Podcasts about pediatric emergency

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Best podcasts about pediatric emergency

Latest podcast episodes about pediatric emergency

Aging Powerfully with Melissa Grelo
42. The Doc Talk Podcast Hosts Answer Your Questions!

Aging Powerfully with Melissa Grelo

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2024 59:30


Their new show is called The Doc Talk Podcast and they're here to answer your questions. Emergency Physician and Pediatric Emergency doctor, Dr. Shazma Mithani and Family Physician, Menopause Specialist, Sexual Health Specialist and medical contributor on The Social, Dr. Sheila Wijayasinghe, answer your questions about everything from menopause, to how to find a doctor, to thinning hair, to heart disease in women, to colon cancer screening and so much more.  Episode supported by @felixhealthca (felixforyou.ca)!Find Melissa Grelo on Instagram @MelissaGrelo and @AgingPowerfullyWithMG, or on her website AgingPowerfullyWithMelissaGrelo.com. Find clips of the show on YouTube @MelissaGrelo. Producer: Melissa Grelo. Audio/Video Producer and Editor: Drew Garner. 

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast
Dr. Jinsy A. Jacob, Pediatric Emergency Physician and Healthcare Investor

Becker’s Healthcare Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2024 10:39


In this episode, Dr. Jinsy A. Jacob, Pediatric Emergency Physician and Healthcare Investor, shares her journey from medicine to innovation, focusing on empowering healthcare workers and patients. She highlights emerging trends in health tech, the rise of clinician-led startups, and her vision for fostering creativity and sustainability in the healthcare ecosystem.

The Cass Health Podcast
Get to Know Maria Hoegh, ARNP

The Cass Health Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2024 11:41


Send us a textGet to know Maria Hoegh, ARNP!Maria Hoegh is a board-certified Family Nurse Practitioner. She received her Doctor of Nursing Practice from Creighton University in 2021, and recently moved from Utah where she was practicing in a Family Medicine clinic.Prior to the start of her career as a Nurse Practitioner, Maria's nursing career began in 2013 after graduating with her BSN from Clarkson College. She has worked as a Pediatric Emergency nurse at Blank Children's Hospital, and she also worked at the University of Iowa's Children's Hospital in both the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit and Pediatric Hematology/Oncology and Medical Surgical Unit.During this mini-episode, we asked Maria about:Why she chose to become a nurse practitionerWhat she wants her patients to knowHer special interests in medicine Her hobbiesHer family & petsand more! Listen now to this short, fun episode to get to know Maria Hoegh, ARNP.

Speaking of Kids...
#19 - Pediatric Emergency Care Systems Are Failing Our Kids & It's Costing Their Lives with Phyllis Rabinowitz

Speaking of Kids...

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 38:33


In this episode, hosts Bruce Lesley and Messellech Looby chat with Phyllis Rabinowitz, Co-Founder and Co-President of the R Baby Foundation. Phyllis co-founded the R Baby Foundation with her husband, Andrew, after the loss of their nine day old daughter, Rebecca Eva, due to a misdiagnosis in the emergency room. The R Baby Foundation is the first and only foundation dedicated to making sure every emergency room is prepared to give babies and children lifesaving care. Phyllis emphasizes the importance for emergency care to be tailored to the needs of babies and children. Each year, 1400 children pass away in emergency rooms because of the lack of pediatric preparedness. Phyllis recommends that parents research the emergency room to see if have pediatric care coordinators and urges policy changes that would ensure better training, staffing, equipment, research, and education to improve the delivery of emergency care and treatment to children.Learn more about pediatric emergency room care: Blog: Children Are Not Little Adults: Ensuring Adequate Pediatric Emergency Care in U.S. Hospitals, By Bruce Lesley Resource: Sponsor Your ER, by The R Baby Foundation App: find ER now Article: Children Are Dying in Ill-Prepared Emergency Rooms Across America, By Liz Essley Whyte and Melanie Evans Follow the R Baby Foundation on LinkedIn, Facebook, X, Instagram, and YouTube. To join the conversation, follow First Focus on Children on Instagram, LinkedIn, and Twitter. Send us comments on thoughts via email: SpeakingOfKids@firstfocus.orgFind us on Twitter/X: @SpeakingOfKids, @BruceLesley and @First_FocusWant to be a voice for kids? Become an Ambassador for Children here. To support our work and this podcast, please consider donating to First Focus on Children here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Soul Pitt Media Health & Business Report with Craig Dawson
#74 | Interview with Dr. Sylvia Owusu-Ansah, Board Certified Pediatrician / Pediatric Emergency Physician, UPMC

Soul Pitt Media Health & Business Report with Craig Dawson

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 32:01


Soul Pitt Media Health & Business Report Episode #74 | Interview with Dr. Sylvia Owusu-Ansah, Board Certified Pediatrician / Pediatric Emergency Physician, UPMC Join Craig as he discusses with Dr. Ansah: 1) Dr. Ansah, growing up did you always envision yourself as a physician? 2) Dr. Ansah, in your journey to become a physician, your stepfather played a strategic role. Can you talk to our listeners on how he influenced your journey? 3) Dr. Ansah, what advice can you give our younger listeners who may want to become the next Dr. Ansah? Additionally, make sure you listen to our Community Calendar (brought to you by Pittsburgh Regional Transit, PRT) with Debbie Norrell at the end of each of our interviews so you can keep up with what's going on in our Pittsburgh region. Soul Pitt Media's Health & Business Report is sponsored by UPMC, Pittsburgh Regional Transit (PRT), Duquesne Light Co., ThermoFisher Scientific, Pennsylvania's Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), and PA Unites Against COVID.

The Pediatric Lounge
136 The Day In The Life of A Pediatrician in Ecuador

The Pediatric Lounge

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024 27:17


A Pediatrician's Journey and Impact: Dr. Morales' StoryA podcast episode where the hosts welcome Dr. Ricardo Morales, a pediatrician from Quito, Ecuador, discussing 'A Day in the Life of a Pediatrician'. Dr. Morales shares his personal journey to becoming a pediatrician, influenced by his mother's cancer diagnosis when he was a child. He explains his choice of pediatrics, driven by his love for children and desire to be their 'superhero'. The conversation covers the challenges and differences of medical education and pediatric residency in Ecuador compared to other countries, highlighting the limited opportunities and deficiencies within the Ecuadorian health system. Dr. Morales also discusses his efforts to improve pediatric care and his involvement in health education through his Spanish podcast, SOS Pediatra, aimed at empowering parents and addressing myths around child care. Additionally, the script touches on the socioeconomic struggles faced by families in Ecuador, the influence of the pharmaceutical industry on child health practices, and the importance of conveying accurate, evidence-based information to the community.00:00 Welcome to the Podcast: Introducing Dr. Ricardo Morales00:23 A Glimpse into Dr. Morales' Background and Ecuador01:02 Why Pediatrics? Dr. Morales' Personal Journey03:22 Pediatric Residency in Quito: Challenges and Differences05:50 Navigating the Ecuadorian Health System: Insights and Struggles12:52 The Journey from Spain to Pediatric Emergency in Quito19:01 Empowering Parents: The Mission Behind SOS Pediatra Podcast23:12 Social Media for Health Advocacy: A New Frontier25:53 Closing Thoughts and AcknowledgementsSupport the show

Prehospital Care Research Forum Journal Club
Revealing the Role of Prehospital Pain Management in Pediatric Emergency Care

Prehospital Care Research Forum Journal Club

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2023 58:12


Pain management is vital to providing comprehensive care to injured children, and the decisions made in the prehospital setting profoundly impact our pediatric patients' overall experience and outcome. However, little is known about how hospital care is impacted by prehospital pain management in pediatric patients.

This Might Be Helpful
Dr Bonni Goldstein | Ep. 53

This Might Be Helpful

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 28, 2023 51:17


Join the Community Sign up to ‘A Helpful Newsletter' In this episode, Cameron Rosin is joined by Dr Bonni Goldstein. Bonni Goldstein, MD is a physician who specializes in cannabis medicine in Los Angeles, California. She specialized in Pediatric Emergency medicine for years before witnessing the amazing benefits of this treatment in an ill loved one. Since then, she has successfully treated thousands of adult and pediatric patients with cannabis. Dr. Goldstein was awarded "2017 Medical Professional of the Year" by Americans for Safe Access. Get Bonni's book: Cannabis is Medicine Get Cameron's guided meditation package: Meditations Follow Cameron on Instagram: Instagram  Follow Cameron on TikTok: TikTok Subscribe to Cameron's Youtube: Youtube For more information visit https://stan.store/cameronrosin.

Art of Emergency Nursing
AOEN: Empowering Rural Communities, With Sara

Art of Emergency Nursing

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2023 34:46


In this episode, Kevin has a great conversation with Sara Daykin, DNP, RN, CNEcl, CPEN, TCRN, an experienced pediatric emergency nurse and nursing educator.  Together, they delve into the pressing issue of limited access to quality pediatric education faced by rural emergency nurses. Dr. Daykin shares her team's ingenious solution: leveraging technology to bridge the education gap and significantly improve pediatric readiness in rural New Mexico. Tune in to discover how innovative approaches can make a transformative impact on healthcare education and patient outcomes. Follow us on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Art-of-Emergency-Nursing-276898616569046/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJTnz4phtCTjojTIDJo2afA?view_as=subscriber Twitter: @AoenPodcast Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/artofemergencynursing/ To support the show: Leave an honest review on iTunes. Your ratings and reviews greatly contribute to the success of the podcast, and I appreciate each and every one of them. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, or your preferred podcast platform to never miss an episode. Thank you for being a part of our AOEN community!

OPENPediatrics
"Sepsis Guidelines for Early Recognition, Resuscitation, and Management: Global Perspectives"

OPENPediatrics

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2023 56:53


For World PICU Day on May 12, 2023, The World Federation of Pediatric Intensive and Critical Care Societies (WFPICCS) organized a panel discussion with regional speakers discussing Sepsis guidelines for early recognition, resuscitation, and management: Global perspectives. The panelists provided a brief summary of: • Their participation in the development of the implementation of guidelines for use in facilities for either recognition, resuscitation or management of sepsis. • ONE success in either the development or implementation of sepsis guidelines in their institution. • ONE challenge/ failure in either the development or implementation of sepsis guidelines in their institutions. Introduction: Brenda Morrow, PhD, BSc Physiotherapist/Professor Department of Paediatrics University of Cape Town (UCT) Cape Town, South Africa Moderator: Mark Ansermino MBBCh, MMed, MSC, FFA (SA), FRCPC Investigator, BC Children's Hospital Director, Centre for International Child Health, BC Children's Hospital Vancouver, BC, Canada Panelists: John Adabie Appiah MBChB, MWACP, MGCPS, Cert. Crit. Care, MPhil Crit. Care (UCT) Senior Specialist and Founding Head of PICU Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital Kumasi, Ghana Werther Bruno de Carvalho MD, PhD, FCCM Professor of Pediatric Intensive Care/Neonatology Department of Pediatrics Faculty of Medicine - University of São Paulo São Paulo, Brazil Ener Çağri Dinleyici MD, PhD Eskisehir Osmangazi University Faculty of Medicine Department of Pediatrics Eskisehir, Turkey Cintia Johnston RRT, MsC, PhD Physiotherapist Clinical Research Assistent Professor of Neonatology and Intensive Care Pediatrics Department Medical University of São Paulo - FMUSP São Paulo, Brazil Teresa Bleakly Kortz MD, MS, PhDc Pediatrician and Assistant Clinical Professor, Division of Pediatric Critical Care Associate Professor of Clinical Pediatrics in Critical Care Medicine Affiliate Faculty of the Institute for Global Health Sciences Co-director of the Pediatric Global Health Pathway,UCSF San Francisco, California, USA Suchitra Ranjit MD, FCCM Head of the Department of Pediatric Emergency and Critical Care Apollo Children's Hospital Chennai, India Gerri Sefton PhC, MSc, BSc, RGN/RSCN Advanced Nurse Practitioner/PICU Alder Hey Children's Hospital Liverpool, England, United Kingdom

