentistry and the unique dynamics of marketing to dentists 04:15 The delicate balance of patient volume, marketing, and ethical dilemmas in dental practices 07:25 Managing complex cases and patient financial realities while maintaining profitability 09:54 How elite practices handle selling and treatment plans with treatment specialists 12:31 The importance of AI, specialized marketing experts, and having a "geeky" team for success 15:03 VIP concierge-style service: making marketing personal while allowing dentists to focus on what they love 17:09 Outcomes of optimized marketing: more high-value cases, happier clients, and competitive advantage 19:12 Handling tough conversations and building strong, trust-based client relationships 21:08 Ridgely reflects on challenges during the pandemic and other major business disruptions 24:25 Transitioning from player to coach: building systems and a team that runs the business 26:25 Achieving more freedom, better client results, and personal fulfillment through systems and guidance
I've heard every excuse about why wellness practitioners don't raise their rates. Things like "my patients can't afford it," or "I don't know enough to charge more," or even "what if they leave?" The underlying fear that keeps your prices low isn't about the money. It's about what you believe you actually deserve. I recently raised my fees – by only $20. And I laughed at myself - because I know I'm worth more than that. But that small number told me something important: even I get comfortable with what I'm charging. And comfortable is where practices quietly plateau. In this episode I'm getting real about the actual fears that keep practitioners from raising their rates every so often. The belief that your patients can't afford more is simply not true. The idea that you need to know more before you deserve more isn't true either. People pay for what's important to them. Period. I'll also share the exact language to use with your patients when your prices go up – you'll be able to communicate the change with confidence, no justification or over-explaining. You'll be surprised at how many people won't even bat an eye. Because the value the work you do.
The Nurses Report on America Out Loud with Gail Macrae, BSN, RN – A nurse and grieving father expose troubling hospital practices, questioning protocols, incentives, and patient rights during COVID-19. Their conversation explores systemic failures, legal battles, and faith, urging awareness of healthcare power structures and the human cost behind controversial medical decisions...
This episode spotlights the AAOS Patient Engagement Task Force and its efforts to increase patient involvement in and education about orthopaedic care. Host Stuart J. Fischer, MD, FAAOS, welcomed task force co-chairs James W. Barber, MD, FAAOS, and Monica Payares-Lizano, MD, FAAOS, to discuss the creation and structure of the task force and its focus on patient engagement as a key part of the 2024-28 strategic plan. They explain that the task force was designed to promote bi-directional communication between the AAOS Board of Directors and the AAOS councils and committees that are already involved in patient-facing work. Highlighted task force accomplishments include a major revamp of OrthoInfo.org – AAOS' most comprehensive patient-facing musculoskeletal health resource – to make the website more accessible and easier to navigate, as well as provide the content in multiple languages. Drs. Barber and Payares also talked about patient advocacy and the powerful impact of sharing patient stories with policymakers on Capitol Hill, about other AAOS patient education tools such as CPGs, and about the positive effect of patient engagement on PROMs. Both doctors share perspectives about how they are able to effectively inform and communicate with their unique patient populations, emphasizing the importance of placing patients at the center of orthopaedic care. Host: Stuart J. Fischer, MD, FAAOS, member, AAOS Now Editorial Board, and former Editor-in-Chief of OrthoInfo Guests: Monica Payares-Lizano, MD, FAAOS, pediatric orthopaedic surgeon at Phoenix Children's; Member-at-Large, AAOS Board of Directors; co-chair, Patient Engagement Task Force James W. Barber, MD, FAAOS, orthopaedic surgeon with Southeastern Orthopaedics and Surgery Center; Secretary, AAOS Board of Councilors; co-chair, Patient Engagement Task Force
