Podcast appearances and mentions of sally davies

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Best podcasts about sally davies

Latest podcast episodes about sally davies

Legally Speaking Podcast - Powered by Kissoon Carr
Special Edition: The Best of Season 7 – Unveiling Our Top 5 Episodes

Legally Speaking Podcast - Powered by Kissoon Carr

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2024 7:31


In this special edition of the Legally Speaking Podcast, we take you on a journey through the highlights and defining moments of our seventh season. Host Rob Hanna revisits the top five episodes that resonated most with our audience, showcasing the diversity, innovation, and influential insights that have defined our series.Episode 8: Shattering Glass Ceilings with Sally Davies: Dive into the world of Construction Law with Sally Davies, exploring the value of human connections and the intricacies of dispute resolution.Episode 10: Digital Transformation with John Lindsey: Unpack the intersection of legal technology and leadership with tech entrepreneur John Lindsey, and explore his unique approach to innovation in the legal sector.Episode 1: Redefining the Legal Landscape with Lubna Shuja: Celebrate the groundbreaking achievements of Lubna Shuja, the first Asian Muslim President of the Law Society, and her mission to foster diversity and inclusion.Episode 6: Cybersecurity and Digital Law with Peter Wright: Delve into the complex world of Digital Law with Peter Wright, discussing everything from GDPR to cybersecurity challenges in the legal industry.Episode 2: AI in the Legal Sector with Harry Borovick: Explore the transformative impact of AI on legal processes with Harry Borovick of Luminance, and understand the future trajectory of legal tech.Join us for this exclusive look back at these insightful conversations, packed with wisdom, anecdotes, and forward-thinking ideas that are shaping the legal world today. Whether you're a long-time listener or new to the podcast, these top 5 episodes are essential listening for anyone passionate about the legal industry's future.

5 live Science Podcast
Titans of Science: Dame Sally Davies

5 live Science Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2023 52:34


Dr Chris Smith and the Naked Scientist team present the latest science news, analysis and breakthroughs. In this week's episode...the rise of the bed bugs, leading bed bug expert James Logan tells us all we need to know, could genetically modified pig kidneys soon be transplanted into the humans? The clinical trial ixs now awaiting approval. And why it might be time for us to reappraise the impact of the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic. Plus in our Titans of Science series, we hear from England's former chief medical officer Dame Sally Davies on her career in the top job and the antibiotic apocalypse that she's made it her mission to combat. Get the podcast from the BBC Sounds app.

The Naked Scientists Podcast
Titans of Science: Sally Davies

The Naked Scientists Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2023 25:59


In this edition of The Naked Scientists, it's time for the conclusion of our summer series: Titans of Science. Chris Smith chats with England's former Chief Medical Officer and the current Master of Trinity College, Cambridge: Dame Sally Davies. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

Daily Doctor's Kitchen
Antibiotic resistance with Dame Sally Davies

Daily Doctor's Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 29, 2023 5:44


Dame Sally Davies describes the potential perils of resistance to antibioticsFull length podcast episodes are found on “The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast” and the cookbooks plus weekly recipes are on the website www.thedoctorskitchen.com But here, for a few minutes a day enjoy short snippets of information about flavour as well as function & how delicious food can be enjoyable and health promoting too. I'll see you in The Daily Doctor's kitchen Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Legally Speaking Podcast - Powered by Kissoon Carr
Shattering Glass Ceilings: Journeying Through Construction Law, Regulations to Resolutions - Sally Davies - S7E8

Legally Speaking Podcast - Powered by Kissoon Carr

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2023 52:22


You might be wondering, what exactly does a construction disputes partner do? Well, picture this: when conflicts arise in the world of construction, someone swoops in like a legal superhero, armed with a toolbox of litigation, arbitration, mediation, and adjudication skills. They're the go-to person for resolving disputes and bringing harmony to construction projects gone awry.This week we're super excited to be chatting with Sally Davies, who holds the esteemed position of Senior Partner in Mayer Brown's Construction & Engineering Disputes team as well as a global Management Committee member. Sally brings a wealth of knowledge and expertise to the table.But here's the real gem: Sally's not just a legal powerhouse. She's also an advocate for building personal connections and fostering friendships within the workplace. She cherishes the essence of a warm environment, rich in collaboration and authentic camaraderie.This interview is your golden ticket to understanding the inner workings of the construction law world. Join us as we peel back the layers of Sally's remarkable journey, discover the intricacies of dispute resolution, and explore the indispensable value of building genuine connections in the legal profession. 

The AMR Studio
Ep 49: Dame Sally Davies & global governance. AI for antibiotic discovery. Nanomovement diagnostics.

