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In this episode of the Finding Financial Freedom Podcast, we interviewed Jamie Fleischner, founder of Set for Life Insurance, who has helped thousands of professionals secure the right disability coverage. If you're a physician or high-earning professional, protecting your financial future is crucial—and disability insurance is a key part of that plan. Jamie breaks down the ins and outs of Guaranteed Standard Issue (GSI) Policies, explaining how they differ from traditional disability insurance and what you need to consider when choosing the best policy. From pricing and flexibility to common misconceptions, this episode is packed with valuable insights to help you make an informed financial decision. Key Topics Covered: 1. What is a Guaranteed Standard Issue Policy? Understanding how GSI policies differ from traditional disability insurance. 2. Who Qualifies for a GSI Policy? Why only certain programs offer them and what it means for you. 3. Own-Occupation Coverage Are GSI policies truly own-occupation, and why does it matter? 4. Premiums & Cost Comparisons How GSI policy premiums stack up against traditional underwritten disability insurance. 5. Exclusive Discounts & Group Benefits Are there special rates available for specific groups or organizations? 6. Gender-Based Rate Differences How disability insurance pricing differs for men and women. 7. Common Misconceptions About GSI Policies Clearing up myths that could impact your financial decisions. 8. Expert Advice on Choosing Disability Insurance Key takeaways for professionals planning to secure coverage. Resources Mentioned: Set For Life Insurance Website Rezasharif Website Listener Takeaways: GSI policies offer unique benefits and limitations. Group discounts and gender-based pricing can significantly impact your premiums. Flexibility matters—ensure your policy can adapt to your career growth. Understanding the fine print can save you from costly mistakes in the future. Connect with Us: Host: Dr. Disha Spath, The Frugal Physician Guests: Jamie Fleischner on LinkedIn Tune in now and get the expert insights you need to make the best financial decision for your future! This episode is sponsored by Reza & Sharif CPAs - They provide more than just tax returns and financial statements—they deliver strategic financial solutions tailored to your needs. Whether you're a business owner, physician, or investor, they help you navigate complex tax laws, maximize savings, and build long-term wealth. With expert tax planning, accounting, and advisory services, they ensure your finances work for you—not the other way around. Take control of your financial future today. Visit rezasharif.com to see how they can help. This episode is also sponsored by Set for Life Insurance – Providing more than just insurance policies—they deliver personalized coverage and expert guidance tailored to your needs. Whether you're looking for life, disability, or long-term care insurance, their team ensures you get the best protection at the most cost-effective rates. With priority underwriting, special discounts, and access to top-rated insurers, they make securing your future simple and stress-free. Take the next step in protecting what matters most. Visit setforlifeinsurance.com or call 1-888-553-3559 today.
Episode 154. Join me as I share a detailed, behind-the-scenes look at my daily routine, key responsibilities, and insights into the rewarding challenges of working as a psychiatry resident physician in consultation-liaison psychiatry, along with tips for balancing work, learning, and personal life. Links to my favorite things that make doctor life easier, available on Amazon: My Nespresso coffee maker: https://amzn.to/4ioavcV My pillowcase: https://amzn.to/4f5rbmx My favorite scrubs: https://amzn.to/4f9wi56 My agenda book: https://amzn.to/3OM9kGE Visit First Line's website and blog: https://www.firstlinepodcast.com Editing Service for Pre-Med and Medical Students (CV, personal statement, applications): https://www.fiverr.com/firstlinepod For a discount on your TrueLearn subscription use https://truelearn.referralrock.com/l/firstline/ and code firstline Instagram: @firstlinepodcast Facebook: www.facebook.com/firstlinepodcast Email: firstlinepodcast@yahoo.com Content on First Line is for educational and informational purposes only, not as medical advice. Views expressed are my own and do not represent any organizations I am associated with.
Editor-in-Chief, Robert Amdur, MD and Resident Physician, Daniela Martir, MD discuss Partially Ablative Body Radiotherapy for Locally Advanced Unresectable Tumor. The discussion is based on a paper in PRO titled “Partially Ablative Body Radiotherapy (PABR): A Widely Applicable Planning Technique for Palliation of Locally Advanced Unresectable Tumors” (PMID 39393770).
Editor-in-Chief, Robert Amdur, MD and Resident Physician, Daniela Martir, MD discuss Partially Ablative Body Radiotherapy for Locally Advanced Unresectable Tumor. The discussion is based on a paper in PRO titled “Partially Ablative Body Radiotherapy (PABR): A Widely Applicable Planning Technique for Palliation of Locally Advanced Unresectable Tumors” (PMID 39393770).
Presented by the ASC Research and Current Concepts Committee Vicki Jo, MD, Chair & Amy Ly, MD, Vice Chair Dr. Danielle Elliott Range interviews Dr. Melanie Kwan, the winner of the ASC Warren R. Lang MD Resident Physician Award. This interview delves into the steps that led to this award-winning abstract. Platform 13 Revisiting the Performance of Cyst Fluid Carcinoembryonic Antigen as a Diagnostic Marker for Pancreatic Mucinous Cysts: A Comprehensive 20-Year Institutional Melanie Kwan, MD Massachusetts General Hospital Boston, Massachusetts
TNSPPE: Conceptual Review and Highlights of One of the Top Episodes in the Entire Podcast Series- An Interview with Dr. Keshav Raghavendran, MD -- In this re-aired interview, we highlight a stellar former Georgia Tech colleague, then medical student and now medical resident. His episode was one of the most listened to in the series over the past four years! -- Note: The views of this podcast represent those of my guest(s) and I. Note: Purpose of these episodes- not at all, for advice or medical suggestions. These are aimed to provide support for peer pharmacists in training in educational and intellectually stimulating ways. Again, these are not at all for medical advice, or for medical suggestions. Please see your local state and board-certified physician, PA or NP, and pharmacist for medical advice and suggestions.