Top 5 Topics:- When Oral Surgery Goes Wrong: A Bleeding Case That Almost Sent a Patient to the ER- Why Some Patients Can't Get Numb at the Dentist (And the Secret Tricks Surgeons Use)- The Hidden Physical Toll of Dentistry: Why Oral Surgeons Have Back Pain by Age 40- Inside a Wisdom Tooth Surgery: Techniques Dentists Argue About- Social Media Is Censoring Dental Surgery: Why Instagram Flags Some DentistsBackTeeth Boys Band Members:- Dr. Serv Wahan - Seattle, Washington- Dr. Amir Tahmasebpour - Toronto, Canada- Dr. Joe Doctora - Nashville, Tennessee- Dr. Brendan Gallagher - Long Island, New YorkQuotes & Wisdom:“Get this man a parking spot, sheesh!” - Brendan Gallagher“Sometimes teeth make you do something different.” — Serv Wahan“I thought I'd seen everything in my life… and then all of a sudden… there's just blood.” — Joe“If I don't work out, I can't work.” — Amir Tahmasebpour“The patient's forces of mastication are way stronger than your arm or wrist.” — Joe Doctora“That little injection is like a cheat code.” — Serv Wahan“Everyone was pretty professional. The exam seemed very fair, very smooth.” — Brendan Gallagher“Exposing bonds on the palate… don't ever do that again.” — Serv Wahan“We do it out of our own time. We cut a half day out of our schedules to do it.” — Serv WahanQuestions:00:35 — “Brendan, are you a new man after doing the oral board exam?”00:43 — “Did you have any “high profile” examiners?”20:02 — “What about vertical impactions? Do you guys do anything differently?”31:28 — “What are your tricks when a patient can't get numb? What do you do about it?”35:17 — “What do you guys use for a lower mandibular wisdom tooth block 32? What's your go-to?”40:47 — “Do you guys use Exparel ever?”44:20 — “Joe, what's your go-to for exposing and bonding? What's your protocol?”52:45 — “What do you think is the number one procedure that's just a back crusher?”Now available on:- Dr. Gallagher's Podcast & YouTube Channel- Dose of Dental Podcast #212- BackTeeth Boys Podcast Ep. 5My watch in this episode = Citizen Promaster Diver Day Date- 2.2026
Can AI really help you communicate better with patients? What if you could audit your own consultations and discover which words, pauses, and stories increase treatment acceptance? Dr. David Amador joins Jaz for a fascinating episode exploring how AI can transform the way we interact with patients. From auditing conversations to radiographic interpretation, they break down practical applications that improve both communication and patient care. They also discuss how storytelling, patient trust, and ethical use of AI all come together to boost treatment acceptance — showing that AI isn't here to replace us, but to make us better. https://youtu.be/L38Hhu855Ro Watch IC069 on YouTube Key Takeaways AI is transforming the way dental practices operate. Storytelling is crucial for effective patient communication. Building a strong team culture enhances practice success. Data security is paramount when using AI tools. Continuous training is essential for team development. Patient engagement strategies can improve treatment acceptance. AI tools can streamline administrative tasks and improve efficiency. Understanding patient needs leads to better care outcomes. Effective marketing requires a solid online presence and SEO. Networking with other professionals can provide valuable insights. Highlight of the episode 00:00 Teaser 00:34 Intro 02:23 Dr. Amador’s Background and Practice 08:14 Using AI for Decision Support 10:26 Leveraging AI for Communication and Training 15:57 Using AI for Patient Care and Diagnosis 21:37 Midroll 1 24:58 Using AI for Patient Care and Diagnosis 26:11 Leveraging AI for Dental Practice Efficiency 27:35 Midroll 2 30:20 Leveraging AI for Dental Practice Efficiency 32:44 Training and Scaling with AI Tools 33:45 Creating SOPs and Playbooks 36:53 Enhancing Patient Communication with Personalized Videos 40:36 Training and Data-Driven Growth 44:52 Outro AI isn't the future — it's your next teammate. Imagine: while you focus on patient care, AI records your consults, summarizes them, audits your communication, and helps interpret radiographs. Plaud.ai makes note-taking automatic. Overjet makes diagnostics and patient communication crystal clear. Check out Midtown Dental Studio — where cutting-edge technology meets genuine care. If you found this episode valuable, don't miss PS015: Communicating Fees, Treatment Plans, and More #InterferenceCast #CareerDevelopment #Communication This episode is eligible for 0.75 CE credit via the quiz on Protrusive Guidance. This episode meets GDC Outcomes A and B AGD Subject Code: 550 – Practice Management and Human Relations Aim: To explore how artificial intelligence (AI) can be used to audit communication, enhance storytelling, and improve patient conversion while maintaining patient-centered care. Dentists will be able to – Explain how AI tools can support communication, diagnosis, and patient understanding in dentistry. Demonstrate how storytelling and patient-centered communication influence treatment acceptance. Evaluate the ethical, professional, and practical considerations of integrating AI into dental practice.