Meet the Mentor with Dr. Bill Dorfman
Transforming Pediatric Emergency Care with Dr. Marianne Gausche-Hill

Meet the Mentor with Dr. Bill Dorfman

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2023 31:14


When Dr. Marianne Gausche-Hill was denied her childhood dream of being an astronaut, she redirected her passion for problem solving and adventure into a career in Emergency Medicine, where she courageously tackled medical stereotypes and worked to save the lives of critically ill children around the world. In this episode of Meet the Mentor® with Dr. BIll Dorfman, you will be able to: 1. Discover the significance of emergency department pediatric readiness guidelines in the United States. 2. Uncover the critical role of teamwork, communication, and mentorship in enhancing healthcare outcomes. 3. Explore personal and professional life balance strategies for women in the medical field. 4. Delve into facing and rising above stereotypes in careers dominated by men. 5. Identify avenues for personal and professional growth through medical practice and community engagement. About the Guest Dr. Marianne Gausche-Hill is a highly respected medical expert in emergency medicine and pediatric emergency care. As Medical Director for the Los Angeles County Emergency Medical Services Agency and a Professor at the David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, she has dedicated her life to improving emergency care for children. With a passion for problem-solving and a keen eye for detail, Dr. Gausche-Hill has developed national pediatric readiness guidelines that have saved countless lives. She has also worked internationally, collaborating with healthcare professionals in countries like Iraq to improve pediatric care. The key moments in this episode are: 00:03:00 - Early Life and Career Choices 00:11:44 - Improving Pediatric Emergency Care 00:15:50 - National Pediatric Readiness Project Assessment 00:17:50 - Mentorship and Collaboration 00:16:59 - Medical Aid in Iraq 00:18:23 - ER Stories 00:22:05 - Balancing Family and Career 00:24:03 - Reflections on a Lifetime in Medicine 00:28:55 - Looking Ahead For more information about the LEAP Foundation, go to LEAPFoundation.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

JAMA Pediatrics Editors' Summary: On research in medicine, science, and clinical practice related to children’s health and
Outcomes of Singleton Births Following Single- vs Double-Embryo Transfer; Mental Health Revisits at Pediatric Emergency Departments

JAMA Pediatrics Editors' Summary: On research in medicine, science, and clinical practice related to children’s health and

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 15:53


JAMA Pediatrics Editors' Summary by Dimitri A. Christakis, MD, MPH, Editor in Chief, and Alison A. Galbraith, MD, MPH, Associate Editor, for the February 6, 2023, issue. Related Content: Mental Health Revisits at US Pediatric Emergency Departments Obstetric and Perinatal Outcomes of Singleton Births Following Single- vs Double-Embryo Transfer in Sweden

SAEM Podcasts
AEM: Racial Differences in Low-Value Pediatric Emergency Care in General Emergency Departments

SAEM Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2022 17:42


Host: Dr. Gita S. Pensa, MD We discuss this paper with first author Dr. Joyce Li, MD, MPH. They sought to evaluate racial and ethnic differences in pediatric patients across a broad range of low-value imaging studies in the general ED setting.

AEMEarlyAccess's podcast
AEM Early Access 62: Racial differences in low-value pediatric emergency care in general emergency departments

AEMEarlyAccess's podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2022 17:42


We discuss this paper with first author Dr Joyce Li. They sought to evaluate racial and ethnic differences in pediatric patients across a broad range of low-value imaging studies in the general ED setting.

BCEN & Friends
Pediatric Emergency Care .. There's an App for that? (Laura Kemerling)

BCEN & Friends

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2022 22:44


This episode of BCEN and Friends lets you meet our friend Laura Kemerling. Laura is a registered nurse and works for the Children's Mercy Critical Care Transport team in Kansas City, Missouri. She graduated from Missouri Western State University in 2003 with a Bachelor of Science in Nursing and began her nursing career in the operating room at Children's Mercy Hospital, later transitioning to adult ICU nursing for several years. Laura returned to pediatric care in 2010 to work for the Transport team. Upon completing a Master of Science in Nursing Education from Benedictine University in 2018, she began clinical instructing for BSN students. Her current full-time role focuses on Transport and EMS relations, outreach education, and caring for critically ill neonatal, pediatric, and maternal fetal patients in the out-of-hospital setting. Laura maintains a national certification in neonatal and pediatric transport through the NCC and she is an active member of the Missouri and Kansas Emergency Medical Services for Children (EMSC), as well as the Air and Surface Transport Nurses Association (ASTNA). She is an instructor for the Pediatric Advanced Transport Course and the S.T.A.B.L.E. Program, and has hosted multiple webinars, symposiums, and workshops focused on evidence-based pediatric emergency care in the transport environment. Michael Dexter and Mark Eggers talk with Laura, about her role as the coordinator for Children's Mercy Critical Care Transport program. What an amazing story. Listen as Laura tells us about the app that was developed for pediatric emergency care, how it came to be and what the driving factors were behind it! This episode is called, Pediatric Emergency Care .. There's an App for that? Laura Kemerling can be found on LinkedIn and Facebook Website: https://www.childrensmercy.org/health-care-providers/transport/outreach-and-education/ Social media: LinkedIn:       https://www.linkedin.com/in/laura-kemerling Facebook:      Laura Kemerling

Back2BasicsMode
Neuroscience of Virtual Reality | SE2/EP063 | Back2Basics

Back2BasicsMode

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2022 26:57


 Eric Ayers is  Eric Ayers is An optimist and thought leader with a passion for inspiring all to reach an understanding of personal potential. Bridging the educational gaps in healthcare through an amazing VR platform within hospitals and universities.With over 17 years of Nursing experience, primarily in Pediatric Emergency, before pivoting into the Healthcare Innovation and Simulation realm, Eric fell in love with the idea of learning through experience. An idea that he describes as The Toddler Approach.  Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/back2basicsmode?fan_landing=true)

AEMEarlyAccess's podcast
AEM Early Access 60: Intubation practice and outcomes among pediatric emergency departments: A report from National Emergency Airway Registry for Children (NEAR4KIDS)

AEMEarlyAccess's podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 22:35


Tracheal intubation (TI) practice across pediatric emergency departments (EDs) has not been comprehensively reported. We aim to describe TI practice and outcomes in pediatric EDs in contrast to those in intensive are units (ICUs) and use the data to identify quality improvement targets.

Healthcare and Higher
38. Lu De Souza - Vice President & Chief Medical Officer at Cerner Corporation

Healthcare and Higher

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 79:17


Dr. Lu de Souza is the Vice President and Chief Medical Officer for Cerner Corporation. She heads their largest physician group and leads a team responsible for helping health organizations leverage their EHR and health IT to improve patient care, clinician engagement, and clinical outcomes. Lu joined Cerner in 2011 and has held various leadership roles including Physician Executive, Senior Director, and Chief Medical Informatics Officer. Prior to this, she served as a Pediatric Emergency Physician at both Brandon Regional Hospital and Lakeland Regional Medical Center as well as Director of Pediatric Emergency for TeamHealth. Lu received her Doctorate degree in Medicine from Wright State University and is a Fellow of the American Medical Informatics Association. She is passionate about advancing healthcare information systems and applying learnings from different healthcare systems around the globe. Learn more about Lu at https://atchainternational.com/healthcare-and-higher-podcast-ep38-lu-de-souza/ Are you a healthcare professional or healthcare executive looking to advance your career, build a better brand, or create a leadership legacy? Visit us at https://atchainternational.com to learn how we can help. Connect with Iqbal on: - Linked at https://www.linkedin.com/in/iqbalatcha/ - Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/iqbalatcha1 - Twitter at https://twitter.com/IqbalAtcha1 Join us next week for another exciting episode of the "Healthcare and Higher" podcast! #HealthcareAndHigher #IqbalsInterviews Song Credits: "Life Is A Dream" by Michael Ramir C. "Stay With Me" by Michael Ramir C. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/iqbal-atcha/support

Back2BasicsMode
Virtual Reality for Healthcare | SE2/EP020 | Back2Basics

Back2BasicsMode

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 32:42


Eric Ayers is  Eric Ayers is An optimist and thought leader with a passion for inspiring all to reach an understanding of personal potential. Bridging the educational gaps in healthcare through an amazing VR platform within hospitals and universities.With over 17 years of Nursing experience, primarily in Pediatric Emergency, before pivoting into the Healthcare Innovation and Simulation realm, Eric fell in love with the idea of learning through experience. An idea that he describes as The Toddler Approach. Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/back2basicsmode?fan_landing=true)

EM Pulse Podcast™
It could happen on my shift

EM Pulse Podcast™

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2022 34:29


General EM physicians are well trained to care for kids, and most of us care for them regularly in the ED. Usually it's for common things like viral upper respiratory infections or playground injuries. But every once in a while, a critically ill or injured child comes in. Are you ready? Is your ED ready? Do you have tiny endotracheal tubes and nurses who can place IVs in those tiny veins? What else do we need to do to be “peds ready”? We're glad you asked. In this episode, we talk with national leaders in the field of pediatric emergency medicine and pediatric emergency readiness. Listen to learn more about what it means to be peds ready and why it's so important! Is your ED peds ready? Have questions or want to learn more? Find us on social media, @empulsepodcast, on email empulsepodcast@gmail.com, or through our website, ucdavisem.com. We're working on an episode on what it's like to be a woman in emergency medicine. We'd be honored if you'd share your story? Contact us as above, or leave your story on a brief voicemail at 951-251-4804  (don't worry, we'll edit it to make it sound smooth!).  ***Please rate us and leave us a review on iTunes! It helps us reach more people.*** Hosts: Dr. Julia Magaña, Associate Professor of Pediatric Emergency Medicine at UC Davis Dr. Sarah Medeiros, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine at UC Davis Guests: Dr. Marianne Gausche-Hill, Medical Director for the LA County EMS Agency, Professor of Clinical Emergency Medicine and Pediatrics at UCLA and Harbor-UCLA, Senior Consultant to the EIIC, and member of the steering committee of the National Pediatric Readiness Project Dr. Kate Remick, Pediatric Emergency and EMS Physician, Professor at the Dell Medical School at the University of Texas, Co-Director if the EIIC, and San Marco Hays County Medical Director Resources: PedsReady.org EMSC Innovation and Improvement Center Pediatric Readiness Project Toolkit NPRP assessment achieves 71% response rate! Moore B, Shah MI, Owusu-Ansah S, Gross T, Brown K, Gausche-Hill M, Remick K, Adelgais K, Lyng J, Rappaport L, Snow S, Wright-Johnson C, Leonard JC; AMERICAN ACADEMY OF PEDIATRICS COMMITTEE ON PEDIATRIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE AND SECTION ON EMERGENCY MEDICINE EMS SUBCOMMITTEE; AMERICAN COLLEGE OF EMERGENCY PHYSICIANS EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES COMMITTEE; EMERGENCY NURSES ASSOCIATION PEDIATRIC COMMITTEE; NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES PHYSICIANS STANDARDS AND CLINICAL PRACTICE COMMITTEE; NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF EMERGENCY MEDICAL TECHNICIANS EMERGENCY PEDIATRIC CARE COMMITTEE. Pediatric Readiness in Emergency Medical Services Systems. Pediatrics. 2020 Jan;145(1):e20193307. doi: 10.1542/peds.2019-3307. PMID: 31857380. Ames SG, Davis BS, Marin JR, L. Fink EL, Olson LM, Gausche-Hill M, Kahn JM. Emergency Department Pediatric Readiness and Mortality in Critically Ill Children. Pediatrics. 2019;144(3):e20190568. Pediatrics. 2020 May;145(5):e20200542. doi: 10.1542/peds.2020-0542. Erratum for: Pediatrics. 2019 Sep;144(3): PMID: 32354750; PMCID: PMC8190968. *** Thank you to the UC Davis Department of Emergency Medicine for supporting this podcast and to Orlando Magaña at OM Audio Productions for audio production services.