Amy Beattie, UB resident physician and psychiatrist on the picket line fighting for livable wages
Matt Burwinkel, UB resident physician of internal medicine on picket line, fighting for livable wages full 151 Tue, 03 Sep 2024 17:01:23 +0000 bac1ac12-779f-4bb9-9216-b1e00118797d wben_extras,news WBEN Extras wben_extras,news Matt Burwinkel, UB resident physician of internal medicine on picket line, fighting for livable wages Archive of various reports and news events 2024 © 2021 Audacy, Inc. https://omny.fm/shows/wben-extras/matt-burwinkel-ub-resident-physician-of-internal-m
If we didn't know Dr. Brian Ogendi, we might be concerned about someone being able to pull off a residency and two fellowships while being a father of two young boys, but we do know Brian through his work with our Osmosis Medical Education Fellows (OMEF) program in which he played a major role while earning both his MD and MBA degrees. In other words, we're not worried. Host Hillary Acer checked in with Brian recently as he was wrapping up med school and preparing to start a residency in Internal Medicine/Physician-Scientist Pathway at UVA Health with a fellowship in infectious disease and critical care medicine. “For me, medicine and research really go hand in hand. They enhance each other, they sharpen each other,” he explains. He's already demonstrated that in his role as research advisor to the OMEF program where he drew on his work at the NIH and elsewhere to provide grounding and encouragement to learners. Brian is hoping to put all of this education and experience to work providing care to underserved communities both in the United States and in his native Kenya, leveraging a global network built through Osmosis to do so. Don't miss this uplifting installment in our Next Gen Journeys series full of advice on juggling heavy workloads and family responsibilities while gaining the skills to become an effective, community-minded physician.Mentioned in this episode: UVA Health
Taking a step away, I'll be back don't worry, thanks so much for the support so far!__Resources___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
SERGE A. JABBOUR, MD, FACP, FACE is a Professor of Medicine and the Director of the Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolic Diseases at Jefferson. He is also the Director of the Jefferson Diabetes Center. Dr Jabbour completed his training in Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolic Diseases at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia.Dr Jabbour has been recognized with many honors and he is holder of many teaching awards. Dr Jabbour was named Top Doc in Philadelphia area every year since 2011 by Philadelphia Magazine and one of the best endocrinologists in the nation by Castle Connolly every year since 2012. Dr Jabbour is a member of numerous professional organizations, including The Endocrine Society, American Diabetes Association and American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists.Dr Jabbour has published many articles and chapters on diabetes, metabolic syndrome, various endocrine topics; he serves on the Editorial Board of many journals and he just finished in September 2021 his 5-year tenure as the Chair of the Endocrine Board Review Committee for The Endocrine Society.Dr Jabbour's main research interest is in the field of diabetes. He is involved in many clinical research trials related to new diabetes drugs. He also gives many lectures all over the world on different endocrine topics, mainly diabetes, either in the setting of grand rounds, symposia or other CME presentations. I am truly honored to have such an inspiring and world-class endocrinologist with me today. Welcome Dr. Jabbour, let's see how many people we can convince to do endocrinology.Jefferson Endocrinology:https://www.jeffersonhealth.org/clinical-specialties/endocrinology-diabetes-metabolic-diseases?gclid=CjwKCAjwiOCgBhAgEiwAjv5whBW4FTPRCa_lVxnQI577rjIie4qMEkxca7tNsBwTxndwYCamtYfiMBoCknsQAvD_BwEJefferson Diabetes Center:https://www.jeffersonhealth.org/clinical-specialties/diabetes-center___0:00 - Intro1:49 - Statistics About Endocrinology3:10 - What Is Endocrinology?5:22 - Journey Into Medicine and Endocrinology13:07 - Keeping the Team Happy15:42 - An Average Day/Week of an Endocrinologist19:40 - Advice for People Looking Into Leveling up Ranks22:50 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?25:25 - Best Thing About Being an Endocrinologist27:35 - Making a Rare Diagnosis32:16 - Passion for Studying Diabetes34:21 - Things We Should Know About Type 2 & 1 Diabetes53:06 - What Do You Think About Ozempic and Glp-1?59:44 - Dietary Tips1:06:21 - Hemoglobin a1c Levels1:20:10 - SGLT2 Inhibitors1:16:48 - Future of Endocrinology1:19:34 - Changes Over the Years1:20:17 - Myths About Diabetes1:24:29 - High Number of Diabetic Patients in the U.S.1:30:39 - Advice to People Looking Into Endocrinology1:32:36 - Maximizing Competitiveness Going Into Endocrinology1:39:00 - What Makes the Best-Med Students/Residents/Fellows?1:42:28 - Advice to People Entering a Career in Medicine1:45:17 - What Advice Would You Give Your 18-Year-Old Self?1:48:20 - Adapting to the U.S.1:49:43 - Closing Message1:51:57 - Outro__ResourcesWho Moved My Cheese? by Dr Spencer Johnson: https://amzn.eu/d/dZHrYY8 ___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
While M4s are focused on the next steps of their careers, they also have to hone the skills to be a skilled intern come summer. Dr. Meg Wolff, clinical professor in the department of emergency medicine and pediatrics at the University of Michigan Medical School, offers insight on how students can avoid getting too distracted by the Match process. ✶✶✶✶
Dr. Logan DuBose joins us on the Aging Today Podcast as we discuss utilizing AI technology as a matching tool to assist people living with dementia and their families. AI can help caregivers find care services, aid programs, and provide them with valuable information about caregiving.Click AgingToday.us & listen today!
Amy Mackenzie, MD, grew up in Los Angeles but fled the scene in 1994 after college in rural New York to live and work in Japan for 3 years. She decided to pursue medicine at that time and headed back to the states to finish up pre-med work while working for the Japanese Consulate in Los Angeles. She then moved to Philadelphia in 2000 to work and apply to med school, ultimately enrolling at MCP-Hahnemann (now Drexel). After a year as part-time faculty at the med school, she went on to 3 years of IM residency at Temple and subsequently worked as a hospitalist at Fox Chase for a year between residency and fellowship. She completed heme/onc fellowship at Jefferson in 2013 and then became the first oncologist to do a geriatrics fellowship at Jefferson. She has 4 board certifications: internal medicine, hematology, oncology and geriatrics. She is an associate professor and a fellow of the American College of Physicians, actively participates in an older adults task force with ASCO (Amercian Society of Clinical Oncology) and sits on the board of the newly formed American Academy of Geriatric Oncology. Welcome to the show!