Today, I'm joined by Rachel Blank, founder & CEO of Allara Health. Allara Health delivers in-network virtual care to women, specializing in underserved chronic conditions like PCOS, endometriosis, and hypothyroidism. In this episode, we discuss closing the gender care gap. We also cover: Building the largest women's health dataset PCOS and endometriosis treatment blind spots Point solution fatigue and consolidation Subscribe to the podcast → insider.fitt.co/podcast Subscribe to our newsletter → insider.fitt.co/subscribe Follow us on LinkedIn → linkedin.com/company/fittinsider Website: www.allarahealth.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/allarahealth/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@allarahealth - The Fitt Insider Podcast is brought to you by EGYM. Visit EGYM.com to learn more about its smart fitness ecosystem for fitness and health facilities. Fitt Talent: https://talent.fitt.co/ Consulting: https://consulting.fitt.co/ Investments: https://capital.fitt.co/ Chapters: (00:00) Introduction (01:13) Allara's mission (03:25) Inadequate visits for complex conditions (05:26) No FDA-approved PCOS medication (06:25) Innovation in access (07:30) Building research datasets (08:00) Care delivery (10:00) Filling care gaps in the traditional system (11:05) Symbiosis with fertility clinics (12:14) Consumer-first growth strategy (13:05) Combating misinformation (16:02) Branding and marketing (18:30) Point solution fatigue emerging (20:01) Patient-first vs. use case-first (21:25) Consolidation wave coming (22:25) Expansion roadmap (23:22) 50% US commercial coverage today (24:00) The path to profitability (25:00) AI enabling doctors (27:20) Building vs. buying AI solutions (28:20) 2026 priorities (29:50) Conclusion
Patients may assume you're highly trained, but what they're often looking for first is reassurance that you genuinely care. In this episode of Everyday Oral Surgery, host Dr. Grant Stucki welcomes return guest Dr. Richard Akin, an oral and maxillofacial surgeon practicing in Louisiana, for a thoughtful conversation on the science of empathy in clinical care. Together, they explore how warmth and presence can shape patient trust even more than perceived competence, and how just a minute of focused listening can make a meaningful difference. They share simple ways to build connection, from using a patient's name and sitting at eye level to educating patients as equal partners in care. Dr. Akin also reflects on the emotional weight of this work, the risks of empathy fatigue, and how the right kind of connection may help ease burnout. He offers practical sustainability insights as well, including how adjusting your schedule and building autonomy can support a longer, healthier career. Tune in for a human-centered discussion on why empathy is so important for both patients and providers.Key Points From This Episode:The story behind the phrase “no one cares how much you know until they know how much you care” and how it applies to oral surgery.Why patients assume competence, but seek out signs of genuine care.How 90 seconds of focused listening matters more than prolonged distracted listening.Research on how patients rate warmth and benevolence higher than perceived competence.Ways that surgical bravado can block deeper connection and understanding.Findings on how patient compliance improves when they feel personally cared for.Helping patients feel like informed partners through education and clear choices.Simple connection tools, like using the patient's name and sitting at eye level.Lessons from Unreasonable Hospitality and the practice of truly seeing the patient.How emotional barriers and detachment can contribute to burnout in healthcare.Why the right kind of connection can help relieve clinician burnout.Scheduling and autonomy as keys to long-term energy and sustainability.How connection with patients can lower stress more than rushing through care.Reflections on the modern medical system and transcending transactional care to build more relational, trust-based patient connection.Links Mentioned in Today's Episode:Dr. Richard Akin — https://www.drakin.com/Dr. Richard Akin