The Sim Cafe~
The Sim Cafe~ An Interview with Eric Ayers

The Sim Cafe~

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2021 29:37 Transcription Available


With over 17 years of Nursing experience, primarily in Pediatric Emergency, before pivoting into the Healthcare Innovation and Simulation realm, Eric fell in love with the idea of learning through experience. An idea that he describes as The Toddler Approach. Eric is an optimist and thought leader with a passion for inspiring all to reach an understanding of true personal potential. Bridging the educational gaps in healthcare through various modalities, including an amazing VR platform and Just in Time Training tools, to name a few, align with his passion by empowering staff to be co-creators of their own education. Leveraging his Healthcare Education background with his MBA in Healthcare Administration, his focus is on adding value to the organization by illuminating value within the employees. An idea that generates positive cultural shifts thereby creating positive organizational, employee and customer outcomes. He is a husband, a father, an innovator, a VR enthusiast, a simulationist, a writer and a lover of both possibility and humanity. It is his intention to change the world through shifting perspectives, an idea he owes to his beautiful and amazing wife, Jennifer.

Stethoscopes to Swaddles Podcast
Toddler Safety and Everything You Didn't Know About the Pediatric Emergency Room

Stethoscopes to Swaddles Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2021 68:37


This interview is with Dr. Nkeiru Orajiaka, an ER Pediatrician who shares tips on how to keep your kids healthy and safe! Her instagram is @dr_norajiaka Her website is drnkeiru.com Please enjoy this interview and join us next week! Trigger warning for discussion of SA in the last third of the episode. Please take good care of yourself, you're doing a great job Mama, see you next week!

Practicing
Samir Shaheen-Hussain: Decolonizing Medicine

Practicing

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2021 49:28


Sam talks to Pediatric Emergency physician Samir Shaheen-Hussain about medical colonialism, physician-enabled violence against Indigenous children, and his journey as an activist. Samir is the author of “Fighting for a Hand to Hold: Confronting Medical Colonialism Against Indigenous Children in Canada” (McGill-Queen's University Press, 2020). ***Show Notes:CLARIFICATION: Samir mentions working in Oji-Cree communities during his experience in Sioux Lookout as a medical trainee. The Sioux Lookout First Nations Health Authority serves 33 First Nations, some of which are Oji-Cree. Pikangikum, which Samir mentions, is an Ojibwe First Nation. https://www.slfnha.com/about-2/communities/Book website: www.fightingforahandtohold.caLancet review: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(21)01369-6/fulltext?rss=yesNew Scientist interview: https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2021/07/09/samir-shaheen-hussain-au-canada-le-colonialisme-a-tue-les-enfants-autochtones_6087723_3210.htmlLe Monde interview: https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2021/07/09/samir-shaheen-hussain-au-canada-le-colonialisme-a-tue-les-enfants-autochtones_6087723_3210.htmlNY Times article on unmarked residential school graves: https://www.nytimes.com/2021/06/26/world/canada/indigenous-residential-schools-grave.htmlTerminology:CEGEP = mandatory pre-university junior college in QuebecNunavik = homeland of the Inuit in present-day QuebecEeyou = what the Cree in present-day Quebec call themselvesMap of First Nations in Quebec: http://www.esaquebec.ca/communitiesSummary Report of the Quebec Viens Commission (to which Samir testified): https://www.cerp.gouv.qc.ca/fileadmin/Fichiers_clients/Rapport/Summary_report.pdfTruth & Reconciliation Commission of Canada: https://www.rcaanc-cirnac.gc.ca/eng/1450124405592/1529106060525***Recorded July 26, 2021Music: Mr Smith  https://freemusicarchive.org/music/mr-smithArt: Jeff Landman

Pediatric Emergency Playbook
Focus On: Pediatric Emergency Eye Exam

Pediatric Emergency Playbook

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2021 20:10


The Other Side of Weight Loss
How Cannabis & CBD Are Healing Everything From Chronic Pain to Anxiety with Dr. Bonni Goldstein

The Other Side of Weight Loss

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2021 61:03


Dr. Bonni Goldstein, is the Medical Director of Canna-Centers Wellness and Education, a California-based medical practice devoted to educating patients about the use of cannabis for serious and chronic medical conditions. After years of working in the specialty of Pediatric Emergency medicine, she developed an interest in the science of medical cannabis after witnessing its beneficial effects in an ill friend. Over the last 13 years she has evaluated thousands of patients for use of medical cannabis and is recognized as an expert in the clinical application of cannabis therapeutics. She has a special interest in treating children with intractable epilepsy, autism, cancer and other conditions. Her latest book, “Cannabis is Medicine: How Medical Cannabis and CBD are Healing Everything from Anxiety to Chronic Pain” was published in September 2020 In this episode; The history of marijuana use and safety - Understanding the endocannabinoid system inside your body -Endocannabinoid deficiency What is the point of the Endocannabinoid system in humans  CBD for arthritis and anxiety and many more ailments - How to find your dose and know if it is for you or not and more! http://www.bonnigoldsteinmd.com/ Buy your hormone test kit here! Take the Hormone Quiz and find out what is stopping you from losing weight.  Karen Martel, Certified Hormone Specialist & Transformational Nutrition Coach and weight loss expert.  Visit https://karenmartel.com/  Karen's Facebook Karen's Instagram  

Health Careers With Dr. Marn
Episode 55: A Day In The Life Of A Pediatric Emergency Medicine Physician With Nkeiruka Orajiaka

Health Careers With Dr. Marn

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2021 27:49


Seeing little children suffer from various medical emergencies can be a heart wrenching experience, but you don’t have the luxury of time to wallow in pity if you’re the pediatric emergency medicine physician on duty. Nkeiruka Orajiaka grapples with this reality every day. Born and raised in Nigeria, Nkeiruka has always been passionate about medicine and she especially likes working with children – a quality that she believes to be essential for anyone who is seeking to start a career in her field. Learn more about what a day in the life of a pediatric emergency medicine physician looks like as Nkeiruka gives us a detailed description in this conversation with Dr. Richard Marn. Plus, learn about Nkeiruka’s loftier goals in global medicine and her newly found path to explore her other passions.

EMS on AIR
S2:E19 - "EMS for Children – An interview with Dr. Samantha Mishra DO, MPH about the importance of being prepared for your next pediatric emergency." Recorded January 25, 2021

EMS on AIR

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2021 26:04


In this episode we’ll introduce you to Samantha Mishra DO, MPH. Dr. Mishra, or Sam as she prefers to be called, is the EMS for Children Coordinator for the State of Michigan Department of Health and Human Services. Sam is here to tell us what the EMS for Children Program is, what it does and how you can get prepared for your next pediatric emergency. Specifically, we’ll discuss the intent and purpose of the EMS for Children Program, as well as appreciate the importance of maintaining a state of readiness regarding pediatric emergencies. Finally, we’ll describe why it’s so important that one person from each and every EMS agency across the entire United States and its territories should complete the EMS for Children Program survey. The word survey can be tough to digest and see how it can be beneficial, but we’ll convince you that it’s worth your agencies time to get this one done. Visit EMSonAIR.com for the latest information, podcast episodes and other details. Follow us on Instagram @EMSOnAIR.Please keep emailing your questions, comments, feedback and episode ideas to the EMS on AIR Podcast team by email at QI@OCMCA.org. Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/emsonair?fan_landing=true)

The Cannabis Conversation | Medical Cannabis | CBD | Hemp
EPISODE #95 Medical Cannabis and Children with Dr. Bonni Goldstein, Physician, Medical Director and Author

The Cannabis Conversation | Medical Cannabis | CBD | Hemp

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2021 47:30


On this week's show we're joined with Dr Bonni Goldstein, Medical Director of Canna-Centers Wellness and Education - California-based medical practice devoted to educating patients about the use of cannabis for serious and chronic medical conditions. Bonni is also the author of ‘Cannabis Is Medicine'.In this episode, we discuss the role of medical cannabis in paediatric care, exploring its applications and protocols in autism, epilepsy and cancer. Bonni also shares some of her most recent clinical case studies.→ View full show notes and summary here: https://www.cannabis-conversation.com/blogs/episode95About BonnieAfter years of working in the specialty of Pediatric Emergency medicine, she developed an interest in the science of medical cannabis after witnessing its beneficial effects in an ill friend.  Over the last 14 years she has evaluated thousands of patients for use of medical cannabis and is recognised as an expert in the clinical application of cannabis therapeutics.  She has a special interest in treating children with intractable epilepsy, autism, cancer and other conditions. Her latest book, “Cannabis is Medicine: How Medical Cannabis and CBD are Healing Everything from Anxiety to Chronic Pain” was published in September 2020 by Little, Brown Spark.  Quotables‘When I went into this practice, I didn't tell anybody what I was doing… I kept it on the DL' 03:40‘The science is irrefutable' 05:50‘We cannot deny the existence of millions of people benefitting from this plant' 06:50ResourcesFollow Bonni on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bonnigoldsteinmdDr. Bonni Goldstein's Website: http://www.bonnigoldsteinmd.com/Buy Bonni's Book - Cannabis Is Medicine: https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B084RHRS66/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?_encoding=UTF8&btkr=1

RadioMD (All Shows)
Screening for Bullying, and How To Prevent It

RadioMD (All Shows)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020


One of the worries all parents have is that their kids might get bullied at school, on the sports field, or now even online. Bullying is an even bigger problem now as it takes on many forms and can happen really all the time on social media. One of the worries all parents have is that their kids might get bullied at school, on the sports field, or now even online. Bullying is an even bigger problem now as it takes on many forms and can happen really all the time on social media. Today we're talking to who works in Pediatric Emergency at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and has noticed a significant impact in bullying on her pediatric population there with manifestations including both medical and mental health effects.She talks with Melanie about why kids bully, what to do if your child is getting bullied, teaching our kids to intervene if they witness bullying, and keeping an eye out for cyberbullying.

Healthy Children
Screening for Bullying, and How To Prevent It

Healthy Children

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020


One of the worries all parents have is that their kids might get bullied at school, on the sports field, or now even online. Bullying is an even bigger problem now as it takes on many forms and can happen really all the time on social media. One of the worries all parents have is that their kids might get bullied at school, on the sports field, or now even online. Bullying is an even bigger problem now as it takes on many forms and can happen really all the time on social media. Today we're talking to who works in Pediatric Emergency at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, and has noticed a significant impact in bullying on her pediatric population there with manifestations including both medical and mental health effects.She talks with Melanie about why kids bully, what to do if your child is getting bullied, teaching our kids to intervene if they witness bullying, and keeping an eye out for cyberbullying.