___0:00 - Intro1:17 - Statistics About Oncology2:24 - What Is Hematology Oncology?7:06 - Journey Into Heme-Oncol.12:39 - Entering Med School Older Than Most People19:16 - What Was Heme-Oncol. Fellowship Like?26:29 - Getting Into Geriatrics30:07 - What Is It Like Being an Attending?37:33 - Dealing With Very Sick People41:23 - Delivering Bad and Good News50:24 - Lessons Learned From Treating Very Ill Patients55:32 - An Average Day/Week of a Hematologist Oncologist1:06:20 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?1:09:09 - Worst Thing About Being a Hematologist Oncologist1:11:50 - Best Thing About Being a Hematologist Oncologist1:13:27 - Advice to People Looking Into Hematology Oncology1:16:36 - Maximizing Competitiveness Going Into Fellowship1:19:09 - Advice to People Entering a Career in Medicine1:25:22 - Super Important Question!!!1:27:24 - Closing Message1:30:22 - Outro__Resources___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Here are 42 things I learned from my 20s (that I wish I learned earlier).___0:19 - Schedule Everything0:57 - Call Customer Service1:35 - Your Parents Are People Too2:06 - Friends and Family Are Important2:31 - Aim for People to Respect You, Not to Like You3:28 - Free Time Is Great3:55 - Write Emails Like a Human4:33 - Meditate5:07 - Journaling5:32 - Cold Exposure6:14 - Heat Exposure6:46 - You Can Do Anything7:31 - Anger Solves Nothing8:12 - Listening Is a Learned Skill8:55 - Writing Is Important9:53 - Automate and Delegate11:01 - Reading Is a Superpower11:48 - Take All the Blame and Give the Credit12:28 - Try Doing One Thing at a Time13:27 - The Squeaky Wheel Gets the Oil14:06 - Everyone Is Shy; Be the Outgoing Person14:46 - Have a Positive Attitude15:18 - Your 20's Matter16:23 - Saving Won't Make You Rich19:37 - It Is Just a Matter of Time19:57 - Find Advisors and Mentors21:12 - Win with the Minimum Necessary Target22:33 - Little Habits Matter More23:05 - The World Isn't So Scary24:16 - Avoid Underemployment25:23 - Say “No” Most of the Time25:51 - Say “I Do Not Know”27:30 - No One Cares and No One Knows27:44 - Do the Adult Things28:00 - Don't Complain29:00 - Wake Up and Go to Bed at the Same Time29:04 - You Are the Average of the 5 People You Are With29:13 - Read More29:23 - Just Start!29:43 - Most Things Aren't Personal31:18 - Cultivate a Healthy Mind and Body31:58 - This Too Shall Pass!__ResourcesThe Defining Decade by Meg Jay: https://amzn.eu/d/1mO3gWe Hell Yeah Or No by Derek Sivers: https://a.co/d/czgdFFn___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dr. Goldberg is from Wilmington, Delaware. She went to UPenn where she majored in the Biological Basis of Behavior, graduated Magna Cum Laude, was judged to have the best honor's thesis in her major and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. She went to Albert Einstein College of Medicine for her MD degree and was elected to Alpha Omega Alpha. She was a surgery resident here at Jefferson for many years, but changed careers to pathology. She is currently a cytopathologist and gynecologic surgical pathologist. She is also the doting mother to amazing twins and loving wife to her historian husband. Her research focuses on graduate medical education and laboratory quality and safety. In her "spare" time, she loves to ski, row, and watch her kids do karate and play baseball.___0:00 - Intro1:01 - Statistics About Pathology4:02 - What Is Pathology?11:24 - Changing to Pathology From Surgery29:51 - What Was Residency Like?32:58 - Specializing After Pathology Residency38:38 - What Is It Like Being an Attending?39:43 - An Average Day/Week of a Pathologist45:28 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?47:21 - Best Thing About Being a Pathologist49:37 - Worst Thing About Being a Pathologist55:41 - Myths About Pathologists57:10 - Characteristics of a Student for Pathology58:43 - Advice to People Looking Into Pathology1:01:40 - Maximizing Competitiveness Going Into Pathology1:07:42 - Future of Pathology1:14:30 - Advice to People Entering a Career in Medicine1:18:12 - Book Recommendations1:22:23 - What Advice Would You Give Your 18-Year-Old Self?1:25:06 - Positive Qualities & Characteristics1:28:06 - Finding a Good Program1:30:19 - Closing Messages1:32:28 - Outro__ResourcesAnd the Band Played On by Randy Shilts: https://a.co/d/02Hdxqp___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dr. Rohin Saroya is a family medicine doctor currently practicing family medicine and sleep medicine. He completed his residency at Drexel University and Moved to Jefferson and completed a one-year fellowship in sleep medicine. He is Board certified in both and practicing 80/20% in family medicine and sleep medicine, respectively. He still lives in Philly but is working in central Delaware at Bayhealth. Dr. Saroya is regularly elected as a top teacher, in fact, when searching for an attending doctor to speak to in regards to family medicine, Dr. Saroya was the name that came up 90% of the time. Welcome Dr. Saroya.___0:00 - Intro0:48 - Statistics About Family Medicine6:16 - What Is Family Medicine?10:18 - Journey Into Family Medicine16:16 - What Was Residency Like?22:07 - Getting Into Sleep Medicine23:58 - What Is Sleep Medicine?25:35 - What Was Sleep Medicine Fellowship Like?27:32 - Melatonin in Kids29:09 - Common Mistakes Made in Sleep Hygiene31:04 - Treating People Struggling With Sleep33:04 - Sleep Trackers and Devices to Improve Sleep36:46 - An Average Day of a Family Medicine Doctor40:12 - Tips for Practicing Medicine in the U.S. From Other Countries42:42 - What Is It Like Being an Attending?44:39 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?45:40 - Best Thing About Family Medicine46:49 - Worst Thing About Family Medicine47:48 - Dealing With Burnout and Keeping a Good Lifestyle50:03 - Things You Wish You Knew Before Going Into Family Medicine51:20 - Myths About Family Medicine53:05 - What Makes the Best-Med Students/Residents?57:40 - Future of Your Career1:02:16 - Advice to People Looking Into Family Medicine1:04:13 - Maximizing Competitiveness Going Into Residency1:06:34 - Advice to People Entering Medicine1:08:21 - Common Mistakes1:09:08 - Positive Qualities & Characteristics You Admire1:10:28 - Closing Message for People Looking Into Family Medicine1:11:31 - Closing Message1:12:04 - Outro__Resources___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Gillian is from the larger Philadelphia area and initially studied Philosophy and Psychology at the University of Scranton and worked in social services as a Case Manager after college. She then transitioned to Vaccine Development NIH-funded research as a clinical coordinator at the University of Vermont while taking pre-med classes. She attended medical school at Penn State College of Medicine, where she also earned her Masters in Education and was recognized with the Leonard Tow Humanism in Medicine award and the Gold Humanism Honor Society. During medical school, she also held multiple statewide and national positions such as Chair for the Committee on Bioethics & Humanities for the American Medical Association-Medical Student Section, Board of Trustee for the Pennsylvania Medical Society, State Director on the Pennsylvania Political Action Committee Board of Directors for the Pennsylvania Medical Society. She was served as an Editorial Fellow with the AMA Journal of Ethics in 2019. She matched at TJUH in Internal Medicine where she was recognized with multiple teaching awards including Hobart Amory Hare Resident Teaching Award, Alpha Omega Alpha Honor Society and teaching award, and the Darilyn Moyer, MD, FACP Professionalism Award for Trainees in Southeastern PA. She is interested in a career in academic hospital medicine and medical education crafting curriculum that incorporates health system science and humanism topics in medicine.