on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/rick-akin-644aa932/Dr. Richard Akin email — rick@drakin.comFrom Tension to Trust: The Science of Connection in Healthcare (with Dr. Richard Akin) — ‘Empathy: The Human Connection to Patient Care' — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cDDWvj_q-o8Unreasonable Hospitality — https://www.amazon.com/Unreasonable-Hospitality-Remarkable-Giving-People/dp/0593418573Being Mortal — https://www.amazon.com/Being-Mortal-Medicine-What-Matters-ebook/dp/B00JCW0BCYEveryday Oral Surgery Website — https://www.everydayoralsurgery.com/ Everyday Oral Surgery on Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/everydayoralsurgery/ Everyday Oral Surgery on Facebook — https://www.facebook.com/EverydayOralSurgery/Dr. Grant S
The Dentist Money™ Show | Financial Planning & Wealth Management
On this short episode of The Dentist Money Show, Practice Strategist Christine Uhen, BA, CEPA, dives deeper into one of the five points of productivity: how to measure the true value of your patient base and why it's one of the most important drivers of practice performance. Christine teaches you how patient numbers, retention rates, and annual patient value shape the financial health of your practice. She explores key benchmarks to track how to balance new patient acquisition with retention, when to add hygience capacity, and more. Whether you're building momentum or planning your next move, this episode helps you understand the metrics that matter most. If you would like to watch the first episode of The Five Points of Productivity, click here! Book a free consultation with a CFP® advisor who only works with dentists. Get an objective financial assessment and learn how Dentist Advisors can help you live your rich life
In this special TIO Congress edition of Parallax, Dr Ankur Kalra is joined by two of interventional cardiology's most influential voices: Professor Roxana Mehran, incoming President of the American College of Cardiology and Co-Course Director of TIO, and Professor Nicholas Van Mieghem, TIO Course Director. The conversation spans the evolution of online medical education, sex-specific differences in cardiovascular disease, and the challenge of translating clinical evidence into everyday practice. The guests explore sex as a biological variable across valve disease, plaque formation, and left ventricular remodeling, address the underdiagnosis of microvascular dysfunction in women, and examine persistent access barriers for female and non-white patients despite advances in trials such as SMART and RHEA. Professor Van Mieghem adds insights on modern TAVI planning and lifetime valve management, while Professor Mehran shares promising data on Factor XI inhibitors and the case for simplifying antithrombotic regimens. The episode closes on clinical inertia - with intravascular imaging uptake in the US still at just 12–15% despite a Class 1 indication, Professor Mehran outlines her ACC presidential vision: closing the gap between evidence and bedside practice, and reversing the troubling rise in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Questions and comments can be sent to podcast@radcliffe-group.com and may be answered by Ankur in the next episode. Host: @AnkurKalraMD and produced by: @RadcliffeCardio Parallax is Ranked in the Top 100 Health Science Podcasts (#48) by Million Podcasts.
Medical errors related to misdiagnoses contribute to an estimated $870 billion in waste in the U.S. each year. Artificial intelligence...[…]
In this episode, Dr. Killeen reflects on a trend many dentists are seeing right now. Patients are still saying yes to treatment, but overall dollars are down. Instead of reacting with fear, he reframes the moment through the lens of steel. Before steel is quenched it is strong, but after it goes through intense heat and rapid cooling, it becomes even tougher and more resilient. Dentistry works the same way. Challenging cases, tighter schedules, difficult conversations, and uncertain seasons are the fire that sharpens your skills. When you lean into learning and build real clinical and communication competence, confidence naturally follows. Pressure is not the enemy. It is often the process that makes you better.