The Podcast by KevinMD
A message from a pediatric emergency physician: Be kind

The Podcast by KevinMD

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2020 15:16


"As I read about Dr. Breen, saddened by the fact that we have been robbed of yet another young, promising, motivated physician, I am reminded that as bad as this pandemic is — and truly believe it is awful — when it gets better (and I have to believe that it will), we can’t forget. Because all the other things that have always been there but got shoved to the back burner by COVID will be there again. And no matter what kind of medicine you practice, there will be unique (and some not-so-unique) stressors. We are always expected to be kind to our patients. But my plea to you is to be kind to each other and, more importantly, yourself. You’re worth it. And I promise there is someone out there who understands what you are going through. Sometimes you just have to ask." Annalise Sorrentino is a board-certified pediatrician and pediatric emergency medicine physician. She can be reached at her website, on LinkedIn, and on Twitter @BlazerMD. She shares her story and discusses her KevinMD article, "A message for health care workers: Be kind to yourself." (https://www.kevinmd.com/blog/2020/08/a-message-for-health-care-workers-be-kind-to-yourself.html) This episode is sponsored by The Nuance Dragon Ambient eXperience (DAX). The Nuance DAX solution makes it possible to forget the tech-toggling and reduces documentation burdens no matter how or where care is being provided. (www.kevinmd.com/nuancedax)

Brown Skin Stories
This PharmaSista Started A Pediatric Emergency Pharmacy Position And Wants Everyone to BeeHIVE! (HIV Educated)

Brown Skin Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2020 44:09


Season 2 Episode 18 It's fair to call Andrea Dunn a renaissance woman. After finishing Pharmacy school at Howard University, she created her own Pediatric Emergency Pharmacy position. She also founded BeeHIVE, which stands for "Be HIV Educated." You're not gonna want to miss her story on this episode of Brown Skin Stories.  Connect with Dr. Dunn BeeHIVE LinkedIn PALS

UC San Francisco (Video)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

UC San Francisco (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

Health and Medicine (Audio)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

Health and Medicine (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

Mini Medical School for the Public (Video)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

Mini Medical School for the Public (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

UC San Francisco (Audio)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

UC San Francisco (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

Global Health (Audio)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

Global Health (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 35573]

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

University of California Audio Podcasts (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

Global Health (Video)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

Global Health (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 35573]

University of California Video Podcasts (Video)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

University of California Video Podcasts (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

Mini Medical School for the Public (Audio)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

Mini Medical School for the Public (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

Global Health (Video)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

Global Health (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 35573]

Health and Medicine (Video)
A Model for Curriculum Development for Low-Resource Settings: Improving Pediatric Emergency Care with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine

Health and Medicine (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2020 58:25


Lack of emergency medical care is an important factor contributing to lower survival rates of critically ill children in low resource settings, such as in Tanzania. Dr. Carol Chen works with the African Federation for Emergency Medicine working group of pediatric emergency medicine and global health experts to create freely available curriculum to train providers across the continent of Africa. Series: "Mini Medical School for the Public" [Show ID: 35573]