___0:00 - Intro1:29 - Statistics About Internal Medicine3:55 - What Is Internal Medicine?7:25 - Why Internal Medicine?15:18 - What Was IM Residency Like?17:23 - Plans for Designing a Curriculum19:22 - Shooting Incident at the Hospital23:02 - Best Thing About Being an IM Doctor26:09 - Worst Thing About Being an IM Doctor27:14 - Work Intensity and an Average Day as a Resident34:14 - The Best Year of Residency35:19 - An Average Outpatient Day/Week38:32 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?43:56 - Things You Wish You Knew Before Coming Into IM45:33 - Characteristics of a Student Best for IM50:00 - Advice for People Looking Into Internal Medicine51:22 - Maximizing Competitiveness Going Into IM Residency54:03 - Things Learned From Residency56:53 - Common Mistakes1:00:49 - Positive Qualities & Characteristics You Admire1:03:05 - Closing Message1:04:14 - Outro__Resources___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dr. Isenberg is a professor of surgery at SKMC and the vice chair of surgical education here at Jefferson as well. He is specialized in colorectal surgery. He went to medical school at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, trained in surgery at Lenox hill hospital, and completed is colorectal surgery fellowship at Thomas Jefferson University. He is the editor-in-chief for ACS case reviews in surgery, the immediate past president of the TJUH medical staff, the immediate past chair of Colorectal RC of ACGME and the past VP of ASCRS. He is a widely loved teacher and leader here at Jefferson. I personally had an amazing experience working as a medical student in his team here at Jefferson and because of how amazing an experience I had, I came very close to picking surgery as opposed to internal medicine. He has won multiple teaching awards, including Dean's career educator award in 2020. ___0:00 - Intro1:07 - Statistics About Colorectal Surgery1:39 - What Is Colorectal Surgery?2:32 - Why Colorectal Surgery?5:53 - Choosing Surgery During Med School7:29 - What Was General Surgery Residency Like?8:26 - Going Into Colorectal Surgery9:49 - What Is It Like Being an Attending?12:08 - An Average Week of a Colorectal Surgeon13:42 - Being In Academia15:20 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?18:25 - Making Curricular Changes in Skmc21:47 - Best Thing About Colorectal Surgery23:47 - Worst Thing About Colorectal Surgery24:45 - What Makes the Best-Med Students/Residents/Fellows?27:12 - Advice to Students Doubting About Surgery28:39 - Maximizing Competitiveness Going Into Surgery30:00 - Changes in Colorectal Surgery Over the Years32:17 - Future of Colorectal Surgery33:19 - Dealing With Burnout and Keeping a Good Lifestyle38:25 - Clinic vs Operating Room39:26 - Advice to New Attendings39:47 - Advice to People Entering a Career in Medicine42:02 - Any Mistakes That You Made Throughout Your Career/Life?44:27 - Book Recommendations48:55 - What Advice Would You Give Your 18-Year-Old Self?49:34 - Closing Message54:39 - Very Important Question!55:00 - Outro__ResourcesAn Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth by Chris Hadfield: https://a.co/d/biHgWmwThe Book of Joy by Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, and Douglas Abrams: https://a.co/d/eSZdL0iWhen Bad Things Happen to Good People by Harold S. Kushner: https://a.co/d/em0VH6I ___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Alex Valiga is the current chief resident physician in the Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology here at Thomas Jefferson University. He grew up outside of Philadelphia in North Wales, Pennsylvania and attended nearby Drexel University where he earned a bachelor's degree in biomedical engineering. It was during this time that Dr. Valiga developed his passion for cutaneous oncology by spending several years conducting basic science research at the world-renowned Wistar Institute. Given his achievements in academics and research, Dr. Valiga was elected to national honors societies for engineering (Tau Beta Pi) and biomedical engineering (Alpha Eta Mu Beta). After completing his undergraduate studies, Dr. Valiga then continued on to Drexel University College of Medicine. During this time he was honored to be elected co-president of his medical school class for four consecutive years and received the Joel Roslyn Award, an honor reserved for a single member of the graduating class in recognition of outstanding leadership while demonstrating a notable level of commitment and service to his fellow classmates. After graduation, Dr. Valiga then completed an internship in internal medicine at Lankenau Medical Center and is now halfway through his final year of dermatology residency at Thomas Jefferson where he is also serving as Chief Resident. With his academic interests in cutaneous oncology, Dr. Valiga will continue his training with a fellowship in micrographic surgery and dermatologic oncology after which he hopes to continue his career in academic medicine.___0:00 - Intro1:18 - Statistics About Dermatology4:14 - What Is Dermatology?6:36 - Journey Into Dermatology12:56 - 1st and 2nd Years of Dermatology Residency17:55 - Monkeypox Case22:49 - 3rd Year and Overall Residency Experience32:11 - An Average Week of a Dermatology Resident36:28 - Types of Fellowships37:36 - What Fellowship Did You Pick and Why?42:18 - Future of Your Career43:56 - Dealing With Burnout and Keeping a Good Lifestyle50:52 - Maximizing Competitiveness Going Into Derm Residency59:25 - Best Thing About Being a Dermatologist1:00:20 - Worst Thing About Being a Dermatologist1:03:24 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?1:08:22 - Future of Dermatology1:10:09 - Advice to People Entering Medicine1:12:10 - Book Recommendations1:15:32 - What Advice Would You Give Your 18-Year-Old Self?1:18:53 - Closing Message for People Looking Into Dermatology1:20:03 - What Makes the Best Dermatology Resident?1:21:17 - Closing Message1:24:41 - Outro__ResourcesI Will Teach You to Be Rich by Ramit Sethi: https://a.co/d/1jQA8D8 Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell: https://a.co/d/hOnFtG8 Man's Search For Meaning by Viktor E. Frankl: https://a.co/d/dHP8ebQ ___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Where medical students do their residency is one of the biggest decisions they will make. Knowing what program is right for them can be a challenge. Hilary Fairbrother, MD, MPH, vice chair of education at UTHealth Houston, McGovern Medical School, joins to share best practices on how to search for residency programs and find the best fit. American Medical Association CXO Todd Unger hosts.
What career has the highest burnout rate? Burnout among physicians, residents and medical students is one of the most pressing problems in medicine. However, medical faculty are also showing signs of burnout. Joining to discuss the current state of educator well-being and what can be done to address it is Charlene Dewey, MD, MEd, MACP, director of the Center for Professional Health and chair of the Faculty Wellness Committee at Vanderbilt University Medical Center. American Medical Association CXO Todd Unger hosts.
