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Stories from My Hippy Days, Part 2 Featuring David and Rhonda A year or more ago we did a Part 1 podcast on stories from my days as a Stanford Medical student in the late 1960s. This was the Hippy Era and the famous “Summer of Love.” A young man, Clyde, recently asked if we'd do Part 2, since we didn't get to all the stories the first time around. As an aside, there are more stories, so if you like them, we'd be happy to do a Part 3 as well. 1. Husain Chung and the crazy teen from LA: When a stallion wants to run, you run with the stallion!” 2. A frightening encounter with Vic Lovell: And a mentor's advice on how to handle it. 3. Bar next to the Free University Coffee House: Outrageous works, even with the Hell's Angels. 4. The bearded man on the quad near the Stanford Student Union—Telling me to “sit with open hands” 5. Ken Kesey and his merry pranksters walked into the Stanford Student Union—they were dressed in pajamas or clown outfits and Neil Cassady was juggling hammers. 6. The tape recorder experiment: Bizarre week, unexpected conclusion. 7. Encounter at the Medical School: “Psychiatry and Psychotherapy—Are they Relevant or Obsolete?” Featuring Hussain Chung 8. Missing the medical school graduation ceremony: Didn't pick up my diploma until years later. 9. Homeless in Carmel Valley: Saved by Ramadan, Subud and Bapak. Thanks for tuning in today! And keep your requests, questions, and feedback coming. Your satisfaction and happiness are our top goals! Rhonda and David
Dr. Robert Pearl served as the CEO in Kaiser Permanente where he led over 12,000 physicians, 50,000 staff and was responsible for the nationally recognized medical care of 12 million Kaiser Permanente members on the west and east coasts. He currently serves as a professor at the Stanford Medical and Business Schools. Dr. Pearl is the author of two books on healthcare: “Mistreated” and “Uncaring”Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/mission-evolution-with-gwilda-wiyaka--2888020/support.
Real Answers - Children, Families, Cell Phones - 7/17/24 Today: Questions about "questionable" content coming across the mobile devices of children and teens. New York-based Counselor Christopher Anderson offers some advice for parents and families. Particularly this week, many children were viewing images, videos and reports about the shooting of Donald Trump at a Pennsylvania campaign rally -- often without perspective or support from an adult. Beyond that immediate incident, young people who use cell phones have access to media files and content which families may consider inappropriate -- or at least, not fitting for the age or maturity level of a child or teen. Anderson says families need open communication, good standards on the use of electronic devices, and -- most importantly -- an ongoing assurance that the child or teen is valued and loved, by the parent and by the Lord. "Real Answers" is the Family Life News feature which helps people tackle the tough topics families face. Licensed Mental Health Counselor Christopher Anderson offers his perspectives twice a month, Wednesdays during the Noon Report and on this Family Life News podcast. Sarah Harnisch is your host. An additional resource: Research from Stanford Medical
A fresh twist to my podcasts! Bhav Jain, a Stanford Medical student, interviews me. After listening to my podcasts, Bhav sent me an email with several questions intended to help him with his stuttering. Stuttering is a complex challenge and Bhav seeks the same insight as most adults who stutter do. Listen as he reads the questions to me.
