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For this episode of Sounds Seen we're joined by Jemma Burns and Charlie Lempriere of Pulse Points, to speak about their work on the Netflix reboot of the Australian TV series Heartbreak High. Drawing from their storied experience in music, specifically in the Australian scene, Jemma and Charlie have created a soundtrack for the series that reflects back what it means to be a high school kid in Australia - taking influence from around the world but leaning into the dynamism and richness of the Australian music scene across the spectrum - including The Veronicas, DJ Plead, Courtney Barnett and Troye Sivan. We talk about how Australia is having a moment right now (musically and culturally), how music is perhaps THE key tool when trying to resonate with younger generation audiences, and Charlie also explains how he got his start as a music supervisor.
The heat wave not just takes a toll on physical health, but it also affects us mentally. Tune into this Health Shots InFocus podcast episode to know how heat affects mental health and effective tips to stay cool!
Martin Clinic recently sent an important email to its customers about high blood pressure. Dr. Martin breaks down that email in today's episode and gives a teaching on what causes high blood pressure. For most of us, we've been led to believe the common misconception that salt intake is the primary cause of high blood pressure. Dr. Martin says that's false. Dehydration and a high-carb diet are more likely the main culprits. Join Dr. Martin as he explains why lowering your insulin levels is a much better approach to reducing high blood pressure than it is to take medication.
whoa okay i’m transitioning into the next moment now and ** wooooooosh **i’m feeling mostly pretty zen about it but it’s just like been weird bizarre thing after bizarre thing. also, totally wonderful things too, so it balances out. but very much looking forward to getting fully situated and into some routines again.i said it wasn’t all that dramatic last week but this week it’s all dramatics and i’m finding that so hilarious. truly living for it.DOWNLOAD/STREAM RECORDING00:00 (intro by omar)00:20 Ava Luna “Take It Or Leave It” Pigments EP02:21 Castle If “Genetic Structure” Zardoz04:12 Katie dey “stuck ” solipsisters07:24 Natural bridges “Shone Like Gold” Residual Daydreams11:08 Jason Anderson “Kittery” Auburn13:18 Doug Tuttle “Fade” Dream Road17:18 Positive No “Teenage Waistline” Teenage Waistline20:34 Erasers “No Wonder” Pulse Points26:24 Urochrome “Resist Psychic Death” Trope House27:42 TURN TO CRIME “Up There” Down in the Basement30:44 Second Narrows “Glue” S/T32:56 Snowpiler “Crest” I Feel God In This Chili’s Tonight35:49 Glambat “Cole Gate” I Feel God In This Chili’s Tonight39:11 Godcaster “DIRT BIKE BIKE VS. THE COPS (VACCINE GIRL)” GODCASTER DEMO41:14 Christian fitness “real tennis” you are the ambulance43:13 Philary “Old Leg” I Complain45:43 A Deer A Horse “Cold Shoulder” Everything Rots That Is Rotten EP48:46 Mock Identity “Nacion de Opresion” Paradise50:15 Cigarette “Golden Letters” Light Blues52:38 Kristin Witko “That’s My Name” Zone Of Exclusion
Jennifer Down is the award winning author of Our Magic Hour and Pulse Points. Jennifer is one of my favourite Australian authors and so there was quite a bit of anticipation around her new novel Bodies of Light.Suffice to say it's a complex and moving story. This is the sort of book that takes you on a journey and really, if it's not too much of a cliche to say, you wonder if you're the same at the end of it.Maybe I should give you a bit of an idea…Holly has a simple, but happy life. It's uncomplicated for a reason and Holly would prefer it stay that way.When a message out of the blue drags Holly into her past, she is shaken. She felt she had escaped, buried the ghosts and become a new person. No one should know who Maggie is but now Holly is faced with the woman she used to be.Trauma is rarely far from the surface and we are thrown into Maggie's life to revisit all the events that have brought her to where she is today and once caused her to disappear.Bodies of Light is a complex and painstakingly realised portrait of a woman. While it is true for any life, in Maggie we see the myriad tragedies and small joys that have dragged up from childhood, through adolescence to become an adult.I barely feel I can talk about these events. There is certainly an element of spoiling the narrative, but really what we are privy to in Bodies of Light is so personal, so complex that it doesn't feel like my story to just blurt out on air.Maggie's story and the road she has taken to become Holly; far from her beginnings and without a shred or the person she once was, is more than we would ever wish to know about a friend or acquaintance. In giving us such detail Jennifer Down is inviting us to look at Maggie's world, her actions and their consequences and understand that people always have their reasons.I'll admit there were times while reading that I wanted to look away. But then we live in a world that makes it easy to get distracted, to look away when the trauma gets too much.In fictionalising a life Down has provided the reader space to inhabit the world. Into this space she explores the world of out-of-home, the impacts of childhood trauma and the ways these formative experiences impact our adult selves.I remember reading early reviewers and social media responses to Bodies of Light and Jennifer Down responding that maybe this book was a heavy outing while we were all going through, or gradually coming out of lockdowns. But I think that this is just the sort of book to shake us after we've all had the time to explore (or avoid) ourselves at such a granular level.This is a book I'll need to come back to. Not everything can, or should be quick and simple to understand. I started off saying there was some anticipation for me in the arrival of Bodies of Light and I think best ending by replying that the anticipation was worth it ...