Dr. David Oxman is a Critical Care Doctor and associate professor of medicine here at Jefferson and the program director for the critical care medicine fellowship. He went to medical school at Temple, where he also completed his residency in IM. HE completed four fellowships in Infectious Diseases at Tufts, Surgical Critical Care at Harvard, Medical critical care at Hahnemann, and Medical ethics at Harvard. He is currently the medical school's ethics and professionalism thread director and runs the hospital ethics consultation service here at Jefferson. I also had the personal luxury of being in a student group led by Dr. Oxman, where we had discussions about being medical students and our hospital experiences.Oct 9th___0:00 - Intro0:51 - Statistics About Critical Care4:36 - What Is Critical Care?5:48 - Journey Into Medicine and Critical Care10:30 - Why Critical Care?19:07 - An Average Week/Day Balancing Academia, ICU, and Ethics Consultation25:32 - Ethics Consultation and Ethical Dilemmas in the Hospital42:47 - Best Thing About Being a Critical Care Doctor43:44 - Worst Thing About Being a Critical Care Doctor45:19 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?48:25 - Interest in Academia51:07 - Thoughts About Med Students on Social Media55:44 - Common Myth About Critical Care Doctors56:27 - Changes Over the Years and the Future of Critical Care 1:07:02 - Advice for People Looking Into Critical Care1:07:59 - Maximizing Competitiveness1:09:35 - Advice to People Entering a Career in Medicine1:11:49 - Book Recommendations1:14:25 - Lessons From COVID, Changes in Practice and Burnout1:23:29 - What Advice Would You Give Your 18-Year-Old Self?1:25:30 - Closing Message for People Looking Into Critical Care1:29:18 - Closing Message 1:31:13 - Outro__ResourcesOf Human Bondage by W. Somerset Maugham: https://a.co/d/eT0pUtyMy Own Country by Abraham Verghese: https://a.co/d/ffD8lh7 ___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dr. Steven Herrine is the chair of medical education and professor of medicine here at SKMC at Jefferson and a practicing hepatologist and gastroenterologist. He grew up in NYC and studied math and history at Oberlin College, after which he spent a few years as a chef, and then went to Jefferson medical school, Penn, for IM residency and Jefferson for GI/hepatology, where he has stayed since. He has won multiple awards for teaching, including IM residency teacher of the year, which makes sense because he now runs medical education as the chair here at SKMC. This is a scary interview for me because if I say anything bad, Dr. Herrine can of course, kick me right out of medical school with only a couple months left. Sep 25th___0:00 - Intro1:17 - From Being a Chef to Doing Medicine5:39 - What Is Hepatology?6:12 - Why Hepatology?9:50 - What Was Fellowship Like?10:48 - Choosing the Kind of Practice That You Want to Do17:46 - Best Thing About Being a Hepatologist20:29 - Worst Thing About Being a Hepatologist22:07 - How to Get Into Dean/Chair Positions?24:23 - An Average Week/Day Balancing Clinic and Dean Position27:39 - Most Surprising/Unexpected Thing About Being a Dean29:50 - Formalities and Processes for Changing Med School Curriculum32:03 - Main Factors in Change33:00 - LCME Guidelines on Curriculum35:06 - Being the Dean of Medical Education37:21 - Lessons Learned After Being in Medical Education for 20+ Years 39:52 - Social Science & Medicine43:48 - Deciding on Online and On-Site Classes47:28 - Medical Education Changing Over the Years49:57 - Differences Between Successful and Unsuccessful Students53:25 - Medical Education During COVID-1957:56 - Future of Your Career59:32 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?1:00:57 - Advice to People Entering Medicine1:02:36 - What Advice Would You Give Your Med Student Self?1:03:30 - Any Mistakes That You Made Throughout Your Career?1:05:14 - Book Recommendations1:08:28 - Closing Message for People Looking Into Hepatology1:08:52 - Closing Message for People Going Into Medicine1:10:03 - Tips for Making Great Graphics for Teaching1:11:05 - Giving a Good Experience for Students at SKMC&Jefferson1:13:55 - Closing Message1:15:13 - Outro__ResourcesBeing There by Jerzy Kosinski: https://a.co/d/3a8BVrZ Undaunted Courage by Stephen E. Ambrose: https://a.co/d/cS4QFdF ___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
More than 2 out of 5 residents are burned out, with female and second-year residents particularly at risk, according to the AMA's exclusive Organizational Well-being Assessment report. Joining to discuss the report's key findings and implications in recognition of National Physician Suicide Awareness Day is Mark Greenawald, MD, vice chair of Academic Affairs, Well-being, and Professional Development in the Department of Family and Community Medicine at Carilion Clinic and vice chair of Family and Community Medicine at the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine, in Roanoke, Va. American Medical Association CXO Todd Unger hosts.
This summer, our research reporter Soleil Shah added a new role to his resume: first-year medical resident. Now he spends his days alternating between making the rounds on hospital patients and reading up on the latest health policy research for the Tradeoffs newsletter. Guest:Soleil Shah, MD, MSc, Research Reporter, Tradeoffs; Resident Physician, Brigham and Women's HospitalLearn more and read a full transcript on our website.We're also excited to share that you can now find Tradeoffs on YouTube! Still not enough Tradeoffs? Sign up for our free weekly newsletter featuring the latest health policy research and news.Support this type of journalism today, with a gift. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dr. Lalitha Trivikram is a board-certified Internal Medicine physician who graduated from Penn State College of Medicine and completed her post-graduate training at the University of Michigan and New York Hospital - Cornell. She has over 20 years of experience in outpatient, inpatient, and congregate care settings, including skilled nursing, acute rehabilitation, and correctional facilities. Currently, she serves as a medical director in the Philadelphia Department of Prisons, the jail for the City of Philadelphia, which has a daily census of around 4,500 citizens and a patient population numbering nearly 18,000 individuals annually. In the spring of 2020, she stepped into public health when asked to be the lead physician in the COVID-19 response at the PDP. Under her leadership, the mortality rate from Covid has been one-tenth that of other regional jurisdictions. She is a family friend, and I had the luxury of shadowing her as an undergrad. Lalitha is a stunningly good diagnostician and a fantastic person all around.Aug 28th___0:00 - Intro1:21 - Statistics About Internal Medicine2:49 - Why is Internal Medicine?3:41 - Why Internal Medicine?10:32 - What was IM Residency Like?15:05 - Differences in the Residency years17:07 - inpatient vs outpatient20:16 - Working as the Medical Director in the Philadelphia Jail23:54 - An Average Day as the Medical Director26:25 - Difference diseases/injuries found in a jail setting32:41 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?34:14 - Memorable Experiences at the prison38:37 - Thoughts about working in a prison39:57 - prison life during COVID-1950:06 - Best Thing About Internal Medicine51:01 - Worst Thing About Internal Medicine52:12 - Burning out54:01 -Choosing between the clinic and industry55:55 - Common myth about IM doctors57:57 - What makes the best IM student?1:04:40 - Characteristics of an IM student1:05:36 - Advice to students looking into a specialty1:06:44 - Future of Internal Medicine1:12:31 - Any Mistakes That You Made Throughout Your Career?1:16:16 - Closing Message1:17:35 - Outro__Resources___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Akanksha Dadlani, Resident Physician - Department of Psychiatry at University of Cincinnati Medical Center joins the podcast to discuss how Chat GPT use exists in mental health cases, the future of technology in medicine, and how we should consider the ethics of technology in medicine.