Friends of Kijabe
Mardi Steere

Friends of Kijabe

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2019 58:07


FULL EPISODE EPISODE SUMMARY Conversation with Dr. Mardi Steere about Mission, Leadership, Emergency Medicine and Ebenezer Moments from her 8+ years at Kijabe Hospital. EPISODE NOTES David - So today, I'm talking with Mardi Steere. This is a conversation that I don't want to have. It's about leaving about memories, and about Kijabe.And I don't want to have it because I don't want you guys ever to leave. That is the hardest part of life in Kijabe. But amazing people come and amazing people go and you're gonna do amazing things and stay in touch. First, why don't you give the introduction you gave at the medical team the other day. Mardi - So this is bittersweet for me as well. We came to Kijabe in 2011 and planned to stay for two years and here we are eight and a half years later, taking our leave. And in some ways, it's inevitable. You can't stay in a place forever. It's been a real opportunity for me to reflect. David - Let me pause you real quick there. So when you first came, who is we? And then what did you come to do? Mardi - In 2011, I was a young pediatric emergency physician with an engineering husband looking for a place where we felt like God had said "To whom much is given, much is required," and we knew our next step was to go in somewhere with the gifts and the passions and the exposure and education that we've been given. And so I came as a Pediatrician, and the hospital hadn't had a long-term pediatrician in quite a while. Jennifer Myhre had just joined the team in 2010 and my husband Andy is a civil engineer and project manager, and now, theological educator as well.We moved here with our then two-year-old and four-year-old to do whatever seemed to be next. David - That's amazing. So give the theological introduction to the Ebenezer. Mardi - It comes from first Samuel Chapter 7 verse 7-12, where there's a battle between the Philistines and the Israelites and Samuel lays a stone to God for being faithful and to remember what God has done. When Andy and I got married in 1998, actually, it was a scripture that was read at our wedding. And we were encouraged when these Ebenezer moments come, take stock of them, step back, and acknowledge what God has done . Those moments will be key moments in your marriage. As I was talking to the medical division the other day, I felt like it was just another reminder that, as we have our professional lives and we work in a place like Kijabe and we serve, it's really easy to get caught up day-to-day in the daily struggles that we all have - with life and death and bureaucracy and not enough money and not enough equipment and team dynamics and conflict. But there are these moments when we take a step back and we see what God has done. This hospital has been around for 100 years, and I've only been here for a little over eight of them, but there are so many moments where I look back on where we've come from - and the journey that we've been on - and I see these landmark moments of God intervening. David - How do you see the balance here between medical excellence and spiritual - I don't know if excellence is the right word - between medical excellence and spiritual excellence. I think the origins of medicine were very intertwined with the spiritual, but at least in Western medicine, it's very divorced and I feel like in some ways, what I see happening here is not taught in classrooms anywhere else. Mardi - This is one of those things that I am going to be taking with me for the rest of my life. I don't know who's listening to this, but Americans have a cultural Christianity where it's acceptable in medicine, I think, to ask medical questions and maybe you ask a spiritual question and saying God bless you and bless her heart, and praying for people is somewhat accepted but still it's a parallel track to medicine. In Australia, it's completely divorced. There's almost a cultural fear of discussing the spiritual in Australia, a very agnostic country. So to be a Christian in Australia, you have to make a choice. But then when you go to medical school, it's taught to you almost don't bring that in. This is a science, and one of the things that I love about Kijabe is that they are inextricably intertwined. There isn't a meeting that we start here without prayer. When I'm covering pediatrics, as a clinician, we start with team prayer and depending how busy things are, if you're trying to see 30 patients on rounds, you might pray for the room, as you start. We ask the parents how they're doing, and then we pray for the mom with her permission, and for the baby or the dad or whichever caregiver is there. We ask God to intervene, we ask God to give us wisdom, we ask him to be a part of the science. We ask him to be a part of the conversations. When it comes to the even bigger picture, when it comes to strategically planning the hospital, and our core values again - they're inextricably intertwined, and it's a gift. One thing that I'm gonna take with me as a leader and as a clinician, is that it is not difficult to ask anyone, "What is your world view and what is your spiritual worldview? Because all of us have one in Australia. That world view might be... "I don't believe there's a spiritual realm." That's so important to know. But what if the answer to that question is," I believe in God, but I don't see him doing anything." What an opportunity we miss. What if we have immigrants in our population in our community, and we don't ask them "What is your spiritual and cultural world view? What do you think is happening beneath the surface?" and we don't give someone an opportunity to say without derision, "I think I've been cursed" or "There is a generational problem in my family," and we don't open up the opportunity to intervene in a way that's holistic, much we miss by not intertwining the spiritual and the physical? The fact is every one of our communities has a spiritual world view, and shame on us if we don't explore it with them. David - Amen. It's fascinating here because before coming here, I thought of missions as giving. The longer I'm here, the more I think of it as receiving. When you stop and pray for a family, the encouragement received from those family members is huge. The trust and the love, and you do see people who come in the halls and you ask, "Why are you here?" "Because my doctor will pray for me." Mardi - So what's interesting to me is there are some conversations going on in medicine around the world right now about this "innovative new concept of Compassionomics." And really it's exactly what you're saying, it's not new and it's not innovative. I think that Compassionomics is our fearful way of re-exploring the spiritual. It's taking the time on rounds to say, "How are you doing as a family, how are we doing as a team," and to take the opportunity to draw comfort from each other. It comes from a spiritual foundation, that I think that we've lost, and I think a lot of it comes from burnout and from the way that medicine has become a business and a commodity. We're starting to re-explore through Compassionomics, and I pray through exploring the spiritual, the deeper side of medicine that around the world I think people really miss. David - Right on. Mardi - And if that's not reverse innovation, I don't know what is. David - It's fascinating, this space that Kijabe fills and how we think about it and how we talk about it. I use a phrase - World class healthcare in the developing world - but when I use that, I don't mean that I want Kijabe to be the big hospital in the big city in the West, because there are certain aspects that we don't want to lose. Yes, absolutely, it would be super-cool to be doing robotic surgery, and some of these wild technological things, but really I feel like what Kijabe excels at is not fancy and not glamorous. It fundamentals of medicine. I remember Evelyn Mbugua telling me this one time. I asked her, "What do you think about medicine in general?" "When I have a challenge or when I'm stuck on a patient, I go back to their history." It's fascinating that that's fascinating! Some of the basic fundamentals of medicine are practiced here, just looking at your patient and laying your hands on them and touching them and talking to them. A conversation is both a diagnostic tool and it's actually medicine. If the numbers are true, I know it's different from orthopedic surgery than for outpatient, but, if half of medicine is actually placebo, this stuff is really important to healing. And it's not anti-science. It actually is science to care about people. Mardi - It's interesting when you mentioned the placebo effect. I think that the placebo effect is considered as nothing, but it's not the placebo effect, is actually a real effect. It's that time and conversation and compassion, truly do bring healing and the point of a control trial is to see in a drug-do better than that. But the thing we're doing, already makes sense. It's interesting to me that medicine around the world is getting faster and faster and more and more advanced. Time is money. I think that around the world, we wanna save money in medicine, we wanna do more with what we have, but we're willing to sacrifice time, to make that happen. And why is that the first thing that goes? Burned-out physicians in high income countries, the thing that they love, is when they have to see more and more patients in less and less time because they know what they have to offer is beyond a drug, and beyond a diagnosis and beyond a referral and beyond a surgery. The one of my favorite phrases in medicine that I truly don't understand but want to spend the rest of my life working on it, is a "value-based care." I think to define value you have to define what we're offering. If value is time, then one of the things I think that Kijabe and mission hospitals can continue to pioneer the way in is, "how do we cut costs in other areas but refuse to sacrifice the cost of time and make sure that our impact is helpful for our patients but that also helps our team members and our clinicians receive the value that comes from being a part of a meaningful conversation. I think that's what patients want too. They don't want the robotics, they come to us because they're helpless vulnerable and afraid, and those are the things that we're treating. They trust what we tell them and if we don't have the time to build up that trust, we've lost a lot of the value that we offer. David - What have you seen change about team? You guys have been part of this big culture change process, but I think it's something that's started long before long before either of us. What do you see is the arc of Kijabe and the archive teamwork and the arc of culture? Mardi - So, Kenya is an incredibly multicultural and diverse country and Nairobi is high-powered and it's fast and it's a lot of white-collar and highly educated people and Kijabe is not so far from that. I think we operate more in a Nairobi mindset than a rural, small town mindset, but that's actually been a huge transition, I think, is going from presenting ourselves as a rural distant place to a part of a busy growing rapidly advancing system, and so that comes with leadership styles that become more open and more I guess, more modern in style. And so that's been the first big thing that I've just seen a huge jar over the part of the decade that I have been here is that leadership is no longer just top-down, enforced. It's participational leadership and I'm a massive fan of that. Leaders do have to make hard decisions and make things happen, but the input of the team has become a much, much higher priority in the last decade. And that's huge because our young highly-educated, highly-aspirational team members have got some great ideas and shame on us as leaders, if we don't take the time to listen to their approach to things. So that inclusive style of leadership has has been a huge arc. And then I think the other thing is just our changing generations, millennials are not confined to high-income countries. We have a young generation of people here who aren't gonna stay in the same job for 40 years like their parents or their grandparents did, and that's the same globally. And so we've had to question, over the last decade, how do you approach team members who are only gonna be here for a little while? Do you see that is, they're just gonna go, or do you get the maximum investment into them and benefit out of them in the time that they're gonna be here and then release them with your blessing? And so that's been something that's been huge for me is when we've got these new graduate nurses or lab staff radiographers, to not be on the fact that three years after they come to us, they go it's to say, "You know what, we've got these guys for three years, let's sow into them, let's get the most we can out of their recent education... Let's do what we can to up skill them with the people that we've got here and then let's release them all over Kenya to be great resources for health care across the country and across the region. David - I would say, for healthcare and for the gospel. I've been wrestling a lot with what does it mean for Kijabe is to be a mission hospital. I think the classic definition - I don't know if we define it as such, I don't often hear people say it out loud, but I think it's an unwritten thing - that what makes a Mission hospital a Mission Hospital, is that it cares for the poor. Hopefully on some level, or on a lot of levels, that will always be true at Kijabe. But I'm really excited about the possibility of what you just described, that if these guys are here for three or four years and we are to training them with the attitude that they are going out as Christian leaders and as missionaries to these parts of Kenya that honestly, you and I will never touch. And a lot of the places I've never even heard of. But if we're equipping them to be the light that's the huge opportunity that Kijabe has to be missional. Mardi - This is a much, much longer podcast, but defining mission is really really important, isn't it? I think that there's a couple of things that stick out to me as you're talking and one is that, I think mission has a history that can be associated with colonialism. And one thing I love about my time in Kenya is seeing that we are a globe of missionaries. The church that we attended in Nairobi, Mamlaka Hill Chapel, these guys would send mission teams to New Zealand, which is fabulous. It's not that lower middle income countries are receiving missionaries anymore. All of us need the gospel, all of us need the full word of Jesus and when you're spreading the gospel, what are you spreading? I think that this is a much longer conversation, but I believe that we are called to go and make disciples we are called to serve the sick, we are called to serve the poor, we are called to serve those in prison. I focus on the parable of the sheep and the goats, it is one of my life scriptures, "when you are poor and sick and needy whatever you did for the least of these, you did for me." And what I hope for Kijabe does is that for whoever passes through our doors, whether it be patient, whether it be staff member, this is who we are, we love Jesus and we want you to know this incredible King who gave so much for us and who has an eternal life for us that starts now. And eternal life starting now means making an impact and restoring that which is broken, and it means restoring it now, wherever you are. As our team members go out to work in other hospitals, I would hope that one of the indicators of success for us would be a lack of brain drain, because it would show that we've shown people, "You know what there are people here that need you in healthcare. And this is why I'm here." If I had wanted to be an evangelist rather than a health care missionary, I should have stayed in Australia, for less people in Australia know Jesus that in Kenya. But I felt like my call in mission was to serve the sick in a place where I could help other people do the same. That's been my passion here, but I'm called to go back to Australia now. Does that mean my mission life is over? Absolutely not. It means that I'm going back to Australia to love Jesus and serve sick there and to do it in a different way. And I think that understanding that all of us, whoever is listening to this podcast right now, wherever you you have a call to mission, it's that sphere of influence that God's put you in. It's to take care of the poor or the sick, or to love the wealthy, who are lost around you that are never gonna step foot in a church but need a love of Jesus every bit as much as one of our nursing students here in the college. David - Amen again, that's fantastic. So back to Ebenezers, back to the the stones. What are things come to mind as you look back over on your time at Kijabe that were hallmarks or turning points? Mardi - There's a few of them. One evening sticks out to me because it's so indicative of the bigger picture and what we've been working towards. I'd been here for about nine months or so. . . One of the things that Jennifer Myhre and I noticed is we started out on pediatrics was that our nursing staff were incredibly passionate about their kids, but no one had really had the time to teach them about sick kids and how to resuscitate them, just basic life support, because they were so overwhelmed. You know, there was one nurse who was taking care of 12-15 patients at a time. That ratio is now one to eight, so it's much easier. But they just hadn't had the opportunity to learn some of the basic life-saving assessment in resuscitation skills, and so we started doing just weekly mock resuscitations with the nurses and as we got to know each other and they got to trust me and to know that I wasn't there to, to judge them, but to try and help them, we would do mock recesses every week, and people would stop being scared of coming and would come with by interested and actually came to test their knowledge. When I started in 2011, about once a week I would get called in, in the middle of the night to find a baby blue and not breathing, who was dead, and there was nothing that I could do. But what we worked together on was setting up a resuscitation room, and setting up the right equipment. And so after about nine months of this, I was called in for yet another resuscitation in the middle of the night, and by the time I got there, the baby was just screaming and pink, and I asked the nurse is what had happened and it was the same story as always, this baby choked on milk, they had turned on the oxygen given the baby oxygen done some CPR and they resuscitated that baby before I got there, they didn't need me at all. And the Ebenezer for me was the was the pride on their faces. "We are experts at this and we know what we're doing." That has just escalated leaps and bounds. Now we've got outstanding nursing leadership and they're being equipped and taught and up-skilled every day. But that was an Ebenezer moment for me that the time taken to build relationship and team and invest doesn't just bring a resuscitated baby and life is important, but it builds team and it builds ownership and pride in "this is what I've been called to do, and I'm good at it." It's interesting because it's what you would do is individual doctors with your teams and doing the mock code. But it's also very much a systems process for Kijabe hospital, right? A big part of solving that challenge was getting the right nursing ratios, but also setting up high dependency units to where children you're concerned about could be escalated. Did that happened during your time here? Mardi - So when we started here in 2011, children weren't really admitted to the ICU at all unless they were surgical patients who just had an operation, and then the surgeons would take care of them and transfer them down to the ward. So the pediatrics team wasn't really involved in any ICU care, extremely rarely. We didn't have a high dependency unit. And our definition of high dependency unit, here, is a baby that can be monitored on a machine 24-7. This is something that shows you how reliant we are on partnerships, David. So for example, the nursing and the medical team together decided, "Look, we think we need a three-bed unit, where at least the babies who were the more sick ones can be monitored on machines." And so, Bethany kids were the ones who equipped... We turned one of our words into a three-bed HDU in the old Bethany kids wing, and that was the first time we could put some higher risk babies on monitoring so that if they deteriorated we knew about it sooner. And we saw deaths start to drop, just with that simple thing. The other thing was that pediatricians who worked here in the past weren't necessarily equipped in how to do... ICU care. And so Jennifer and I said, "Well I'm a Peds-emergency physician, and she is an expert in resource-poor medicine, between the two of us, we can probably figure this out." We started putting some babies in ICU who we knew had a condition that would be reversible if we could just hook them up for 24 hours to ventilator. So we started ventilating babies with just pneumonia or bronchiolitis. Or sepsis, that was the other big one, something that if you can help their heart beats more strongly for a day or two, you can turn the tide. And so we just started working with the ICU team to say, "Look, can we choose some babies to start bringing up here? And four years later we were overtaking the ICU at the time and that's why we had to build a new Pediatric ICU, which opened in 2016. All of these things are incremental, and we stand on the shoulders of giants. The Paeds ward existed because a surgeon said "I don't want babies with hydrocephalus and spina bifida to not get care." And then we came along and said "We think that's great, but we think that babies with hydrocephalus spina bifida, who also have kidney problems and malnutrition, should probably have a pediatrician care for them." And over time, that degree of care, that we've been able to offer has just grown and grown. And we had Dr. Sara Muma as a pediatrician join us in 2012 then Dr. Ima Barasa - she was sponsored into pediatric residency long before I got here. That was the foresight of the medical director back then, to say "We are gonna need some better pediatric care". And then I stepped into the medical director role and people like Ima and Ariana came along and they've just pushed it further and further and further. None of us are satisfied with what we walk into, and we keep saying we can do better because these kids deserve more. David - That's fantastic, I think that's another way when you think about the influence and the impact of Kijabe, it's that refusing to settle. It's to say, "Yeah this is possible. Let's figure it out." And for all the team members to say that and commit to it, and for the leadership to support that I think that's what makes Kijabe special. I read something that the other day, it was just an interesting take, someone said [to a visiting doctor] "Why are you going to that place? It has so much." But Kijabe only has “so much” because the immense sacrifice of so many people over so much time. None of this showed up without the hours and the donations and years and years and years of work. I remember you saying that about Patrick with his ophthalmology laser? How did you phrase that? Mardi - Patrick, he's such a wonderful example of the kind of person that doesn't look for reward, but sees a need and just walks to the finish line. He started out, I believe, on the housekeeping team in the hospital. He's been here for 20 years at least, I think, and then went through clinical office or training, which is a physician assistant level training, and then received higher training in cataract surgery. He started our ophthalmology service in 2012. Since then he had nurses trained around him. He's been doing cataract surgery, and then he said, "We've got these diabetic patients and the care we offer isn't good enough, we need a laser." He went to Tanzania, and got laser training, and now he's going to start doing laser surgery on patients with diabetic retinopathy. He refuses to be satisfied with the status quo. And that's the heritage that we have here. You know, talking about even a moment I feel them enormously privileged to have been here in 2015 as we as a hospital celebrated our centennial. It took us a year to prepare for that, and I know you were a part of that process, David. David's job was find all of the stories and all of the photos and interview all of the people and make sure to document everything that might be lost if we lose these stories now. Being a part of that process... I was in tears so many times when we would hear one more story about somebody's commitment and sacrifice. We've been able to write down that story from 2015, with the Theodora Hospital as we were known then. The stories of not just these missionaries but these extraordinary early nurses, like Wairegi and Salome who worked here for decades, who were initially trained informally, because we didn't even have accreditation for the nursing program. David - We didn't even exist as a country. Mardi - That's a really good point! To hear those stories and to see our very first lab technician was just amazing. And then when these 80 and 90-year-olds came over and saw the scope of the hospital as it exists now, it just gave me a glimpse into whatever we do today, we have no concept of 100 years from now, the fruit that that will bear. And I think a missional life, is like that, isn't it? It's being okay with not seeing fruit. There's foundations positive and negative, that all of us lay in the interactions and the work that we do and I think all of us, our prayer is that those