Are you getting eight hours in bed but still waking up exhausted?Dr. Emily Cooper shares groundbreaking findings from nearly 15,000 patient encounters at her metabolic clinic. The data reveals surprising connections between stress, eating frequency, sleep quality, and metabolic health — and why the number of hours you spend in bed doesn't tell the whole story.KEY TAKEAWAYSOver 60% of patients reported trouble staying asleep, even when they got eight hours in bedHigher stress levels were associated with double the rate of low energy and significantly worse sleep qualityEating frequency matters — patients eating five times per day reported the best sleep and highest energy levelsThe sweet spot between meals is two to four hours — longer gaps were linked to sleep disruption and low energyAny amount of alcohol was associated with fragmented sleep, regardless of stress levelsNearly 65% of patients were not hydrating adequately throughout the dayNOTABLE QUOTE"If your cortisol goes high, we can get the same effects that happen when we take steroids, which we know promote pre-diabetes, insulin resistance, weight gain." — Dr. Emily CooperLinks & ResourcesPodcast Home: fatsciencepodcast.comCooper Center for Metabolism: coopermetabolic.comResources from Dr. Cooper: coopermetabolic.com/resourcesJoin Our Community: patreon.com/cw/FatSciencePodcastSubmit Your Question: questions@fatsciencepodcast.com or dr.c@fatsciencepodcast.comFat Science is supported by the Diabesity Institute, a nonprofit dedicated to increasing access to effective, science-based metabolic care.Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Please consult with a qualified healthcare provider for personalized recommendations.
Dr. Ashley Mak explores the healthcare paradox, the flaws in traditional physical therapy models, and introduces the 30-day anti-fragile intensive to empower patients in their recovery journey.Learn more at ifixyoursciatica.comAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
In this inspiring episode of the UCM Podcast, Dr. Bill Davis interviews Dr. Caitlin Walker, founder of Atlas Imbalance Chiropractic in Oceanside, CA, who shares her powerful journey from chronic migraine and vertigo sufferer to thriving Blair Upper Cervical chiropractor. After struggling through chiropractic school with debilitating symptoms, a life-changing CBCT scan and precise upper cervical care transformed her health—and her calling. Dr. Walker discusses the impact of mentorship, the value of associateship training, the realities of launching a practice with a newborn at home, and the importance of systems, marketing, and balance in business ownership. She also shares how partnering with UCM Practice Growth Systems helped simplify her marketing, strengthen her systems, and create steady growth in her first year of practice. This episode is a heartfelt and practical look at what it really takes to build a purpose-driven upper cervical practice.
Medical errors related to misdiagnoses contribute to an estimated $870 billion in waste in the U.S. each year. Artificial intelligence...
In this episode, Ravi K. Bashyal, MD, Vice Chairman of Patient and Provider Experience at Endeavor Health and Clinical Assistant Professor at University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine, shares how patient centered culture, standardized pathways, and surgical specialization have built the busiest orthopedic hospital in Illinois. He discusses outpatient joint replacement, system wide growth, and why humility and human connection remain at the core of high performance care.
Your Guide To Living With Adhd: Managing Daily Life, Healthcare, And Intimacy Living with ADHD often means struggling with essential executive functions like focus and organization. Because symptoms manifest differently in each person, many people lack the specific systems and structures needed to manage their unique challenges. Our guest offers advice on various coping strategies and what to do when those structures fail. Guest: Cate Osborn, online mental health advocate, co-author, The ADHD Field Guide for Adults Host: Elizabeth Westfield Producer: Kristen Farrah. From Doctor To Patient: Lessons In Self-Advocacy From A Physician Dr. Sylvia Owusu-Ansah's life took a turn when a routine medical screening became anything but. Despite her professional expertise, she still had to navigate the frightening transition from provider to patient. Owusu-Ansah explains how she's using her story to show others how to self-advocate when navigating the healthcare system. Guest: Dr. Sylvia Owusu-Ansah, pediatric emergency medicine physician, assistant professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, cancer patient 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.