Akanksha Dadlani, Resident Physician - Department of Psychiatry at University of Cincinnati Medical Center joins the podcast to discuss how Chat GPT use exists in mental health cases, the future of technology in medicine, and how we should consider the ethics of technology in medicine.
Here are 101 pieces of advice to myself for a better life.___00:24 - #1. Create don't consume00:53 - #2. Ask for help1:02 - #3. Surround yourself with people who excite you1:22 - #4. Remove people from your life that drain you1:25 - #5. Avoid lukewarm romantic relationships1:36 - #6. Be in nature1:49 - #7. Meditate2:09 - #8. Have long dinners with your family2:31 - #9. The squeaky wheel gets the oil2:40 - #10. Take the blame and give the credit2:46 - #11. Focus on a single task2:58 - #12. Do a difficult task every day3:04 - #13. Allocate 2-3 hours of uninterrupted time to personal projects3:30 - #14. Purchase things that eliminate negatives3:40 - #15. Put yourself in other people's shoes4:16 - #16. Ask, "What is the incentive?"4:45 - #17. Maintain important relationships5:17 - #18. Think if your actions are emotional or logical5:45 - #19. Everything can be learned5:49 - #20. Everything can be forgotten6:10 - #21. Everyone will die6:14 - #22. Everyone is focused 99.99% on themselves6:52 - #23. Everyone wants to feel important7:16 - #24. Everyone wants to be happy7:20 - #25. Every semi-pro wants to guide a beginner7:45 - #26. Switch up your gym routine8:00 - #27. Realize the difference between bad and good pains8:29 - #28. Find the time you work best and utilize it!9:00 - #29. If you wouldn't replace it, throw it away9:23 - #30. Do not be afraid to confront haters9:52 - #31. Remember your roots9:58 - #32. Go first!10:09 - #33. Connect with everyone you meet10:34 - #34. Lean in10:57 - #35. Make your own rules and stick to them11:34 - #36. Just start!11:38 - #37. Apologize quickly and sincerely11:51 - #38. Don't let your core products expire12:15 - #39. Stay publicly a-political12:32 - #40. Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results13:05 - #41. Act like your hero13:30 - #42. Don't wallow in sadness13:58 - #43. People undervalue execution and overvalue ideas14:28 - #44. Be humble14:38 - #45. Be real15:19 - #46. Sharing happiness doesn't dilute it, it concentrates it15:40 - #47. Side projects and hobbies will change your life15:55 - #48. Never complain16:01 - #49. Use the 80/20 rule16:51 - #50-8430:43 - #85. Stop listening to junk31:03 - #86. If your backups fail, it is your fault31:45 - #87. Put on a show, tell a story32:48 - #88. Do one thing every day you don't want to do33:05 - #89. Don't hire mercenaries; inspire soldiers33:14 - #90. Your appearance matters33:34 - #91. Always make deadlines33:57 - #92. If you are not sleeping 6 1/2 hours, you are not sleeping34:03 - #93. Keep your sleep optimal34:22 - #94. Wake up and go to bed at the same time34:27 - #95. Call customer service34:29 - #96. Always exercise34:34 - #97. No one likes a know-it-all34:43 - #98. Stop complaining about your New York strip steak34:54 - #99. The top 1% of the business runs off connections35:01 - #100. Get 1% better every day35:17 - #101. Everything passes__ResourcesWait But Why - https://waitbutwhy.com/ ___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dr. Alexi Nazem is the Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer for Nomad Health, the leading digital marketplace for temporary healthcare jobs. Through his entrepreneurial ventures and medical expertise, he has grown the company to over 500 employees and raised over $200 million in capital since its founding. Dr. Nazem has more than two decades of experience in the medical and healthcare sector, and remains an active member of the Department of Medicine faculty at Weill Cornell Medicine. Prior to Nomad Health, he served as a Resident Physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital, National Field Manager for the 100,000 Lives Campaign, and was a Clinical Fellow at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Nazem earned his Bachelor's degree in Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry from Yale University, his medical degree from Yale University School of Medicine and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School. Learn more about Alexi at https://atchainternational.com/healthcare-and-higher-podcast-ep73-alexi-nazem/ For a complete list of guests and links to past episodes, visit https://atchainternational.com/healthcare-and-higher-podcast/ 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. Follow Healthcare And Higher: - LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-healthcare-and-higher-podcast - Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/healthcareandhigher Connect with Iqbal on: - Linked at https://www.linkedin.com/in/iqbalatcha/ - 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.
Jason Han was Born and raised in South Korea until age 10. Came here with his family and attended Columbia University and Perelman School of Medicine, where he was the student body president. I'm currently a cardiac surgery resident at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania and the vice president of the TSRA, which is our national governing body. I'm broadly interested in communication, education, and leadership, especially concerning our patients and staff. I've written a column for the Philadelphia Inquirer for seven years and have written essays for the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of American College of Cardiology, and more.July 31st___0:00 - Intro0:41 - Statistics About Cardiothoracic Surgery9:03 - Managing Things Other Than Medicine16:10 - Choosing Medicine19:23 - What Is Cardiothoracic Surgery?29:37 - CT Residency33:21 - Working Hours34:44 - Tips/Tricks to Maximize Competitiveness40:14 - Getting Feedback From Attendings41:24 - Symptoms of Burnout and Maintaining Happiness46:45 - Family 47:25 - Being an Immigrant in America52:49 - Best Thing About Cardiothoracic Surgery54:42 - Worst Thing About Cardiothoracic Surgery56:25 - If I Give You $100 Million, What Would You Do?58:28 - Projects to Educate People About Surgery1:08:19 - General Advice for People Picking Careers in Medicine1:11:51 - Any Advice for Your Younger Self?1:13:11 - Advice for Med Students Looking Into CT1:17:00 - Things to Look For While Choosing a Program1:24:42 - Characteristics of a Student for Cardiothoracic Surgery1:28:54 - Future Career Plans1:32:49 - Super Important Question!!!1:35:36 - Closing Message1:37:47 - Outro__Resources___View the Show Notes Page for This Episode for a transcript and more information: zhighley.com/podcast___Connect With ZachMain YouTube: @ZachHighley Newsletter: https://zhighley.com/newsletter/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zachhighley/?hl=enWebsite: https://zhighley.comTwitter: https://twitter.com/zachhighleyLinkedln: https://www.linkedin.com/in/zach-highley-gergel-44763766/Business Inquiries: zachhighley@nebula.tv___Listen for FreeSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/23TvJdEBAJuW5WY1QHEc6A?si=cf65ae0abbaf46a4Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-zach-highley-show/id1666374777___Welcome to the Zach Highley Show, where we discuss personal growth and medicine to figure out how to improve our lives. My name is Zach a Resident Physician in Boston. Throughout these episodes, I'll interview top performers from around the world in business, life, and medicine in hopes of extracting the resources and techniques they use to get to the top.The best way to help the show is to share episodes on any platform. If you think a friend or family member will like a certain episode, send it to them!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