Jennifer Down is a highly awarded writer, named a Sydney Morning Herald Young Novelist of the Year consecutively in 2017 and 2018. Her third long form work is 2021's Bodies of Light. Our Magic Hour, her debut novel, was shortlisted for the 2014 Victorian Premier's Literary Award for an unpublished manuscript. Her second book, Pulse Points, was the winner of the 2018 Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction and the 2018 Steele Rudd Award for a Short Story Collection in the Queensland Literary Awards, and was shortlisted for a 2018 NSW Premier's Literary Award. About The Garret Read the transcript of this interview at thegarretpodcast.com. The interview was recorded by Zoom, and we can't wait to start recording in person again soon. You can also follow The Garret on Twitter and Facebook, or follow our host Astrid Edwards on Twitter or Instagram. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
CME credits: 0.75 Valid until: 28-04-2022 Claim your CME credit at https://reachmd.com/programs/cme/pulse-points-prostate-cancer-embracing-advances-parpi-combinations/12472/ During recent years, advances in the understanding of the underlying genetic events and biology in prostate cancer development, including the DDR and MMR pathway alterations, have yielded new avenues for clinical exploration. Prostate cancers with deleterious aberrations in DNA damage repair (DDR) genes, including homologous recombination repair, such as mutations in BRCA1/2 and ATM, are associated with response to poly (adenosine diphosphate–ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition. PARP inhibitors are now gaining FDA approvals for the treatment of patients with mCRPC, and ongoing clinical trials are evaluating these PARP inhibitors as monotherapy or in combination with other treatments such as androgen pathway inhibitors. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN®) is now recommending germline testing and molecular biomarker analysis, including tumor testing for HRR mutations, and to consider tumor testing for MSI or dMMR for metastatic disease. PARP inhibitors for the treatment of mCRPC in patients harboring germline and somatic BRCA/ATM mutations, and in combination with androgen pathway inhibition, are poised to propel the management of mCRPC toward a more personalized approach. In this activity, expert faculty will review, discuss, and provide their expert insights on recent and emerging practice-changing advancements with PARP inhibitors for the treatment of mCRPC, with a ...
CME credits: 0.75 Valid until: 28-04-2022 Claim your CME credit at https://reachmd.com/programs/cme/pulse-points-prostate-cancer-embracing-advances-parpi-combinations/12472/ During recent years, advances in the understanding of the underlying genetic events and biology in prostate cancer development, including the DDR and MMR pathway alterations, have yielded new avenues for clinical exploration. Prostate cancers with deleterious aberrations in DNA damage repair (DDR) genes, including homologous recombination repair, such as mutations in BRCA1/2 and ATM, are associated with response to poly (adenosine diphosphate–ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibition. PARP inhibitors are now gaining FDA approvals for the treatment of patients with mCRPC, and ongoing clinical trials are evaluating these PARP inhibitors as monotherapy or in combination with other treatments such as androgen pathway inhibitors. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN®) is now recommending germline testing and molecular biomarker analysis, including tumor testing for HRR mutations, and to consider tumor testing for MSI or dMMR for metastatic disease. PARP inhibitors for the treatment of mCRPC in patients harboring germline and somatic BRCA/ATM mutations, and in combination with androgen pathway inhibition, are poised to propel the management of mCRPC toward a more personalized approach. In this activity, expert faculty will review, discuss, and provide their expert insights on recent and emerging practice-changing advancements with PARP inhibitors for the treatment of mCRPC, with a ...
Dr. Robin Newhouse, is the dean of the Indiana University School of Nursing, an IU distinguished professor and the lead investigator for IU’s Grand Challenge: Responding to the Addictions Crisis. She joined us on Pulse Points to talk about the addictions crisis in Indiana and the significant work being done in this area through IU’s Grand Challenge, a $50 million initiative to respond to the rising problems associated with addiction.