More than 25 years after To Err Is Human put patient safety on the national agenda, the crisis persists. The WHO estimates that 1 in 10 patients worldwide experiences harm during medical care, and half of it is preventable. And yet one foundational factor remains overlooked: the well-being of the people delivering care. With more than half of nurses reporting burnout and hundreds of thousands expected to leave the profession, the workforce crisis and the patient safety crisis are now one and the same. In this Insight from Episode 123: Safer Together | The Architecture of a Movement, Donald Berwick, MD, MPP, FRCP, President Emeritus and Senior Fellow at IHI and former Administrator of CMS, and Patricia McGaffigan, RN, Vice President at IHI and President of the Certification Board for Professionals in Patient Safety, make the case that healthcare must look beyond its own walls, drawing on lessons from aviation and other industries, to build cultures where psychological safety, dignity, and the freedom to speak up are the foundation of safe care. Not sentiment but essential reality.
L'IA va-t-elle remplacer votre médecin ? 230 millions de personnes utilisent déjà ChatGPT pour leur santé chaque semaine. Dans cet épisode, on décrypte la grande offensive santé d'OpenAI, Amazon et des géants de la tech — et ce que ça change vraiment pour les patients, les médecins et le système de santé.Au programme : ChatGPT Health, les World Models d'AMI Labs, Insilico Medicine, les capteurs d'ondes cérébrales, les lunettes connectées, la neurostimulation anti-Alzheimer, et la question qui divise — peut-on faire de ChatGPT son psy ?===========================
In this powerful and science-forward episode of the Tick Boot Camp Podcast, host Matt Sabatello sits down with Amy Proal, PhD, a leading microbiologist whose work is reshaping how the medical community understands chronic Lyme disease, post-treatment Lyme disease (PTLD), ME/CFS, and Long COVID. Dr. Proal brings a rare combination of deep scientific expertise, lived experience with chronic illness, and real-world clinical integration, offering listeners clarity on why so many patients remain sick long after standard treatment ends — and what science is finally doing about it.
Send a textAbout Dr. MillerDr. Miller owns and practices at Grand Eye Care in the greater Chicago area. His mission: to flip the script on childhood myopia. With a mix of passion, innovation, and heart, he leads an immersive myopia management program dedicated to helping kids see better—now and for the rest of their lives.
Til Death… or 20 Grand Do Us Part?
This week we speak with Professor James Cnota of Cincinnati Children's Hospital about a recent report he co-authored from the SVR trial regarding the impact of tricuspid regurgitation (TR) on outcomes in hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS). How common is TR seen in the HLHS patient and how does this change over time after surgical palliations? Is there an optimal time to intervene on the tricuspid valve in this patient group? What does the future hold for tricuspid surgical interventions? Dr. Cnota has the answers this week. doi: 10.1007/s00246-025-04122-x
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.