The AMR Studio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 54:54


June comes with a bang! Tune in to this episode to hear the insights of the incomparable Dame Sally Davies, former UK Chief Medical Officer and current UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance. We chat with her about her path to being a global advocate on AMR, the need for better global governance, and what her vast experience has taught her. Talking to her was a truly inspirational experience.​ In the news section, we bring you a very cool article using deep learning and computational methods (hello Artificial Intelligence!) to find a potential antibiotic against Acinetobacter baumanii, and a brief study presenting the results of a new antimicrobial susceptibility testing that is independent of growth by analyzing bacterial nano-movement Check relevant links in the show notes at http://www.uac.uu.se/the-amr-studio/episode49. Follow our updates on twitter on http://www.twitter.com/uac_uu with #theAMRstudio hashtag! Theme music by Henrik Niss: http://www.tinyurl.com/henriknissspotify.

Hyphens Haven
Liz Duffy Adams - Playwright

Hyphens Haven

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 55:56


http://lizduffyadams.com/Liz Duffy Adams' play Born With Teeth, recipient of a 2021 Edgerton Foundation New Play Award and Best Play/Production, 2022 Houston Press Awards, had its world premiere at the Alley Theater in 2022, and moved to the Guthrie Theatre in March–April 2023.Her Or, premiered Off Broadway at WP Theater and has been produced some 80 times since, including at the Magic Theater, Seattle Rep, and Roundhouse Theatre. Her work has also premiered or been developed at Contemporary American Theater Festival, Humana Festival, Bay Area Theater Festival, Portland Center Stage, Syracuse Stage, Greater Boston Theater Company, New Georges, Clubbed Thumb, Crowded Fire, Shotgun Players, and Cutting Ball, and includes Dog Act; The Salonnières; Dear Alien; A Discourse on Wonders of the Invisible World; Buccaneers; Wet or, Isabella the Pirate Queen Enters the Horse Latitude; The Listener; The Reckless Ruthless Brutal Charge of It or, The Train Play; and One Big Lie.She's a New Dramatists alumna and has received a Women of Achievement Award, Lillian Hellman Award, New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship, Weston Playhouse Music-Theater Award, Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellowship, and the Will Glickman Award for Best New Play. Her Artistic Stamp virtual play in letters, Wild Thyme, was nominated for a 2021 Drama League Award for Outstanding Interactive or Socially-Distanced Theater.Publications include Or, in Smith & Kraus' “Best Plays Of 2010;” Dog Act in “Geek Theater,” Underwords Press 2014; Poodle With Guitar And Dark Glasses in Applause's “Best American Short Plays 2000-2001;” and acting editions by TRW Plays, Playscripts, Inc. and Dramatists Play Service. Adams' portrait appears in Sally Davies' collection, New Yorkers (Ammonite Press 2021).  Adams has an MFA from Yale School of Drama and a BFA from New York University, and was the 2012–2013 Briggs-Copeland Visiting Lecturer in Playwriting at Harvard University. She has dual Irish and American citizenship, and lives in New York City on land that once belonged to the Lanape, and in Western Massachusetts on unceded Pocumtuc and Nipmuc land.Now is a great time to act on your dreams! If this episode helped you, please share to a friend!https://www.instagram.com/HyphensHaven/http://www.dreamofdrea.com/Watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/c/DreamofDréa

Bedside Reading

Maggie O'Farrell is one of my favourite writers and it was such a pleasure to reread her memoir I am I am I am for todays episode when I'm discussing it with Sally Davies.We talk about where we read (in the lift at work anyone?!), what we read and why reading is so valuable to us both. We also explore  the risk-taking decisions of young brains, how common near death experiences are, how experiences shape the person we are now and how defensive we are primed to be about the NHS when sometimes care is indefensible.Follow Sally on Twitter here: https://mobile.twitter.com/sally_bobs

The New Statesman Podcast
Bonus: Anti-microbial resistance: the crisis that could spell the end of medicine - with Pfizer

The New Statesman Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2022 30:19


In 2014, the then prime minister David Cameron commissioned a review into a worrying global phenomenon: an increase in drug-resistant infections. “If we fail to act,” he warned, “we are looking at an almost unthinkable scenario where antibiotics no longer work and we are cast back into the dark ages of medicine.” The economist Jim O'Neill, who chaired the review, predicted that by 2050 “ten million lives a year” and a “cumulative cost of $100trn of economic output” would be at risk from bacteria, viruses, fungi and parasites increasingly resisting treatment. Six years on, however, anti-microbial resistance (AMR) continues to endanger humanity. Alona Ferber, editor of the New Statesman's Spotlight policy channel, is joined by three expert guests to discuss why AMR is so complex, how far we have come in tackling it since the 2016 review, and what our best hopes are for getting this dangerous trend under control: Pfizer UK's managing director and country president Susan Rienow, the UK government's AMR envoy Sally Davies, and the microbiologist Laura Piddock, scientific director of the Global Antibiotic Research and Development Partnership in Geneva. This special episodes has been funded by Pfizer Limited. Non Pfizer panelist's views are independent, but content has been reviewed by Pfizer Limited for A B P I code compliance. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Daily Doctor's Kitchen
Our next pandemic with Dame Sally Davies

