POPULARITY
Today, Dr. Ezra Schwartz and Dr. Nakia Sarad begin an exploration of how vascular surgeons and patients communicate. We will discuss how we share stories with one another and what may get lost in translation. The first episode in this series features Dr. Anahita Dua in conversation with her patients and their experience with deep venous arterialization. Faculty Guest: Dr. Anahita Dua is a vascular surgeon at the Massachusetts General Hospital and an associate professor of surgery at Harvard Medical School. She wears many hats at the MGH including director of the Vascular Lab, co-director of the Peripheral Artery Disease Center and Limb Evaluation and Amputation Program, associate director of the Wound Care Center, director of the Lymphedema Center, associate director of the Vascular Surgery Clerkship, and director of clinical research for the division of vascular surgery. Dr. Dua completed her undergraduate medical studies at the Aberdeen University School of Medicine in Aberdeen, Scotland. She then completed her general surgery residency at the Medical College of Wisconsin and a vascular fellowship at Stanford University Hospital. She holds multiple master's degrees, including trauma sciences and business administration in healthcare management. She also completed certificate programs at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in health economics, outcomes research, and drug and device development. She has published over 140 peer-reviewed papers and has edited five vascular surgery textbooks. For more information on the CLariTI Study, click here. Patient Guests: (Shared with consent) John McConnell - patient of Dr. Dua Daniel Debovie - son of a patient of Dr. Dua. Deep Venous Arterialization References: Ho, Vy T., Rebecca Gologorsky, Pavel Kibrik, Venita Chandra, Anna Prent, Jisun Lee, and Anahita Dua. “Open, Percutaneous, and Hybrid Deep Venous Arterialization Technique for No-Option Foot Salvage.” Journal of Vascular Surgery 71, no. 6 (June 1, 2020): 2152–60. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvs.2019.10.085. Shishehbor, Mehdi H., Richard J. Powell, Miguel F. Montero-Baker, Anahita Dua, Jorge L. Martínez-Trabal, Matthew C. Bunte, Arthur C. Lee, et al. “Transcatheter Arterialization of Deep Veins in Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia.” New England Journal of Medicine 388, no. 13 (March 30, 2023): 1171–80. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJMoa2212754. Twitter: Dr. Anahita Dua (@AnahitaDua) Dr. Ezra Schwartz (@ezraschwartz10) Dr. Nakia Sarad (@NadSaradDO)
Tracing a historical line from commedia dell’arte, Hogarth and others to modern and contemporary artists including Ollie Harrington, Robert Colescott, Spike Lee, and Kara Walker, we discuss Black visual satire with Duke professor Richard J. Powell. Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Stitcher | Spotify |
Tracing a historical line from commedia dell'arte, Hogarth and others to modern and contemporary artists including Ollie Harrington, Robert Colescott, Spike Lee, and Kara Walker, we discuss Black visual satire with Duke professor Richard J. Powell.
Gerrymandering: What’s the Big Deal? Host: Ann Luther, League of Women Voters of Maine Engineer: Joel Mann How redistricting has changed over the last 50 years Thee emergence of extreme partisan gerrymandering Court cases pending before the U.S. Supreme Court Why it matters in Maine. Guests: Matt Dube, Assistant Professor in Computer Information Systems at the University of Maine in Augusta www.uma.edu/directory/staff/matthew-p-dube/ Elaine Kamark, Senior Fellow in the Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution www.brookings.edu/experts/elaine-kamarck/ To learn more about this topic: Gerrymandering and how to fix it, from Elaine Kamark at Brookings. The new front in the gerrymandering wars, from the New York Times Magazine, August, 2017. We Drew 2,568 Congressional Districts By Hand. Here’s How., from the 538 Gerrymandering Project, January 25, 2018. Mathematical Characteristics of District Boundary Lines as Indicators of Partisan Gerrymandering in U.S. House Elections, Richard J. Powell, Matthew P. Dube, and Jesse T. Clark, April, 2017. Assessing the Causes of District Homogeneity in U.S. House Elections, Richard J. Powell, Matthew P. Dube, and Jesse T. Clark, August, 2017