seeds that we plant would bear fruit. We have to be okay with not seeing the fruit with saying this has been my contribution. I've stood on the shoulders of giants and now I hand over the baton to you, who will come after me. Make of it what you will. It's not my dream and it's not my goal, I've done my part, and let's see where God takes it through you. David - And so, very shortly, you're about to become a giant. [laughter] I really appreciate you, I appreciate you bringing that up. That was one of the most important things that could have ever happened. It was in the 2015. It was before we started Friends of Kijabe. The realization for me I always come back to how long life is. It's both amazingly short and amazingly long. Watching Dr. Barnett and realizing that he worked here for 30 years, and then went back to the states, so now he's... I think he just hit 102 years old. It really does bring in a clear view what is legacy, what does it mean and what are we building? But also that this is very much outside of us. We get to pour everything we have into it for a time, but then others will take up that work. And it's both humbling, and amazing and... Mardi - And I think it's helpful to as many of us have a sense of calling on our lives, I think that this is what God has for me now. But we have to hold that with open hands because our view and our understanding of what God is doing is so small and what he is doing is so large. I think sometimes in this kind of setting, you come in with a dream and a passion and a goal, but you see that path shift and change during the time that you're here and that is good and that is okay. I think a danger is when we come in and think that we have the answers or we know exactly where God is going, and then things don't work out, and we burn out or are bitter or disappointed. To come into a sense of mission and calling... Saying "not my will but yours be done," and to just obey in the day-to-day and to see where it goes and to be okay with the direction being different at the end than it was at the beginning - I think that's how we lead a life led by the Spirit. We hold these things with open hands and say, "God take it where you will" and if it's a different place, let me just play my part in that. David - Okay, I gotta dig into that cause. How do you balance that? I would frame it as vision. I feel like a good example to look at, I don't know if it's the right one, so, you can choose a different one if you want to, but the balance between vision and practicality and reality. Because you say that, and you are walking in the day-to-day, but I just think of the Organogram that has been on your wall, which was on Rich's, wall, which is now your's again, which is about to be Evelyn's wall. And you had this vision back in, "this is how I think the organization should work to function well." But there's a four-year process in making that come to pass. How do the day-to-day and the long-term balance? Mardi - I think we're talking about spiritual and practical things combined aren't we? I think that anyone who's in organizational leadership knows that you, your organization as a whole needs a trajectory and a long-term plan. We make these five-year strategic plans which are based on the assumptions of today and every strategic plan. You need to go back every couple of years and say, Were those assumptions right? And just to be a super business nerd for a minute, you base things on SWOT analyses and you base things on the current politics and economics. David - What does SWOT stand for? Mardi - Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats. Then you do a PESTLE analysis, you look at the politics, you look at the economy, you look at the social environment of the day, etcetera etcetera. In technology everything is changing quicker than we can keep up with. And so I think that when you're looking at a place like a happy, which is large and complex, you set yourself some goals, and you work with them, but, you know, so something's going to change. Politics are gonna change, the economy's gonna tank, maybe there's gonna be a war on the other side of the world and we’re the only source of this, that, or the other?Maybe India falls into the sea and we start doing all of the surgeries that India was doing? I just don't even know. One thing for me, I've been enormously privileged to have been the medical director for two different terms that were separated by two years. And so I think I have a slightly unique perspective because from 2013 to 2016, I set the way I thought that our division would work and I came back into the role, two years later and already it had changed, but Rich had made it a better. It's funny, I when I came into the role, my predecessor. Steve Letchford said, "Look, you're gonna need a deputy, you can't do this by yourself." And I looked at my team and said "Um, No, I need four deputies, four sub-divisional heads because this is too much for one or two people and I can't keep my ear to the ground without it. I came back after two years away and there were five deputies and my initial gut reaction was, "You changed my structure!" And then I realized that Rich and Ken had made a really wise call. It did have to be five deputies for lots of really good reasons and that team of five has been my absolute rock this year. David - Who is the team of five? So the team of five, I've got a head of inpatient medicine and pediatrics, and specialties and this George Otieno. There's a head of Outpatient Department, and Community Health and Satellite clinics, and that's Miriam Miima. I've got ahead of Surgery and Anesthesia, and that's Jack Barasa. There's a head of Pharmacy, and that's Elizabeth Irungu. Then there's a head of what we call Allied and Diagnostic that incorporates the Lab and Pathology, Radiology, Physiotherapy, Nutrition and Audiology, and the head of that, it is Jeffrey Mashiya who is a radiographer. What's amazing to me about that is when I instituted this framework in 2014, there were four people and they were all missionaries. And I've come back in 2018 and there are five people and they're all our Kenyan senior staff and they're extraordinarily talented and any one of them can stand in for the medical director, when the medical director is away. What a gift that has been. David - I can't imagine how important this is for continuity. Because you think right now, you're handing off your responsibilities to Evelyn, but she has five people that...those are the executors and they actually get to groom her in leadership. That's amazing and for the strength of Kijabe and the stability, it's indispensable. I don't think there's another way to build a strong, stable system other than to build that. Mardi - Yeah, that's actually one of the things that brings me so much joy as I leave is the team isn't going to notice too much the change in senior leadership because that level of day-to-day practical strategic and operational leadership is just so strong. I think it made Ken as my CEO, I think it made his job easier to say, "Look, who should fill the position that Mardi is vacating?" He was able to say, "Who's got institutional memory and who's got leadership expertise and wisdom, and who knows how the senior leadership team works?" Whoever that person is, they're gonna have a team around them that will mean that no voices get lost in the transition. When I took the job in 2013, hearing the voices of specifically missionaries and surgeons can be really noisy and you hear their voices, but who's listening to the head of palliative care and who's listening to the head of laboratory who's listening to the head of nutrition, which is a tiny team of four people, those voices are well represented by wise people who all listen to each other and make the system work around them. It's a tremendous gift and there's no way to do this job without a team of people like that around you. And you know what, that's one of my other Ebenezers, David. Thursday, we installed Evelyn as the incoming medical director. Seeing those five sub-divisional heads praying for Evelyn and as that took off, I will never forget that. David - Absolutely. I wasn't here the first time, but I remember I should print out a series of those [pictures] because I remember you handing the hat to Rich and I remember it going back to you and then watching you give Evelyn the hat and stethoscope. There's this legacy of people that care. It's interesting to think about... 'cause you are, I mean you’re building this remarkable team and your system and things that operate independently of you. But at the same time, you're unbelievably special, and have given a ton over the past years and you. As Rich phrased it, you walked in shoes that not many other people will get to walk in. It's special. I imagine is what it's like when the former presidents get together for their picture. There's things that only only you guys will know and only you guys will have experienced. Mardi - You know, one thing that is really special is I think a lot of leadership transitions come through pain, brutality and war. And one thing that I noticed on Thursday, is that in the room as I handed over leadership to evil and were Steve Letchford and Peter Bird, who have both been here for decades and who've previously been the medical directors. I think there's a beauty about the transition of leadership here in the clinical division that it hasn't come through attrition, war and burnout. I'm leaving with a lot of sadness, and I'm not cutting ties with this place to see. . . there has been a cost. Rich. I know, I would still love to be here in this position as the person who is my predecessor…but to see such strength of leadership that is here and sowing into the next generation rather than leaving when they died. They've stepped down and gone into leading other areas to ensure that the team that follows them is strong, I think that's a tremendous gift and something unique about Kijabe. People love this place and they love this team and they wanna be a part of its ongoing success in its broader mission. David - And they love and they love that above their own glory and their own desires. I think it's what makes an organization great, it’s what makes a country great. I think it's probably gonna be easier in a place of faith, honestly, that this is God's ministry, not our own, not any one persons's. FPECC What is FPECC? I think it's important for people to know a little bit about how hard is it to create a training program or anything new in Kenya? Mardi - So FPECC is the fellowship program in pediatric emergency and critical care. Ariana [Shirk] and I are pediatric emergency physicians, we trained in pediatrics, and then we did specially training in how to take care of emergencies and resuscitation. And were the only two formally trained pediatric emergency doctors in Kenya. Critical Care is taking care of kids in ICUs and currently in the country, there are four pediatric ICU doctors for 55 million people. I don't have the stats that my finger tips, but it's extraordinarily low. I think of the city where you live and how many ICU beds there are, and how many children's hospitals you have just in your own city if you're based in a high income country. For 55 million people, there's kids just can’t access that care. David - Recently, I'm sure it's gone up, but two years ago, it was 100 beds for the country. Mardi - For adults and kids. . . In the country, there are a 12 pediatric ICU beds. Actually no, that's not true, there are 16 and eight of them came into existence, when we opened up our Peds ICU here three years ago. David - And keep in mind, this is East Africa, of the 56 million people. . .33 million of those are under age 18. So 16 beds. Mardi - That's right. Think of anything that can cause a critical illness. Trauma, illness, cancer, you name it, that's not enough beds. So when I came to Kenyo, I had no dream of starting a training program that wasn't even remotely on my radar. But sometimes things just come together at the right time. It was actually University of Nairobi, where they have the only other Peds ICU, they had been working with University of Washington in Seattle to say, “Look, can you help us start some training?” This is really important, because in East Africa there is nowhere that a pediatrician can learn how to run an ICU. Think of the US, where every state has got multiple training programs, where pediatricians will spend three years to learn to be an ICU doctor. There is nowhere for 360 million people in this region to learn how to do ICU care for children. Just think about that for a second. 360 million people... No training program. There's one in Cairo, and there's one in Cape Town, but that's for 600 million people. So I'm just taking a few of them where there's nowhere to go. University of Nairobi was talking to Seattle. They've got two Peds ICU doctors in Nairobi and they were thinking of starting a program. Then just through several contacts, actually through the Christian mission network, one of University of Washington's ICU doctors grew up in Nigeria but she's involved with the Christian Medical and Dental Association, and so she knew about Kijabe. The University of Washington team came out to Kenya for a visit, and they said, "Hey we heard you doing some ICU care caring Kijabe. Can we come out and see what's happening?" That was in 2013. They came out and said "Hey what are you guys doing here?" And we showed them around, and their minds were blown, they didn't know there was any peds ICU happening outside of Nairobi at all. And so, we rapidly started some conversations and said "Look, why don't we start a training program in Pediatric Emergency Care and Critical Care and our trainees can train at both Kijabe hospital and Kenyatta hospital in Nairobi and they can get an exposure to two different types of ICUs. They can also take advantage of the fact that Ariana and I are here as Peds Emergency faculty, and we can split the training load. Training programs in the US have dozens of faculty for something like this, to rely on just two doctors in Nairobi was an incredible risk even though University of Washington is supporting with visiting faculty. So we said, "Look, we've got all these people in the country at the same time, let's just try and do it." So we started that process in 2013. We took our first fellows at the beginning of this year. It's taken us six years. That's how things work here. You've got to form relationships. University of Nairobi didn't know us real well when it came to our pediatric care. We had to get to know each other, we had to develop a curriculum. We had to let the Ministry of Health know. We had to get the Kenya pediatrics Association on side. The Kenya Medical Practitioners and Dentists Board, had to approve the program. The University Senate had to approve the program. We had to try and get some funding in place. None of that happens quickly. It's all relationship that's all a lot of chai. That's all a lot of back and forth and making sure that you don't try and skip anything to get through the hoops, any quicker than you need to, because if you try to go to quick it falls apart. And if University of Nairobi and Kenya doesn't own this program, it's not gonna last. And I think that's probably the first thing to take away for me is this program exists because University of Nairobi and Kenya wanted it I didn't come in here and say, "We need this.” University of Nairobi wanted it, and we said, "How can we support it?" And so Arianna showing up here for a short-term visit - which we rapidly recruited you guys as long-term - it was God's timing because Ariana and I couldn't have done this independently from each other. It's taken both of us to build those relationships over the last six years. Arianna and I are so proud of this program. Our first two graduates will finish this training at end of December 2020, and we hope and pray that we can recruit them to stay at Kijabe and University of Nairobi as our first home-grown faculty. What's been lovely about that, too, is that we've connected with people all over the world who want to support this kind of thing, they just didn't know how. David - Not did they not know how, there wasn’t a way. It literally did not exist until February 2019. Mardi - So now, we're actually talking to colleagues in Uganda and Tanzania, and colleagues in Sudan and other places about... “Hey, is this a good model for you?” I've got some contacts in Nigeria, they've got how many million people, 30 million people or something ridiculous? And there's no way to get this training there either. And people all over the world want to be able to support what a country wants to start in its own strategy. So that's something that I'm just thrilled to be leaving. Even as we leave next month, I'm hoping and planning to come back at least once a year to teach in the program for the forseeable future and to support Arianna from a distance in continuing to connect people all over the world to say, "Here's a way that your global health desires can interface with a local country's needs." David - You two are the only Peds Emergency Medicine doctors in the country and there's a realization. . .What actually is Emergency Medicine here and what is the difference between what it looks like here versus America? Mardi - Yeah, it's a really great question. First of all, Ariana and I trained in a country where there are multiple children's hospitals per city. So, Pediatric Emergency Medicine is the Emergency Department attached to a children's hospital. There are less than 10 children's hospitals on this entire continent, I think. So there are no Pediatric Emergency departments. What is really great is that Emergency Medicine combined adult and pediatric is a growing specialty here. There's been so much great work that's going on in so many countries around the region. Rwanda last year, just graduated their first class of emergency residents. Uganda just on the cusp, the great advocate there, Annette Allenyo is leading the charge for emergency medicine. Ben Wachira is an Emergency Medicine trained doctor here at Agha University, and they're on the cusp of starting an emergency medicine residency training program. You know Emergency Medicine's a funny thing. Emergency medicine in a high-income country, is a part of a functioning system. Emergency medicine in the US means that you've got ambulances that get your people to you and you've got an ICU at the other end that you send sick people to. Emergency medicine here is. . . people showing up on our door step, we don't know how to get them here and then where do we send them? I think that Emergency Medicine training here is so much more broad. We're training people not only how to provide Emergency Medicine, but how to be advocates in a broader system. And I think if you live in a high income country, you can't understand how much medical training is not about medical training. It's about advocacy and building access to care for people, no matter where they're at. What I see emerging here is…from the start, it's collaborative. Emergency Medicine training here isn't just training a doctor in a specialty to give you a certificate and leave you there. It's connecting you with people who are trying to get paramedic systems going and people trying to build ICU care. That's one of the reasons we realized that our Pediatric Emergency and Critical Care program had to be both. There's not enough places to work where you've got the luxury of staying in the ICU. Our graduates are gonna go out and work in hospitals where they will be expert trainers for the pediatricians running the ICU and the family medicine doctors running the emergency department and the surgeons who are doing pediatric surgery with just general training. Our graduates are gonna be those advocates drawing teams together asking "How can we improve the system from arrival at our doorstep till the day we send them home." It's a different focus in our training. Yes, the skills are necessary. You need to know how to run a ventilator and keep a heart pumping when it's not. But it's about building a team and being a part of solving systems issues and hopefully in a way that is affordable and sustainable. David - I love that word, systems. For me, this is the year of systems. Thinking broadly about each of these individual parts because it’s another way that healthcare here is very different from healthcare in the US. The US is just sub-specialization, that's what it's all about. And here, there's not a fine line between. . .for an Emergency Medicine doctor, you're not sitting out in casualty waiting for a kid to come in, right? If you want to find the emergency, you just walk around and lay eyes on every kid and there's gonna be one out of 70 children in that building, who is in trouble. So it really is a bigger and broader way of thinking about things. Mardi - I think another thing that's interesting to me just as we come back to the missional aspect of who we are... I think 00 years ago, a missionary was someone who would go into deepest, darkest wherever and be whoever they wanted to be. I think as we consider what is global mission, our question needs to be, “What is that country looking for, what systems are they trying to develop and how do we help them in it?" And that comes down to health…if you're a missionary, what does the local church want to do? What is their mission and how can we assist them? I think we need to ask better, what system is someone trying to build and how can we be a part of it. Because that's the key, isn't it? We're here to serve God who is restoring creation and he's doing it in lots of different ways already. We don't need to necessarily think we've got the answer, but to say "God, where are you working and how can I be a part of it, and what does it look like?" I think Mary Adam in her community health project, is a really lovely example of that. Community Health growth is a priority of Kenya. So she's gotten grant funding and she is just sowing in it, she knows every county Governor in the country, I'm suspecting. She knows how to get into the system, but how to be salt and light, and how to be the love of Jesus in making things functional and making all things new. I think that's one thing that I think Kijabe is doing well. We are looking at health strategy and saying How can we be a part of it and love that our FPECC program is in partnership with University of Nairobi. I love that our clinical offices have a program that we got accredited for called the Emergency Critical Care Clinical Officer program, that actually wasn't a part of hell strategy, but we did see a gap, and as soon as we trained people in that we went to the Clinical Officer of Council and said, "Hey you want to accredit this? This is a really good program. And they did, and now the Kenya Medical training training college has taken that program and they're doing their own program. I think those are lovely examples of saying “We're here to bring restoration but we don't want to be separate from the system. Where are you going and how can we help” David - What does that mean for friends of Kijabe? How do you see that working with Friends of Kijabe as an organization? Mardi - What's been really lovely, about Friends of Kijabe in the last year, and I know you're excited about this, David, is in what the core the Friends of Kijabe vision and mission. I think a core part of Friends of Kijabe that we've got the CEO, the CFO and the Director of Clinical Services on the Friends of Kijabe board. One question that I've heard you ask so many times in the last year is "Where are you going and how can we help, what are your priorities? Friends of Kijabe exists to help the hospital further its strategy, but also exists as a bit of a connector between people in high-income countries who really want to contribute and who have passions. Where does that intersect with the hospital strategy? So Friends of Kijabe is not going to take the whole hospital strategy and try and piecemeal help every part of it. They're gonna say, "Hey you're a part of your strategy that are happy resonates with and that's become very clear. A lot of Friends of Kijabe funding currently goes towards whatever the hospital thinks is important. The hospital has prioritized the theater expansion project this year and that's great. But, at its core, Friends of Kijabe also says, "We support the needy. We support education. We support sustainability. How can we get there?" And so [FoK] has prioritized putting money towards each of those areas which happened to align with the core values of Kijabe Hospital. So a large proportion of what Friends of Kijabe hospital is doing this year is helping us with an infrastructure project. But every year we're going re-ask "What are your priorities, and how can we help that?" But we're also going to say, "Here is where our heart beats. Can we help with this too?" I think one of the things about Friends of Kijabe is the trust that's developed since its inception. As Friends of Kijabe, we trust that the hospital leadership is following a strategy that is meaningful, that is sustainable, and that is in line with where Kenya is going and where the African Inland Church is going because that's who we're owned and operated by. As long as our missions intersect, I think Friends of Kijabe can trust that at the hospital is taking us in a good direction. David - Awesome, anything else I should ask you? Anything you'd like to add? Mardi - No. It's been an extraordinary eight years and it's been such a privilege to be here, and it's lovely to leave with joy, even as there's associated sadness. I really can't wait to see what the next few decades bring, and I'm gonna be watching both from a distance and also up close, when I come back to visit. David - Thank you Mardi.