Daily Doctor's Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 3, 2022 5:44


Dame Sally Davies describes the potential perils of resistance to antibioticsFull length podcast episodes are found on “The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast” and the cookbooks plus weekly recipes are on the website www.thedoctorskitchen.com But here, for a few minutes a day enjoy short snippets of information about flavour as well as function & how delicious food can be enjoyable and health promoting too. I'll see you in The Daily Doctor's kitchen Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Daily Doctor's Kitchen
What is the next pandemic with Dame Sally Davies

Daily Doctor's Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 6, 2022 5:43


Dame Sally Davies talks about the next pandemicFull length podcast episodes are found on “The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast” and the cookbooks plus weekly recipes are on the website www.thedoctorskitchen.com But here, for a few minutes a day enjoy short snippets of information about flavour as well as function & how delicious food can be enjoyable and health promoting too. I'll see you in The Daily Doctor's kitchen Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

B&H Photography Podcast
Sally Davies Encore Episode: We Are Our Stuff

B&H Photography Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2022 56:08


This episode of the B&H Photography Podcast was originally published on July 29, 2021. We revisit it today to mark the passing of the podcast torch from creative producer John Harris to Jill Waterman, a creative content writer for the B&H Explora blog, who appears as a guest with Davies. Harris will continue to be an avid listener to the show, and we hope he'll also grace us with his voice on occasion as a future guest.  Photographer Sally Davies embodies a remarkable creative spirit, and we think that spirit also resides in the homes of the 72 New Yorkers she photographed for her colorful book of environmental portraits, appropriately titled, New Yorkers. If this spirit does not exist and Davies is not in tune with it, how could she have captured the essence of her subjects and their abodes so efficiently, in some cases in just minutes? We answer that question and many others in this discussion about the making of her book. We are also joined by Jill Waterman who has been photographed by Davies, and has written about her work. Our conversation gets to the heart of Davies' fanciful project, and touches upon its themes of inclusiveness and of gentrification, but also digs into the process of photographing in cramped quarters with little time, and of the surprisingly difficult task of getting people not to smile for a portrait. We talk about Davies' decision to eschew light stands for on-camera flash and to use a Sony mirrorless camera and Zeiss 18mm lens. We also talk about the importance of creative freedom and rejecting preconceived expectations. Davies photographed a wide range of New Yorkers for this series and did not refuse a single person suggested to her, but when it came to organizing a book, edits needed to be made, and we discuss this process, as well. Davies is well-known for her street photography, and we mention her projects on neighborhood storefronts and vintage cars, but this series of interior portraits is as “New York” as it comes. Join us for this engaging conversation. Guests: Sally Davies and Jill Waterman Photograph © Sally Davies For more information on our guests and the gear they use, see: www.bhphotovideo.com/explora/podcasts

World Economic Forum
Antimicrobial resistance - how to stop a quiet pandemic

World Economic Forum

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 32:53


Bacterial resistance to antibiotics kills between 1.25-5 million people every year. So why is antimicrobial resistance (AMR) not given the priority or funding that some other health problems receive? We hear from Christopher Murray, director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation which has done the first global assessment of the impact of AMR, and UK AMR envoy Sally Davies, who says AMR needs to be treated as a pandemic.

World vs Virus
Antimicrobial resistance - how to stop a quiet pandemic

World vs Virus

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2022 32:53


Bacterial resistance to antibiotics kills between 1.25-5 million people every year. So why is antimicrobial resistance (AMR) not given the priority or funding that some other health problems receive? We hear from Christopher Murray, director of the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation which has done the first global assessment of the impact of AMR, and UK AMR envoy Sally Davies, who says AMR needs to be treated as a pandemic.

Genomics Unravelled
1. Genomics in the NHS with Dame Sally Davies

Genomics Unravelled

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2022 21:56


In this episode, we are joined by Dame Sally Davies. Dame Sally was the Chief Medical Officer for England and Senior Medical Advisor to the UK Government from 2011-2019, during which time she oversaw the 100,000 Genomes Project and the launch of the NHS Genomic Medicine Service. We chat about her time as Chief Medical Officer, the intersection of genomics and antimicrobial resistance, and the future of genomics within the NHS. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/genomicsunravelled/message

Art World: Whitehot Magazine with Noah Becker

Noah talks to NYC based photographer Sally Davies about her book “New Yorkers” and her NFT drop on Justin Aversano's Quantum.art platform. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/noah-becker4/support

LCIL International Law Seminar Series
The Eli Lauterpacht Lecture 2021: 'Global Governance for Health – why has it failed?' - Dame Sally Davies