"Poverty is one of the Leading Causes of Death."I've always been fascinated by the link between poverty and health outcomes in the US. Making informed decisions on health care may be even more difficult for those worrying about making it through the next meal. As well, young children stand to feel the impact the most, with lower levels of nutrition (or many unhealthy food choices in their communities). What are some things governments should focus on instead? How can we move the yard stick forward? I chat with a Resident Physician in New Jersey, to talk about their experiences and what they see on a daily basis.Visit my NEW Website! https://openmindspodcast.com/Check out my Instagram/Tik Tok for daily posts: Instagram @openmindspodTiktok @openmindspodcast
Are you ready for Medical Laboratory Professionals Week? Our annual celebration of pathologists and medical laboratory professionals begins April 23, 2023, and this year's theme is Saved by the Lab, a play on the popular sitcom from the 1990s, Saved by the Bell. In honor of Zack Morris and friends from Bayside High, we're revisiting the ‘90s to explore what was going on in the world—and the world of laboratory medicine. On this LIVE episode of Inside the Lab, your host, Ms. Kelly Swails, MLS(ASCP), is joined by Dr. Robert A. Goulart, MD, MASCP, FCAP, Associate Chief of Anatomic Pathology and Director of Quality and Patient Safety at the University of Massachusetts Memorial Health System and President-Elect of ASCP, Mr. Sean McNair, MPH, Cytology Education Coordinator at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center and Program Director for the Cytology Training Program at Hunter College, Ms. Stephanie Y. Whitehead, MPH, MBA, MLS(ASCP), Executive Director of Pathology and Laboratory Services at University Health System in San Antonio, Texas, and Chair Elect for the Council of Laboratory Professionals, and Dr. Constantine Kanakis, MD, MSc, MLS(ASCP), Resident Physician at Loyola Medicine in Chicago and Member of the ASCP Patient Champions Advisory Board, for a ‘90s trivia showdown. Our panelists answer questions about ‘90s pop culture, including the highest grossing movies, chart-topping music and hottest toys of the decade.Dr. Goulart, Mr. McNair, Ms. Whitehead and Dr. Kanakis also test their knowledge of noteworthy lab news from the ‘90s. Listen in to find out which of our panelists took home the coveted prize, a tote bag filled with Saved by the Lab gear! Topics Covered · Popular ‘90s trends such as the Tamagotchi, Tickle Me Elmo, Harry Potter and reality television· ‘90s pop culture trivia, e.g.: the most-watched episode of TV, highest grossing movie and chart-topping music of the decade· Lab-specific ‘90s trivia like when ASCP elected a laboratory professional to the Board of Directors for the first time or how many lab professionals were working in the US at that time· Noteworthy laboratory news from the ‘90s, including Marie Gatscha's testimony to Congress on behalf of ASCP, the revision of the WHO Blue Book on bone tumors, and trastuzumab's impact on breast cancer treatment Connect with ASCPASCPASCP on FacebookASCP on InstagramASCP on Twitter Connect with Dr. GoulartDr. Goulart on LinkedIn Connect with Mr. McNairMr. McNair on LinkedIn Connect with Ms. WhiteheadMs. Whitehead on LinkedInMs. Whitehead on TwitterMs. Whitehead on Instagram Connect with Dr. KanakisDr. Kanakis on LinkedInDr. Kanakis on TwitterDr. Kanakis at Loyola Pathology Connect with Ms. SwailsMs. Swails on Twitter ResourcesASCP Lab Week ResourcesInside the Lab in the ASCP Store
On this episode, we have Dr Franklyn Rocha Cabrero speak on his experience advocating for residents under CIR or Committees of Interns and Residents. CIR is the largest housestaff organization in the country which represents 24,000 residents around the country. We talk about how he received backlash from speaking up against some of the unforunate challenges residents face at his program in Miami and also on the national level. Not only that but most important we lean into how to protect yourself when you put yourself out there and how backlash can be a detterent to your success as a future physician. Such backlash can come in many different ways. We learn why advocacy continues to be an important aspect in making residency less dehumanizing and more supportive of individual's experience. What are resident unions and why they are making a significant push? Learn that and more on this episode! Follow us on IG here Buy Dr. Aldwin Soumare's book here Learn more about CIR
John Andrews, MD, has decades of experience working in residency programs. Currently the AMA's vice president for GME innovations, he offers tips to freshly matched residents-to-be on how to ease their transition to the next level of their training.
Thank you Candice Price, Hagar Peerman, Ebone Granger & Camille Jenkins for sharing your story at the YNS Live with NFL Thread Super Bowl LVII Luncheon
This episode features Dr. Vishal Khetpal, Resident Physician at Brown University Internal Medicine Program. Here, he discusses his focus on the social determinants of cardiovascular disease, his excitement surrounding the different capabilities AI will bring to healthcare, and more.
Hockey Hall of Fame ice hockey player, assistant general manager for the Toronto Maple Leafs and resident physician, Hayley Wickenheiser joins the show to discuss being awarded the Empire Club's Annual Nation Builder Award, her journey through her decorated career on-and-off the ice and life operating in the medical field.
A full writeup of this episode, including references and a transcript, is available on our website: hearthisidea.com/episodes/pannu-monrad Jassi Pannu is a Resident Physician at Stanford, a Visiting Scholar at John Hopkins, and a Fellow at the Emerging Leaders in Biosecurity Initiative. Joshua Monrad is a Biosecurity Program Officer at Effective Giving and a Researcher at Oxford's Future Humanity Institute. We discuss: The post-COVID biosecurity landscape, including the American Pandemic Preparedness Plan The Biological Weapons Convention and current issues in dual-use research The role of antivirals, increasing vaccine capacity, and market failures Similarities and differences between GCBR mitigation and general pandemic preparedness How some interventions are underpinned by global cooperation If you have any feedback, you can get a free book for filling out our new feedback form. You can also get in touch through our website or on twitter. Consider leaving us a review wherever you're listening to this — it's the best free way to support the show. Thanks for listening!
Interview with Divya Srikumaran, MD, author of Association Between Parental Leave and Ophthalmology Resident Physician Performance. Hosted by Neil Bressler, MD.