Dr. Halley Alexander and Dr. Abel Sandmann discuss seizure rates and risk factors in patients with cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) during long-term follow-up without CCM intervention. Show citation: Sandmann ACA, Vandertop WP, White PM, Verbaan D, Coutinho JM, Al-Shahi Salman R. Seizures and Epilepsy in Patients With Untreated Cerebral Cavernous Malformations: A Prospective, Population-Based Cohort Study. Neurology. 2025;105(11):e214387. doi:10.1212/WNL.0000000000214387 Show transcript: Dr. Halley Alexander: Hi, this is Halley Alexander with today's Neurology Minute. I'm here with Abel Sandmann from Amsterdam University Medical Center, and we just finished recording a full-length podcast about some exciting findings related to cerebral cavernous malformations and the risk of seizures and epilepsy. Abel, can you give our listeners a rundown of the most exciting findings and how it can change practice? Dr. Abel Sandmann: In our paper, we show that patients with a cerebral cavernous malformation who have a first unprovoked seizure should be diagnosed with epilepsy and considered for anti-seizure medication, as most of them achieve long-term seizure freedom with medical therapy alone. These findings are based on a prospective population-based cohort study in which we analyze long-term follow-up and assess the rates and risk factors for: one, a first-ever epileptic seizure; two, seizure recurrence to evaluate the updated ILAE definition of epilepsy; and three, seizure freedom over two years and five years among patients with epilepsy. We found that among patients who had never experienced a seizure before, the 10-year risk of a first-ever seizure was only 6%. This supports current recommendations against prophylactic anti-seizure medication in patients who are incidentally diagnosed with a cerebral cavernous malformation. However, following a first unprovoked seizure, the 10-year risk of recurrence was 80%, which exceeds the 60% threshold defined by the ILAE. This justifies diagnosing epilepsy after the first and provoked seizure in this population. Given that the risk of recurrence was lower in patients treated with anti-seizure medication after the first seizure, this supports early initiation of therapy, although these treatment analyses were non-randomized and should be interpreted cautiously. Most patients who met the definition of epilepsy became two year and five years seizure-free with medical management alone. But some patients with cerebral cavernous malformations develop medically intractable seizures and might benefit from surgical treatments. Dr. Halley Alexander: Excellent. Thank you so much, Abel. You can find the full-length podcast, which is available now on the Neurology Podcast, or you can also find the full article in Neurology at neurology.org, or in the December 2025 print issue. As always, thanks for tuning in for today's Neurology Minute.
Support your health journey with our private practice! Explore comprehensive lab testing, functional assessments, and expert guidance for your wellness journey. Find exclusive offers for podcast listeners at nutritionwithjudy.com/podcast. _____**Podcast Update: It looks like I accidentally switched the terms: absolute risk reduction vs relative risk reduction. Regardless of the terminologies, the point was to see what funny games statisticians will use for marketing pharma drugs (and this happens in a lot of types of marketing...) To see a clear write-up of the absolute risk vs relative risk, you can read an article I shared about it: https://www.nutritionwithjudy.com/old-newsletter/why-statins-dont-stop-heart-attacks/In this episode, I walk through why statins are prescribed (especially with LDL above 190 mg/dL or with type 2 diabetes), and I explain how statin marketing can make the benefits look bigger than they really are by using relative risk instead of absolute risk. I also cover major concerns I see with statins, including nutrient depletion (like CoQ10) and potential impacts on muscle function over time. Make sure to listen to the full interview to learn more.The statin numbers (the what, why)Lipitor ad: relative vs absolute risk reductionStatin efficacy studies (and risks)Statins reduce nutrient status (including CoQ10)Risks of low cholesterolWhat to test and track for heart diseaseNew book cover _____EPISODE RESOURCES Join the NewsletterCarnivore Diet Cholesterol Labs Cardiovascular Blood TestStatin Use Is Associated With a Decline in Muscle Function and Mass Over Time (PubMed)Should You Take a Statin for Your High Cholesterol? (Yale Medicine)Lipitor Ad Highlighting Relative Risk Reduction (36%) vs Absolute Risk (3% vs 2%) (ResearchGate Figure)Atorvastatin Decreases Blood Coenzyme Q10 in Patients at Risk for CVD and Stroke (JAMA/Arch Neurol)Lipitor: Why It Remains the Best-Selling Drug in Pharmaceutical History (Accio)Heart Statistics: Cardiovascular Disease Statistics for the UK (British Heart Foundation)WHO Mortality Database (World Health Organization)Robert Jarvik (Artificial Heart Developer) (Wikipedia)Pfizer, Lipitor (atorvastatin calcium) print advertisement featuring Robert Jarvik, ca. 2006–2008.____FIND JUDY CHO⛑️Work with Us: https://empowerfunctionalhealth.com/services/
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.