LCIL International Law Seminar Series

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2021 64:00


Lecture summary: Dame Sally will explore global governance for health using the two pandemics of COVID 19 and Antimicrobial Resistance as exemplars highlighting the importance of data and innovation. Dame Sally Davies is the 40th Master of Trinity College, Cambridge University, the UK Government’s Special Envoy on AMR and the chair of The Trinity Challenge, which she set up in May 2020. Before this, from March 2011 to September 2019, she was Chief Medical Officer (CMO) for England and Chief Medical Adviser to the UK Government. Dame Sally was a member of the World Health Organization (WHO) Executive Board 2014-2016 and led delegations to a range of WHO summits and forums since 2004. Dame Sally advocates globally on AMR: for three years, Dame Sally was the chair of the WHO Strategic and Technical Advisory Group on AMR and later co-convener of the UN Inter-Agency Co-ordination Group on AMR, set up in response to the AMR declaration made at UNGA 2016. Dame Sally is a member of the UN Global Leaders Group on AMR, since 2020, serving alongside Heads of State, Ministers and prominent figures from around the world. Dame Sally is a Fellow of the Royal Society and a Member of the US Academy of Science. In the 2020 New Year’s Honours, Dame Sally was appointed Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the Bath (GCB) for services to public health and research, having received her DBE in 2009.

Daily Doctor's Kitchen
Antimicrobials in food production with Dame Sally Davies

Daily Doctor's Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2021 4:53


You might be surprised to learn that antibiotics are used in protein production and fish-farmingFull length podcast episodes are found on “The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast” and the cookbooks plus weekly recipes are on the website www.thedoctorskitchen.com But here, for a few minutes a day enjoy short snippets of information about flavour as well as function & how delicious food can be enjoyable and health promoting too. I'll see you in The Daily Doctor's kitchen Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Daily Doctor's Kitchen
The next pandemic with Dame Sally Davies

Daily Doctor's Kitchen

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2021 5:57


There are a number of reasons to start reducing our reliance on antibioticsFull length podcast episodes are found on “The Doctor's Kitchen Podcast” and the cookbooks plus weekly recipes are on the website www.thedoctorskitchen.com But here, for a few minutes a day enjoy short snippets of information about flavour as well as function & how delicious food can be enjoyable and health promoting too. I'll see you in The Daily Doctor's kitchen Our GDPR privacy policy was updated on August 8, 2022. Visit acast.com/privacy for more information.

Pandemic Planet
Dame Sally Davies on the Silent Pandemic of Antimicrobial Resistance

Pandemic Planet

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2021 25:46


This week, CSIS co-hosted the 9th annual Atlanta Global Health Summit with the World Affairs Council of Atlanta, CARE USA, and The Carter Center. J. Stephen Morrison spoke with Dame Sally Davies, the UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance and Master of Trinity College at Cambridge University. She is also the single most impactful person in the last decade on advancing the fight against antimicrobial resistance (AMR). She provides an update on the Trinity Challenge she co-founded that brings together experts from around the world to improve public health data. She shares her thoughts on why Covid-19 has put action against antimicrobial resistance into “suspended animation”, why AMR needs to be seen not as a “silent pandemic” but a central element of global health security, and some recent political advancements that give her hope. She also shares some of her personal journey as a science communicator and a pioneering woman leader, and what keeps her so optimistic when confronting massive global health challenges. Dame Sally Davies, the UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance and Master of Trinity College at Cambridge University. Dame Sally previously served as the Chief Medical Officer for England, and the Chief Scientific Adviser at the Department of Health. You can catch up on all the conference sessions on the YouTube channel of the World Affairs Council of Atlanta.

RN Arts - ABC RN
Alan Cumming is not acting his age

RN Arts - ABC RN

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 53:18


Since his Tony Award-winning performance as The Emcee in the musical Cabaret, Scottish performer Alan Cumming has been increasingly enamoured of the form, opening his own cabaret bar in New York and now taking charge of the Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Also, we learn about the unifying power of roller derby in the play Ugly Virgins at the Blue Room Theatre in Perth and meet the gig economy workers involved in the new APHIDS theatre work about the hidden cost of convenience, Easy Riders.

The Stage Show
Alan Cumming is not acting his age

The Stage Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 53:18


Since his Tony Award-winning performance as The Emcee in the musical Cabaret, Scottish performer Alan Cumming has been increasingly enamoured of the form, opening his own cabaret bar in New York and now taking charge of the Adelaide Cabaret Festival. Also, we learn about the unifying power of roller derby in the play Ugly Virgins at the Blue Room Theatre in Perth and meet the gig economy workers involved in the new APHIDS theatre work about the hidden cost of convenience, Easy Riders.

The Stage Show
Alan Cumming is not acting his age

The Stage Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 53:18


Since his Tony Award-winning performance as The Emcee in the musical Cabaret, Scottish performer Alan Cumming has been increasingly enamoured of the form, opening his own cabaret bar in New York and now taking charge of the Adelaide Cabaret Festival.Also, we learn about the unifying power of roller derby in the play Ugly Virgins at the Blue Room Theatre in Perth and meet the gig economy workers involved in the new APHIDS theatre work about the hidden cost of convenience, Easy Riders.