Pediatric POCUS Podcast
Bladder Fullness with Dr. Almaz Dessie and FEMinEM host Dr. Resa E. Lewiss

Pediatric POCUS Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2019 21:51


In a very special journal club, we team up with Dr. Resa E. Lewiss and the FEMinEM podcast to answer the question: "In children awaiting a radiology-performed transabdominal pelvic ultrasound, can point-of-care ultrasound decrease time to radiology and improve first-attempt success compared to sensation of bladder fullness?"We sit down with Dr. Almaz Dessie, first author on the recent RCT published in Annals of Emergency Medicine titled Point-of-Care Ultrasound Assessment of Bladder Fullness for Female Patients Awaiting Radiology-Performed Transabdominal Pelvic Ultrasound in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial.Dr. Almaz Dessie is an attending in Pediatric Emergency medicine at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia and completed fellowships in Pediatric Emergency Medicine and Pediatric Emergency Ultrasound. Dr. Resa E. Lewiss is a legend in the POCUS world and is the host of the FEMinEM podcast. Link to the article:Dessie A, et al. Point-of-Care Ultrasound Assessment of Bladder Fullness for Female Patients Awaiting Radiology-Performed Transabdominal Pelvic Ultrasound in a Pediatric Emergency Department: A Randomized Controlled Trial. Annals of emergency medicine. 2018Additional literature cited in the podcast:Chen L, et al, Utility of bedside bladder ultrasound before urethral catheterization in young children. Pediatrics. 2005. Feedback welcome at Tama.The@gmail.com

Behind The Shield
Dr Bonni Goldstein - Episode 218

Behind The Shield

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2019 115:47


Dr Bonni Goldstein is a Pediatric Emergency physician, Cannabis Medicine physician and author of "Cannabis Revealed". We discuss emergency medicine, modern chronic disease management, cannabis medicine successes, CBD and much more.

Yale Emergency Medicine Podcasts
Approach to Pediatric Emergency Airway Management

Yale Emergency Medicine Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2019 39:51


Respiratory failure requiring advanced airway management is a rare but critical skill set for all EM providers. We are privileged to sit down and chat with a true pediatric airway expert and medical educator, Dr. Joshua Nagler from Boston Children’s Hospital. In this podcast we will highlight key anatomic, physiologic and cognitive considerations to consider when managing this type of child. We will review common pitfalls and touch on maintaining our procedural competency and comfort through novel educational strategies highlighting the potential educational and quality assurance role of video laryngoscopy.

Who Lives Like This?!
Caregiving for the Caregiver -- A discussion of cannabis medicine with Dr. Bonni Goldstein

Who Lives Like This?!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2018 62:20


Jason, Elizabeth and Dr Bonni Goldstein discuss the history of the marijuana plant and its medicinal benefits, as well as the obstacles families of children with complex healthcare needs have faced in access and use of cannabis medicine for their children. Dr. Bonni also speaks as a caregiver to caregivers. In the show she also reveals how the endocannabinoid system of caregivers and those who experience chronic stress can become unbalanced. Bonni Goldstein, MD is the Medical Director of Canna-Centers Wellness and Education, a California-based medical practice devoted to educating patients about the use of cannabis for serious and chronic medical conditions.  After years of working in the specialty of Pediatric Emergency medicine, she developed an interest in the science of medical cannabis after witnessing its beneficial effects in an ill friend.  Since then she has evaluated thousands of patients for use of medical cannabis.  She has a special interest in treating children with intractable epilepsy, autism, and advanced cancers. Dr. Goldstein recently authored the book Cannabis Revealed: How the world’s most misunderstood plant is treating everything from chronic pain to epilepsy. Dr. Goldstein has presented her clinical experiences at both national and international medical conferences.  She has appeared on the TV show The Doctors and is featured in a new documentary  called “Weed the People” featured at the 2018 South by Southwest festival.

Rounds With Relias
Episode 9: Limiting Liability Risks in Pediatric Emergency Care

Rounds With Relias

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 18:13


Pediatric emergency care holds many lessons when it comes to risk management. Communicating effectively with children’s families and staying up-to-date on the latest medical science are just some of the duties of practitioners seeking to provide quality care and limit malpractice liability. In this episode, Ann Dietrich, MD, FAAP, FACEP, pediatric emergency medicine expert and professor at Ohio University Heritage College of Medicine, offers valuable tips gleaned from her more than thirty years of practice.