Drs. Janet Fulton and Brenda Lyon are leaders in advancing the practice of nursing, work meticulously to educate Advanced Practice Nurses, and advocate for the recognition of Clinical Nurse Specialists (CNS) and CNS practice nationally. They join Pulse Points to talk about the history of clinical nurse specialists in Indiana and the intersection of CNSs and nursing research.
Dr. Jason Gilbert, Chief Nursing Officer for IU Health joins Pulse Points to talk about the nursing profession, his career path, some significant changes he has led at IU Health, along with providing advice to nurses pursuing leadership roles.
Dr. Sharron Crowder uses her expertise to engage students in learning and empowering nurses for leadership in health policy and advocacy. She joins Pulse Points to discuss her most recent advocacy work on behalf of nurses and opportunities for future IU School of Nursing students.
This month’s Podcast focuses on improving the quality of life and increasing exercise for people living with cancer. Dr. Eileen Hacker, professor and department chair at IU School of Nursing, joins Pulse Points for National Chronic Fatigue Symptom Awareness Month to discuss her research “STEPS to Enhance Physical Activity in people with multiple myeloma being treated with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation.”
Episode #17: Education and support that leads to better planning for Nursing Home Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Dementias. Dr. Susan Hickman of IU School of Nursing, joins Pulse Points to discuss her research program and her commitment to optimizing the quality of life for older adults in life’s final chapter through improved decision-making and communication about treatment preferences. Listeners who may be the caregiver for a loved one facing end of life decisions can learn more.
December is AIDS awareness month. Dr. Chris Coleman, associate dean of IU School of Nursing Fort Wayne, joins PUlse Points to discuss his research on health equity, spirituality, medication and religion and its effects on men aged 50 and older with AIDS. Dr. Coleman discusses his program of research and how people living with AIDS can learn more.
Dean Emerita Angela Barron McBride, PhD, RN, FAAN, joins Pulse Points to celebrate IUPUI's 50th anniversary by discussing the School's accomplishments and contributions to the health care community over the past 50 years.
Anna and Amanda discuss the Man Booker 2018 winner: Milkman by Anna Burns. We loved this (see episode 25 for our discussion)! Apparently it's superb on audio so we recommend that - let us know if you've read (or listened to) it! Closer to home, Jennifer Downs has won the Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction with Pulse Points. Our book of the week is Nine Perfect Strangers by Liane Moriarty. The author of three New York Times No. 1 best-sellers including Big Little Lies, Moriarty has fun with this novel set at a health retreat where nine people go seeking a life change - but will they survive? A great beach read. Next up, Anna and Amanda will be reading Trick by Domenico Starnone. Follow us! Facebook: Books On The Go Email: booksonthegopodcast@gmail.com Instagram: @abailliekaras and @amandalhayes99 Litsy: @abailliekaras Twitter: @abailliekaras Credits: Artwork: Sascha Wilcosz
Jennifer Down is the winner of this year's Readings Prize for New Australian Fiction. Here, she chats with Ellen Cregan, chair of the judging panel, about her winning work of fiction, Pulse Points.
IUSON Associate Dean for Research and Distinguished Professor Dr. Janet Carpenter, PhD, RN, FAAN, joins Pulse Points for World Menopause Month to discuss how she is incorporating her program of research into her new exhibit, "Hot Flashes? Cool!" Dr. Carpenter helps define what menopause is, her inspiration and process behind creating the exhibit, what the components of the exhibit will be and what people can expect to learn from it.
As we observe National Domestic Violence Awareness Month throughout October, we are reminded of the types of violence that can occur between partners and what can be done to help stop the cycle. Dr. Claire Draucker, PhD, RN, APRN, FAAN, sits down with Dean Newhouse to: help define terms; analyze recent data collected of an Indianapolis-based study; and share a number of resources for those experiencing physical or emotional violence by a partner. Dr. Draucker also expands on her important work that focuses on the recovery of victims of childhood sexual abuse. We hope you will tune in to this important episode of Pulse Points.
'Tell it to the Dog' is Robert Power's memoir that provides an unusaul take on memory and reflection and how these elements shape a life. Jennifer Down has death as a connection in the 14 short stories that make up 'Pulse Points'.
Pulse Points: Dr. Julie Meek by Indiana University School of Nursing
Pulse Points is an occasional podcast from the Indiana University School of Nursing. In this episode, we interview Dr. Tamely, Bakas PhD, RN, FAHA, FAAN and discuss her research in caregiver support for stroke survivors and their families.