The G Word
Professor Dame Sally Davies: Patient power and the future of healthcare

The G Word

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2021 29:30


“In us and on us, we have our microbiome, which is more cells - bacterial, viral, and everything - than the number of human cells. And they're our friends. They're like a garden, we've got to plant them properly. We need to be starting to look at those much more, and genomics is going to play a key role.”  In this week's episode of The G word, Chris Wigley is joined by Sally Davies, Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, former Chief Medical Officer and UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance. Having spent 20 years working with people with sickle cell disease, she is passionate about reforming healthcare, setting up the National Institute for Health Research and playing a key role in the establishment of Genomics England.   Today, Chris and Sally discuss generation genome, genetic exceptionalism and the value of patient stories. 

The Guilty Feminist
245. Women in Medicine with Jo Brand and guests Angela Saini and Dame Sally Davies

The Guilty Feminist

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 72:56


The Guilty FeministPresented by Deborah Frances-White and Jo Brand Episode 245: Women in Medicine with special guests Dame Sally Davies and Angela Saini. Recorded 4 March 2021 via Zoom. Released 15 March 2021. With kind thanks to Chris, Adam and everyone at the Science Museum. The Guilty Feminist theme by Mark Hodge and produced by Nick Sheldon. More about Deborah Frances-White http://deborahfrances-white.com https://twitter.com/DeborahFW https://www.virago.co.uk/the-guilty-feminist-book More about Jo Brand https://offthekerb.com/artist/jo-brand/ https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00vlqyn More information about Dame Sally Davies https://twitter.com/ukamrenvoy https://www.gov.uk/government/people/sally-davies More information about Angela Saini https://www.angelasaini.co.uk https://www.instagram.com/angeladsaini https://www.genderscilab.org For more information about this and other episodes… visit guiltyfeminist.com tweet us twitter.com/guiltfempod like our Facebook page facebook.com/guiltyfeminist check out our Instagram instagram.com/theguiltyfeminist or join our mailing list eepurl.com/bRfSPT Thank you to our amazing Patreon supporters. To support the podcast yourself, go to https://www.patreon.com/guiltyfeminist

The Suffrage Science podcast: How women are changing science

Kat Arney talks with Dame Sally Davies (Suffrage Science life sciences awardee, 2011), former Chief Medical Officer for England and Chief Medical Adviser to the Government, the UK Special Envoy on antimicrobial resistance, and now the first female Master of Trinity College Cambridge. The Suffrage Science award scheme celebrates and inspires women in science. Full transcript and more information at www.suffragescience.org/podcast  

Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
The challenge of anti-microbial resistance

Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 62:55


In conversation with Chris Dye, Sally Davies will explore the major challenge of anti-microbial resistance and discuss whether people's greater appreciation of medical risk due to the pandemic will help the development of effective countermeasures. Date 11 February 2021, 5:00pm - 6:00pm Location Online Event Recording: Since their widespread deployment in the mid-20th century, effective antibiotics have been at the forefront of medicine saving countless lives. But the last two decades have seen an alarming rise in pathogens resistant to antibiotics (anti-microbial resistance or AMR), while there are fewer novel antibiotics in the research and development pipeline. During her time as the UK's Chief Medical Officer, and since leaving that position in 2019, Dame Sally Davies, the UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance, has been tireless in pointing out the great dangers of AMR to health throughout the world and suggesting what needs to be done.

Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
The challenge of anti-microbial resistance

Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2021 62:55


In conversation with Chris Dye, Sally Davies will explore the major challenge of anti-microbial resistance and discuss whether people’s greater appreciation of medical risk due to the pandemic will help the development of effective countermeasures. Date 11 February 2021, 5:00pm - 6:00pm Location Online Event Recording: Since their widespread deployment in the mid-20th century, effective antibiotics have been at the forefront of medicine saving countless lives. But the last two decades have seen an alarming rise in pathogens resistant to antibiotics (anti-microbial resistance or AMR), while there are fewer novel antibiotics in the research and development pipeline. During her time as the UK’s Chief Medical Officer, and since leaving that position in 2019, Dame Sally Davies, the UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance, has been tireless in pointing out the great dangers of AMR to health throughout the world and suggesting what needs to be done.