On this episode, we interview Dr. Rashona Moss, IM resident in Detroit regarding her highly necessary book in combating residency burnout and navigating its challenges in the book called the Resident Physician Wellness Guide. Some things we discuss How she learned to utilize coping skills to deal with the death of her grandmother during a arduous ICU rotation during intern year Why support however, whoever, whenever is a necessary component in surviving residency How she dealt with disappointment after not matching the first time How to navigate anxiety in the midst of trying to learn your patients and execute your professional duties why you must always prioritize yourself first! how can you expect to take care of others when you are ill? and MORE Purchase the Resident Wellness Guide Here, Discount code is Balance Follow us on IG here
Dr. Brooke Bachelor, DO, RN- Linkedin Education- University of Illinois- Spanish Language and Literature UIC- B.S. Nursing Northwestern University- Pre-Med Studies Des Moines University-College of Osteopathic Medicine PiLA- Princeton in Latin America Princeton in Africa
In this episode of Health411, host Dr. Jonathan Karp and producer Daniel Geller discuss medical residency with Dr. Madison Mitchell of Capital Health. A recent graduate of St. George's medical school, Dr. Mitchell describes going to medical school in the Caribbean, Family Medicine residency in New Jersey, and how these experiences have shaped her future as a doctor.
Dr. Parichita Choudhury is a cognitive neurologist at Banner Health in Arizona. She received her M.D. from the University of Alberta and immediately joined the University of Calgary as a Resident Physician. She was a fellow at the Mayo Clinic Rochester and now shares her passion for medical education with others. Dr. Choudhury's clinical research focuses on neurodegenerative dementia, diagnosis, and prognosis, with an emphasis on early detection. In this episode… Recent research has pointed toward a connection between hearing loss and cognitive decline. While it's invaluable to treat hearing loss to combat neurological disease, that's not the only solution. In fact, as more work is done in the field, science is offering more ways than ever to diagnose and fight against cognitive decline. As a cognitive neurologist, Dr. Parichita Choudhury is aware of the impact hearing has on brain function. She is a proponent of healthy mental exercise and testing, working hands-on with her patients to help their cognitive health, and now, explains exactly what that looks like in practice. Dr. Mark Syms has a thorough discussion with Dr. Parichita Choudhury, a cognitive neurologist at Banner Health, about cognitive decline and how to fight against it. They discuss her qualifications and observations in the field before diving deep into subjects such as brain testing programs, how the MoCA works, and exercises people can perform to strengthen their cognition. Hear the full conversation on this episode of the ListenUp! Podcast!
In the introduction to Glennon Doyle's latest memoir, she asks herself, “Who was I before I became who the world told me to be?” We're all affected by social conditioning and make choices based on others' expectations. And all too often, we make ourselves smaller to fit in the “cage” of what's socially acceptable. So, what can we do to break free from social conditioning and start accepting our authentic selves? On this episode of Inside the Lab, our hosts, Dr. Lotte Mulder and Ms. Kelly Swails are joined by Ms. Patty J. Eschliman, MHA, MLS(ASCP), DLM, Director of Laboratory Operations at Western Missouri Medical Center and Former Chair of the DLM Exam Committee for ASCP, Dr. Jennifer Kasten, MD, MSc, FASCP, Pediatric Pathologist at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and Member of the ASCP Pathologist Council, and Dr. Constantine ‘Aki' Kanakis, MD, MSc, MLS(ASCP), Resident Physician at Loyola Medicine in Chicago and Member of the ASCP Patient Champions Advisory Board, to discuss Glennon Doyle's bestseller, Untamed: Stop Pleasing, Start Living. Our panelists explore how much of our decision-making is based on other people's expectations and what women can do to find freedom from social conditioning. They share some of the things they denied themselves over the years because they didn't fit with societal expectations and explain what we can do to reconnect with parts of ourselves we've neglected. Listen in for insight around the “cages” we impose on ourselves and learn how the principles in Untamed might inform our work in the predominantly female field of laboratory medicine. Topics Covered · How the expectations of our families and peer groups inform the “cages” we impose on ourselves· How much our decision-making is based on expectations of others (and why some expectations are beneficial)· How to create a balance between forging your own path and asking for advice from others · What we can do to reconnect with the parts of ourselves we've neglected· How the themes covered in Untamed inform working in the laboratory Connect with ASCPASCPASCP on FacebookASCP on InstagramASCP on Twitter Connect with Ms. EschlimanMs. Eschliman on LinkedIn The Lab Leader Coach Connect with Dr. KastenDr. Kasten on Twitter Dr. Kasten at Cincinnati Children's Connect with Dr. KanakisDr. Kanakis on TwitterDr. Kanakis at Loyola Pathology Connect with Dr. Mulder & Ms. SwailsMs. Swails on TwitterDr. Mulder on Twitter Resources Untamed by Glennon Doyle ASCP Leadership Institute Inside the Lab in the ASCP Store
Dr. Taylor Brana was a Resident Physician at the time of the original recording (now at attending) in Psychiatry, Creator of The Happy Doc Podcast and developer of educational platforms that utilize voice-first technology. Our interview is really two separate interviews in one. In the first, we cover his podcast, where he interviews physicians on how they manage to continue finding fulfillment and enjoyment in their lives and practices in a world of crushing debt, wasteful administrative burdens, and so much clicking. We discuss the recurring themes that he sees from his guests. He started this as a med student and continues with it in residency, so we also talk about how he has managed to get the approval from his institutions for this. We then talk about his voice-interactive studying software, MedFlashGo (Medical Flashcards on the Go), which is the first of its kind. We talk about how he managed to do this in residency and how he took it from an idea to the final product. He has created over 200+ podcast episodes featuring TED Talk speakers, top level executives, physician leaders, influencers, and more. He has been featured on numerous podcasts and articles discussing concepts around happiness, fulfillment, success, entrepreneurship, and creativity. He is the CEO and Co-Founder of three voice-interactive education platforms geared towards pre-medical, medical, and dental students, with plans to create more. Taylor has a passion for inspiring others to reach towards their potential and dreams. Find this and all episodes on your favorite podcast platform at PhysiciansGuidetoDoctoring.com Please be sure to leave a five-star review, a nice comment and SHARE!!!
AMA CXO Todd Unger discusses the AMA Medical Student Section's 50th anniversary and how medical students can get involved and help shape the future of medicine with Haidn Foster, MD, chair of the AMA Medical Student Section, and now a resident physician at Penn State Health in Hershey, Pa. For more information on the AMA Medical Student Section, visit: ama-assn.org/mss-50
Dr. Jessica Muñoz Linkedin Loma Linda University Health Education Saint Xavier University-BS in Biology The Ohio State University-College of Medicine Listen to Episode 1 of The WeGo Places Podcast with Jessica
A convoluted, confusing, and opaque system for pricing drugs has evolved that distorts the market and often limits patient access to the drugs they need to survive. In this episode, three experts explain how the system works—or doesn't'—and the consequences of a dysfunctional pricing system.Guests:Dan Durham, Senior Health Policy Advisor, Biotechnology Innovation OrganizationAnna Hyde, Vice President, Advocacy and Access, Arthritis FoundationDr. Vinay Rathi, Resident Physician, Otolaryngology, Massachusetts Eye and Ear and Mass General Brigham