Admissions Straight Talk
All About Duke Medical School’s Unique Curriculum and How to Get In

Admissions Straight Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2018 57:33


Duke Medical School’s Curriculum and Admissions [Show Summary] Dr. Linton Yee, Associate Dean for Admissions at Duke University School of Medicine, shares with us the unique curriculum of the program and the thought process behind it. He also fills us in on what applicants should consider as they fill out their Duke Medical secondary applications, which will make it more likely to be invited for an interview. Interview with Dr. Linton Yee [Show Notes] Our guest today, Dr. Linton Yee, earned his bachelors and MD at the University of Hawaii. He then did his residency in pediatrics at Harbor UCLA Medical Center and a Fellowship in Pediatric Emergency medicine at Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles. From 1996 to 2007 he practiced and taught pediatric emergency medicine in Hawaii and California before taking a position at Duke University as an associate professor in the Department of Pediatrics, Division of Emergency Medicine and as a pediatric emergency room physician. He is also Duke Medical’s new Associate Dean for Admissions, having been appointed to the post in May. Dr. Yee, can you give an overview of the Duke Medical’s highly distinctive curriculum? [2:15] The curriculum is a little different than the vast majority of US-based medical schools in that you do the basic sciences in the first year, a clinical year in the second year, a research or advanced degree in your third year, and the last year is the same as most schools, with rotations and other preparations for graduation. The curriculum has been different than most schools for the last 40 years, with the goal to produce leaders in medicine. We believe research works hand in hand with the advancement of clinical medicine. How does Duke Medical condense what many schools take 18 months or more to teach into one year? [3:42] You have to be efficient in how you are presenting material and make it relevant to how students are learning. We put our students in the clinical realm really early, seeing patients even in the first few weeks of school. A lot of it is integrating material, taking fairly complex ideas and clinical scenarios that go back to basic science in order to see relevance to the basic realm. One example I always talk to students about is shock. The definition of shock is inadequate profusion at the cellular level. If you look at that definition, how are you going to treat it? You have to reverse the profusion, so you need flow, so your carrier would be fluid, you need delivery of oxygen, and an energy source. To maximize oxygen, you need a pump to circulate what is carrying oxygen and fluids, and you need to maintain pump stability. You learn a lot of this stuff in basic biology in junior high school. You have a complex clinical scenario that you actually knew how to treat way back when, you just didn’t know how to integrate it. Can you give me a few examples of how students spend their 3rd year at Duke Medical? [11:52] The goal of the third year is to choose their own direction. Most of their academic life to this point has been pre-determined, so allowing them to choose is key in determining their thought process and ability to think critically and objectively about things. Some examples are we have a scholarship to Singapore to do infectious disease research. A lot of students do work in Tanzania as well. People have gone to Geneva to the World Health Organization, or gone to the London School of Economics for a masters there, and people go all over the place for research opportunities - it is pretty much an open book. We have people do MBAs, Divinity degrees, or an MPH. Not too many people go the JD route but every now and then we do have a student that does that. Let’s turn to medical school admission, your secondary application is one of the more thorough and demanding secondary applications. This year, old questions 5 & 6 were removed and Duke added several – from what I can see ( 1,2,7, 8 and 9).

Specialty Stories
72: A Community Neonatologist Shares Her Specialty With Us

Specialty Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2018 24:01


Session 72 Dr. Leslie Pineda is a private practice Neonatologist in Orlando. We talk about her inspiration to go to the NICU and what she likes, dislikes, and more. I am constantly looking for physicians who would make great guests here on the show. If you know someone who might make great guests here, send them my way at ryan@medicalschoolhq.net. [01:33] An Interest in Neonatology Leslie's mom is a NICU nurse who have been doing it for over 30 years. So she was basically exposed to the field at an early age. She would go visit her at work and back when the babies were still in a nursery, she'd get to see her mom and get the babies through the windows. Through the years, she always knew she wanted to do pediatrics. "I would branch off and think of different things but I always kept falling back to neonatology." As to why not a NICU nurse like her mom, Leslie explains she wanted to make the "big decisions." The bedside was fun but she wanted to pursue further and get to lead the team and make the decisions as the team leader. Other specialties that crossed her mind included emergency as she enjoyed doing procedures. As a resident, she also looked into Pediatric Emergency medicine which she also found exciting because of the procedures and the acuity. Ultimately, she realized she enjoyed working with babies the most. What she likes about the environment is that you're able to get that long-term relationship with the patients within the hospital stay. Understand that some babies could stay there for months and so you really get to know the family. You see them everyday and take care of them all the time. So you're able to make that relationship with them and get that long-term care while also that short-term acute management you'd have to do at the beginning or when they get sick in the parts in between. [05:25] Traits that Lead to Becoming a Good Neonatologist Leslie says you have to want some excitement and that adrenalin rush of taking care of a potentially really sick baby. One must also like the interaction with the families since you're not talking with the baby. At the end of the day, it's about being able to tolerate all your interactions with family members and parents concerning the baby's care. [06:23] Types of Diseases Neonatologists often deal with premature babies. Especially up to less than 35 weeks, they will automatically come to the NICU although full-term babies may come to them as well if they're having some trouble transitioning from intrauterine life and maybe having some respiratory issues like retained fetal lung fluid. You may also encounter some hypoglycemic full-term babies as well if their infants of a diabetic mother. You may also have meconium aspiration or if it's a very stressful delivery, sometimes a baby could get stuck because they're so big They could be into so much stress so they would have to be watched in the NICU and taken cared of in the NICU. "A lot of different pathologies, not just the premature babies that everybody thinks of." [07:56] Community Hospital vs. Academic Hospital As to why Leslie chose community over academic, she admits it had a lot to do with location. Growing up in Orlando, she always knew she wanted to come back there. Why she chose private practice is there's a lot of emphasis on the educational side and research studies, which she still gets to have in her current position. [08:30] Typical Day of a Neonatologist Aside from mostly inpatient, Leslie says there's also outpatient follow-up in certain groups. But for her, she does 100% inpatient. Typical day for her, as she describes, is that each day is a little bit different. They cover multiple hospitals with differing levels. In the main hospital, they come in the morning and take sign out from the outgoing person from overnight about what happened to the babies you'll be following. They huddle with the respiratory therapists and the deliver team, as well as all the neonatologists on for the day. They'd deal with the charged nurses and the pharmacists, even research nurses. They all huddle just so they all know where patients are going or if they expect any deliveries or anybody is going for a surgery. Then they'd review all the numbers and they'd round as a multi-disciplinary team, talking to the families. They'd talk about the plans and after lunch, they'd carry out all the plans they said they would do and touch base again with the families. And then you sign out to the person covering overnight. "We round as a multi-disciplinary team... we go to each patient's room and talk to each family, talk about the plan, talk about the numbers as a big team." [11:03] Doing Procedures, Taking Calls, & Work-Life Balance In terms of procedure, neonatology is procedure-heavy. You're putting endotracheal tubes in the delivery room and NICU. You're putting umbilical lines, doing test tubes, needle decompressions, etc. For calls, Leslie takes about three-night calls a month on average. This is basically dependent on the size of the group you're with since you split it among them. That being said, she thinks she still has enough time for life outside of the hospital. Sometimes, you get to go home early and spend time with family. Other times, you may do a 24-hour call so you lose two days there. So it depends on what your schedule is like for that week or month. [12:36] The Training Path Leslie illustrates the training path to becoming a full-fledged neonatologist. After premed, you do four years of medical school and then you do your three years of pediatric residency. Then you do three more years of neonatology fellowship. You then take your boards after that. At the moment, there are no further opportunities to subspecialize after neonatology. However, she says people are actually looking into doing a neuro neonatal kind of things. This is just in talks, but who knows. In terms of its competitiveness for matching, Leslie thinks it's average compared to all the other pediatric fellowships. For a student to become a competitive applicant, just show some interest in neonatology research or some research. "Fellowship is geared towards doing some research as part of the training program." [14:15] Bias Towards DOs and Working with Primary Care and Other Specialties Leslie doesn't really see any bias towards DOs in that she had co-fellows who are DOs. She has also worked with other DO physicians even in her private practice whom she describes as excellent. What she wished pediatricians knew about what she does to help patients is that they're not trying to avoid taking the patients. Sometimes they work hard to try to keep them on the regular nursery service. This is in order for the babies to not be taken away from their moms and get to stay with their moms and bond. But they're ready in case they need to take care of the baby and hopefully be able to send the baby back to their mom (if they're a full term baby who just needed time to transition). Nevertheless, she doesn't really see any big issues related to pediatricians transferring patients to them. They don't mind consulting on so they can decide together whether or not they can stay a little bit longer with the mom before they take them or just take them over the NICU and keep them. Other specialties they work the closest with include neurologists, infectious disease doctors, cardiologists, pulmonologists, gastroenterologists, and practically everybody. "We're like the primary care physician for the preemie." [17:45] Special Opportunities Outside of Clinical Medicine Leslie says the research route is one opportunity outside of clinical medicine. She explains why research is very hot in neonatology right now. "Neonatology is such a fast-changing field. We just started resuscitating 22-weekers and we're just doing all these new things to improve outcome." [18:30] What She Knows Now that She Wished She Knew Before and the Most and Least Liked Things About Being a Neonatologist Leslie wished she knew that the hours can be a little bit stressful especially when you still have to take overnight in-house call or do a 24-hour call. It's hard since you really like you do and she enjoys everything she does as well as the patients and the people she works with. But it can just be so taxing to stay overnight or do a 24-hour call. What she likes the most about being a neonatologist is working with the babies and the families which she finds very rewarding. And then when they see an acute patient and then when they come back and see you when they're two or three, the feeling is so rewarding. And more so, if they were a 22 o3 23-weeker who was really fighting the odds. On the flip side, what she likes the least is seeing families in a very stressful situation and it's hard for them to understand the things happening. Leslie says how this can be stressful even for the team. Since you want to do what's best for the baby but sometimes, they're just so premature that it's hard. They're really fighting against the odds. You can see the toll it takes on the parents and she says it's just so hard to see this. In order to handle such relationships, they have been working hard in their group to involve the families in the decision-making and in the rounds. They try to get them very involved. It's not them telling the parents what they're going to do. But it's all of them talking and making a decision. They get to hear the plan as a whole team in the room. "Parents do get involved and that helps with communication. It helps with the stress level because they're really part of the team." [21:27] Major Changes in the Field Leslie says they're now able to resuscitate ages that are younger and younger. The younger and younger they go, the better they get at the older gestational ages. Plus, all the technology is always changing. Their ventilatory strategies are changing all the time and what medications they're starting to study in neonates. So they always have to learn since it's always changing. [22:15] Would She Do It All Over Again? If she had to do it all over again, Leslie says she would still have chosen the same as she really enjoys what she does. "The lifestyle can be a little bit hard but it's really rewarding to work with these patients and their families." Lastly, what she wishes to impart to students thinking about getting into neonatology is that if you're really interested in it, try to do rotations as a medical student, as an elective. See what you're really getting into. Shadow a physician and see firsthand what's going on and what kind of babies they're taking care of and how little these babies are or how sick they are. There's a lot of emotional distress that can happen to you because you really get attached to your patients and their families. So if the baby is not doing well, you feel for them too. So these are things you may not understand until you rotate through or go through the NICU to see all that happens there. "There's a lot of emotional distress that can happen to you because you really get attached to your patients and their families." Links: ryan@medicalschoolhq.net

CMAJ Podcasts
Encounters — A pediatric emergency physician struggles to make sense of a child's death

CMAJ Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2018 6:45


Dr. Samina Ali, a pediatric emergency physician in Edmonton, Alberta, reads her article called "A note to Aaron." In the article, Dr. Ali shares the story of one particular child, Aaron Fortier. The story is true. Her Humanities Encounters article is published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal. Full article (subscription required): www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.171182 ----------------------------------- For more stories like this one, get your copy of CMAJ’s Encounters Book. This anthology of prose and poetry of some 100 Canadian authors including Drs. David Goldbloom, Shane Neilson, Allan Peterkin and Monica Kidd, has been specially curated and includes a study guide. https://shop.cma.ca/products/encounters ----------------------------------- Subscribe to CMAJ Podcasts on Apple Podcasts, iTunes, Google Play, Stitcher, Overcast, Instacast, or your favourite aggregator. You can also follow us directly on our SoundCloud page or you can visit www.cmaj.ca/page/multimedia/podcasts.

OPENPediatrics
WSP - P Sun, B Current Status Of Pediatric Emergency And Intensive Care In China Podcast 012317

OPENPediatrics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2017 29:38


WSP - P Sun, B Current Status Of Pediatric Emergency And Intensive Care In China Podcast 012317 by OPENPediatrics

Clinician's Roundtable
Pediatric Emergency Care

Clinician's Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2007


Guest: Denise Dowd, MD, MPH Host: Cathleen Margolin, PhD Dr. Denise Dowd discusses the current state of pediatric emergency care in the U.S. and the Institute of Medicine's (IOM) goals for the future.