The Health Foundation podcast
2: What should nanny do next? The government and obesity – with Dame Sally Davies, Harry Rutter and James Forsyth

The Health Foundation podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2020 31:26


Obesity in the UK is on the up. Prevalence of obesity is higher in more deprived communities, and obesity is linked to a range of health conditions – as well as increasing a person's risk from COVID-19.   Evidence tells us that communities, government policies, commercial influences, and many other factors shape our ability to be healthy – but people often think it's up to individuals to manage their own weight. Some governments are squeamish about intervention in people's lives leading to a so-called ‘nanny state'. However, recent polling by Ipsos MORI for the Health Foundation shows that the coronavirus pandemic has changed the way that people in the UK view the government's role in improving our health.  So what should the Government be doing to tackle obesity? Useful links: July 2020 Ipsos MORI polling for the Health Foundation on Public perceptions of health and social care in light of COVID-19 Find out more about the Health Foundation podcast Find out more about Whose Health Is It, Anyway? by Dame Sally Davies and Jonathan Pearson-Stuttard

The Common Good Podcast
October 29, 2020

The Common Good Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2020 74:41


(00:0 0-08:58): Megan Fowler writes “Meet the Evangelicals Who Won’t Vote for Trump, Biden, or Anybody at All” in Christianity Today. They’re not apathetic. Convicted nonvoters think Christian citizenship calls for a different kind of engagement. (08:58-27:33): We were joined by author and the B. R. Lindner Chair of Evangelical Theology at Northern Seminary, David Fitch. His book “The Church of Us vs. Them: Freedom from a Faith That Feeds on Making Enemies” couldn’t be more relevant than in this election season. David also touches on how our attitude should be going into the election. He says the election is important, but it isn’t THAT important. No matter what, JESUS IS STILL LORD. (27:33-36:56): Brian and Ian discuss this piece by Sally Davies “The need to touch” in Aeon. The language of touch binds our minds and bodies to the broader social world. What happens when touch becomes taboo? (36:56-46:48): Brian and Ian discuss This documentary-drama hybrid explores the dangerous human impact of social networking, with tech experts sounding the alarm on their own creations, “The Social Dilemma”. (46:58-56:19): Ian posted “I feel like a political refugee” on Facebook. He continues “Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that I feel a bit like a civil vagrant in a post-religious-right America, roving the dimly lit streets without a real home to lay my head…” (59:19-1:05:37): Ed Stetzer writes “People Are Being Discipled by Their Cable News” in his blog The Exchange on Christianity Today. How do we disciple in good as we disciple out the wrong? (1:05:37-1:14:39): Mikaela Mathews writes “'A New Start:' Seventeen Inmates Baptized in Mississippi Jail” in Christian Headlines.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

A Podcast of One's Own with Julia Gillard
Sally Davies on women in medicine

A Podcast of One's Own with Julia Gillard

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2020 40:19


Julia talks to Professor Dame Sally Davies, the first and only woman to serve as Chief Medical Officer for England. They discuss the UK government's handling of the Covid-19 crisis, how she provided advice on healthcare crises, and why she wouldn't stand for it when she was labelled with the gendered term the “nation's nanny”.This episode was recorded remotely during the coronavirus crisis.If you enjoyed this episode or any others, please rate and review us on your preferred podcast provider. It really helps us reach more listeners with our message of a more gender-equal world. Any earnings from the podcast go back into funding for the Global Institute for Women's Leadership, furthering the work we do to create a world in which being a woman is not a barrier to becoming a leader. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

PRI Podcasts
Fiona Reynolds, PRI CEO, in conversation with... Dame Sally Davies, UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance

PRI Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2020 17:29


Following the launch of the Investor Year of Action on Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) at Davos, the PRI's CEO Fiona Reynolds, sat down with Dame Sally Davies, UK Special Envoy on Antimicrobial Resistance. Together they discuss what AMR is, why it should be on everyone’s radar and critically, the role investors can play in making change happen. This episode was recorded prior to the coronavirus outbreak in Europe. While a separate matter to AMR, Covid-19 is another issue we must act now on. 

Radio English
Episode 17: Dame Sally Davies

Radio English

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2019 48:46


In today’s episode we’re discussing the radio 4 Desert Island Discs interview with Dame Sally Davies, who is chief medical officer of England. We explain the adjectives ‘sensitive’, ‘sane’, and plain speaking that she and Lauren uses to describe her character. We also talk about words that relate to her career like ‘ethics’, ‘stigma’ and ‘diversity’. Read through the notes for this episode on my blog Join the discussion in the Facebook Group If you have enjoyed today's episode and you have found it helpful, can you help me let others know about it too? Just leave a rating and review on itunes (and subscribe if you haven't already). That would be amazing! Thank you so much!

Ben Coomber Radio
#471 – Solving Childhood Obesity (Part 1)

Ben Coomber Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2019 45:35


Did you know 53,000 take away’s in the UK exist and over 60% are within 400m of a school? Just one nugget from a new Childhood Obesity report that has been commissioned by the government written and collated by Sally Davies. It lists all the ways the government and industry can tackle childhood obesity and we want to have our say. What do we think of the ideas and policy suggestions as people that work front line? How can schools do better? How can we do better? How can parents shift their thinking? This is the start of a 2-3 part series, so stay tuned for more and please do write into the show if you want to add to the conversation. Read the report here: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/837907/cmo-special-report-childhood-obesity-october-2019.pdf

The Lawyer Podcast
The Wellness Podcast: Finding a Sense Of Purpose

The Lawyer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2019 22:53


Eloise Skinner, Sally Davies, Andrew Wells and Katie Power discuss the importance of having a sense of purpose as a lawyer.

sense wellness podcast andrew wells sally davies eloise skinner
Desert Island Discs
Dame Sally Davies, chief medical officer, England

Desert Island Discs

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2019 40:39


Dame Sally Davies is the outgoing Chief Medical Officer for England. She will take up her next post as Master of Trinity College, Cambridge, later this year. She was born in Birmingham in 1949 to academic parents - her father was an Anglican priest and theologian, her mother a scientist. She studied medicine at Manchester University and after two 'brutalising' years spent learning the job on the wards, she welcomed the opportunity to move to Madrid as a diplomat’s wife. However, she decided that she did not enjoy being - in her words - 'an appendage', and so she returned to medicine in the UK, starting in paediatrics and then moving to haematology, specialising in Sickle Cell Disease. Her first marriage didn’t last and her second ended in tragedy when her husband died of leukaemia within months of the wedding. After joining her first research scheme committee in the late 1980s, Sally widened her remit. She became Chief Scientific Adviser to the Health Secretary and, in 2011, Chief Medical Officer for England. Her achievements include creating the National Institute for Health Research, a body to oversee the funding of research in the NHS, and working tirelessly to raise awareness of the dangers of anti-microbial resistance. Sally holds 24 honorary degrees and is about to return to academia, taking up her post as the first woman Master of Trinity College in October 2019. She is married to Willem with whom she has two grown-up daughters. BOOK CHOICE: On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen by Harold McGee LUXURY ITEM: Bubble bath CASTAWAY'S FAVOURITE: The Trumpet Shall Sound, from Handel's Messiah Presenter: Lauren Laverne Producer: Cathy Drysdale

レアジョブ英会話 Daily News Article Podcast
Study: Nearly 1 out of 10 UK Parents Reject Shots for Disease Prevention

レアジョブ英会話 Daily News Article Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2019 2:22


A recent study reported that around 1 in 10 parents in the United Kingdom do not vaccinate their children. The Royal Society for Public Health (RSPH) conducted a survey to determine people's awareness and opinion of vaccines. The respondents included 2,600 parents, nearly 10% of which refused to give their children vaccine for measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR). The study also noted the decline in the number of children taking vaccines in the country. Data from 2017 and 2018 showed a 0.4% drop in the number of children getting the MMR vaccine in England alone. According to the study, the top reason for parents' reluctance is the belief that vaccines have harmful side effects. Such negative ideas about vaccines are fueled by social media platforms, including Facebook. In fact, up to 50% of the parents surveyed have encountered social media messages about vaccines causing negative effects. United Kingdom's chief medical officer, Sally Davies, said that the most popular misconception online is the idea linking the MMR vaccine to autism. Although this idea comes from an old and disproven study, social media continues to propagate the false belief. The RSPH, together with Davies, encouraged people to ignore this misconception. Although there are indeed some side effects to vaccination, the study assured that they are usually mild and rare. The study also highlighted the importance and effectivity of vaccines in protecting people against many diseases. To dispel fears of vaccines, the RSPH strongly recommended actions, such as limiting fake news on social media and promoting better education in schools to name a few.

City Conversations
Catch up with Mayer Brown's senior partner Sally Davies and apprentice Joshua Agbleze

City Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2018 12:40


We catch up with senior partner Sally Davies and apprentice Joshua Agbleze from Mayer Brown to talk about apprenticeships.

Canterbury Christ Church University's Public Lecture Series
Professor Dame Sally Davies: Antimicrobial resistance – the global problem

Canterbury Christ Church University's Public Lecture Series

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2017 68:41


As Chief Medical Officer, Professor Dame Sally Davies acts as the UK Government’s medical adviser and is the professional head of all directors of public health. She has been widely commended for her leadership of worldwide efforts to address the ‘ticking time bomb’ of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) – also known as drug-resistant infections. In this fascinating lecture, Dame Sally discusses the rise of AMR, its implications and the global response to resolve the problem.

Little Atoms
Little Atoms special: Andrew Solomon and Marion Coutts

Little Atoms

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2016 70:58


For the last two years Little Atoms has partnered with the Wellcome Book Prize, broadcasting interviews with the shortlisted authors. We’ll be doing the same this year, and to mark the announcement of the 2016 shortlist on Monday 14th March, here’s a bonus episode. This is a recording of a conversation between previous winners Andrew Solomon and Marion Coutts, which took place at Libreria bookshop on 2nd March. Libreria director Sally Davies is the host. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

coutts libreria andrew solomon sally davies wellcome book prize little atoms
The UrbanAwesome Street Photography Podcast
Urban Awesome Street Photography Podcast Ep03 : Sally Davies

The UrbanAwesome Street Photography Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2016 26:42


Welcome to the 3rd instalment of the UrbanAwesome Street Photography Podcast. In this edition, I talk to New York street photographer Sally Davies about her unique photographic style, her process and approach to her very unique work. Her art has been featured on HBO's "Sex and the City", Ted Demme's film "200 Cigarettes", and her Lucky Chairs have been featured on the Oprah Winfrey Show and "Sex and the City." In this Sally offers some really great advice and her frank approach to her art. Please feel free to share, download and subscribe with iTunes, Stitcher, RSS feeds and many other podcasting platforms. www.chrisretro.com For further information, please email me at hello@chrisretro.com Peace. Chris Retro.

Cumberland Lodge
Dame Sally Davies, Chief Medical Officer, England The Drugs Don't Work

Cumberland Lodge

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2015 38:29


Talk by Dame Sally Davies, Chief Medical Officer, England and Trustee of Cumberland Lodge (Registered charity: 1108677 www.cumberlandlodge.ac.uk) Antibiotics add 20 years to our lives and for the last 70 years, since the manufacture of penicillin in 1943, they have allowed us to survive extraordinary operations and life threatening infections. However, resistance to our current range of antibiotics is the new inconvenient truth. Dame Sally Davies, the first woman to hold the post of Chief Medical Officer for England and is the independent advisor to the Government on medical matters

FT News in Focus
The past and future of the human brain

FT News in Focus

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2015 21:16


Neuroscientist David Eagleman argues that the brain is like a field of battle: subject to conflicting drives and impulses that we are only just beginning to understand. He talks to Sally Davies, FT Weekend's digital editor, about the nature of consciousness, why human beings are hardwired for xenophobia, and how technology can extend our cognitive powers. To read an exclusive extract from David's new book, go to ft.com/eagleman Music: Another Cultural Landslide, 'Everybody's got a brain' See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

every body human brain ft weekend sally davies neuroscientist david eagleman
The Life Scientific
Dame Sally Davies on public health

The Life Scientific

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2014 28:11


Jim al-Khalili talks to Professor Dame Sally Davies about being a champion for patients and a champion for women. As Chief Medical Officer, the first woman to fill the post, she guides government decisions on pressing health issues such as antimicrobial resistance, mental health and, most recently, Ebola. Having spent many years working as a haematologist, focussing on sickle cell disease, Dame Sally now works tirelessly to put scientific evidence at the heart of Government decisions that affect out health. And it's this quest for evidence that has inspired much of her career. As Director General for Research and Development at the Department of Health, she saw the opportunity to overhaul health research in the National Health Service, focussing on the needs of patients. It was a hugely controversial idea which others had tried to implement, and failed. But she stuck to her guns and the National Institute for Health Research, which she created, is now the envy of the world. Named one of the most powerful women in the country, Dame Sally also has a powerful voice abroad. Through her work at the World Health Organisation, she's brought the world's attention to global threats like antimicrobial resistance. Producer: Beth Eastwood.

FT Banking Weekly
Facebook looks at financial services, bankers dodge bonus cap and Co-op Bank faces new crises

FT Banking Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2014 16:27


Martin Arnold is joined by Sally Davies, technology reporter, to discuss Facebook's interest in financial services, as the social media giant outlines plans to provide remittances and electronic money. Daniel Schäfer explores the different ways in which banks are getting around new bonus cap regulations, and Sharlene Goff has the latest on the Co-operative Bank, where a shortage of funds at the Co-op Group may trigger a number of clauses agreed between the two See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Private Passions
Sally Davies

Private Passions

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 18, 2013 30:56


The Chief Medical Officer, Sally Davies, is on our TV screens almost every week as the authority we appeal to in every health scare: horsemeat in burgers, antibiotic resistance, three-parent babies. She is clearly a person of tremendous power and influence, in charge of the National Institute of Health Research with a budget of £1 billion ? voted by Woman's Hour recently one of the top ten most powerful women in the UK. Sally Davies talks to Michael Berkeley about her private life. She tells him about the death of her second husband from leukaemia less than a year after they were married, and how this has changed her as a doctor. (She scandalised her medical colleagues on a hospital ward round by putting her arms around a dying patient.) She discusses the breakdown of her first marriage, as well as the happiness she has found with her third husband and daughters. She also reveals that she believes drugs are a medical issue rather than a criminal one. Sally Davies is humorous, and fun ? she admits she loves wine, for instance. She is deeply musical ? she played in the Midlands Youth Orchestra as a girl and turns to music to relieve stress. Music includes: Mozart, Brahms, Wagner, Vaughan Williams, Rossini's Stabat Mater, Beethoven's Fidelio - and Queen.

Wolfson Institute
Sally Davies - Annual Lecture 2008

Wolfson Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2011 45:34


Department of Health Director General for Research & Development, Professor Sally Davies (centre), visited the Wolfson Research Institute on 22 October and gave the Institute's 2008 Annual Lecture on the work of the National Institute for Health Research.