Dr. Robert Pearl served as the CEO in Kaiser Permanente where he led over 12,000 physicians, 50,000 staff and was responsible for the nationally recognized medical care of 12 million Kaiser Permanente members on the west and east coasts. He currently serves as a professor at the Stanford Medical and Business Schools. Dr. Pearl is the author of two books on healthcare: “Mistreated” and “Uncaring” - RobertPearlMD.com
In this episode and Mike and crew discuss the shocking new Covid developments. We also discuss the sinister elements of the apparent 'Great Forgetting' and what practical steps we can take individually and collectively to turn things around. If you would like to support our work by becoming a Patron via: www.patreon.com/cowdaily Make a one off contribution to our work: https://tinyurl.com/y5ctx4ja You can tune into the Cow Daily livestream every weekday at 12 noon, via Youtube: https://tinyurl.com/4djkz9t2 FULL EPISODES AVAILABLE VIA: SPOTIFY: https://tinyurl.com/yw2unns3 APPLE PODCASTS: https://tinyurl.com/ysp5y23v YOUTUBE: https://tinyurl.com/4djkz9t2 BECOME A SUPPORTER OF MTC'S WORK: https://tinyurl.com/5awruft6 TIK TOK: https://tinyurl.com/29c69mnu MAILING LIST: https://tinyurl.com/46jk392v FACEBOOK: https://tinyurl.com/yckj7mhn TWITTER: https://tinyurl.com/24epkej6 INSTAGRAM: https://tinyurl.com/ybhzhcnn WEBSITE: www.milkthecowpodcast.com HOW TO LEAVE A REVIEW 1. Open Apple Podcast App. 2. Go to the icons at the bottom of the screen and choose “search” 3. Search for “Milk the Cow Podcast” 4. Click on the SHOW, not the episode. 5. Scroll all the way down to “Ratings and Reviews” 6. Click on “Write a Review” #milkthecow #cowdaily #mtc #podcasting #podcasts #podcast #mikecow #MikeCow
An Ohio public pension fund for teachers revealed it lost millions by holding more than $27 million in Silicon Valley Bank shares before the bank's collapse. The rise in catalytic converter thefts in America has been a nuisance for law enforcement agencies and car owners for the past several years. Now new data from Carfax shows just how bad the problem has gotten. Twitter CEO Elon Musk slammed the Democrat lieutenant governor of Minnesota this week over remarks that she made at an event where Democratic Gov. Tim Walz signed an executive order forcing state agencies to protect “gender-affirming” health care, including surgery. In a now-viral podcast interview with Fox News host Tucker Carlson, the primetime news anchor said a Stanford professor told him that federal officials tasked the educator with investigating several cases of troops dying from traumatic brain injuries caused by UFOsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Dr. Sophia Yen is a specialist in reproductive health. She graduated from MIT with a degree in biology and got her medical degree at the University of San Francisco, she is a former associate professor at Stanford Medical school and the founder of Pandia Health, the only doctor-led, women-founded, birth control delivery company in the country! She is answering questions about sex and women.
On this week's episode, we sit down with a dear friend of the program, Ella Eastin. Ella is a 4x American Record Holder and 12x National Champion. Her swimming career for the Stanford Cardinal will go down as one of the most decorated for the university. Ella graduated from Stanford University in 2019, and began pursuing a professional swimming career. She represented the Los Angeles Current in the inaugural season of the International Swimming League. While preparing for Olympic Trials, she endured a long health battle with Dysautonomia, putting a pause on her swimming goals. Now, Ella is on a mission to raise awareness on this extremely rare disease and share her story all while pursuing her career in Medicine at Stanford Medical - so to sum it up, this woman is unstoppable. We talk all about Ella's incredible swimming career and her knew career starting at Stanford Medical this fall! A story of true determination and not letting anything be a “dysadvantage!” Be sure to go check out her new page, @Dysunderstood where she'll be sharing more of her own stories and others going through life with Dysautonomia. Follow Ella on Instagram: @EllaEastin Follow us on Instagram: @NormalGuyLazyEye If you're liking what you're hearing, and want to support this podcast, the best thing you can do is share our podcast. We're growing mostly from word of mouth, so please let your friends and family know about this show! Leaving a 5-star review really helps us get seen on Podcast Apps! You can now rate us on Spotify! NORMAL GUY, LAZY EYE MERCH House Enterprise Website --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/normalguylazyeye/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/normalguylazyeye/support
Gianna Nino is a Stanford Medical student and seasonal farmworker. Gianna has harvested food since she was 14 alongside her mother who has been a farmworker for two decades. Between her masters degree and starting medical school at Stanford, Gianna returned to the fields to pick blueberries alongside her mother, in the middle of the Covid19 pandemic. Gianna tweeted about her experience in the fields, garnering a huge reaction online. Gianna shares what it's like to be an essential worker, helping put fresh food on tables nationwide despite extreme conditions for low wages. She tells Between Headlines why she decided to become a doctor and asks us to acknowledge and appreciate the diverse human beings contributing to our food system.
A captivating and inspiring journey to medicine!! Angel Billingsworth knew he wanted to be a doctor from an early age but did not know how to become one. Once in college, he learnt about it and worked hard to get ready to apply to medical school. But a serious accident put a stop to all his plans. Once recovered, he was inspired by his experiences as a patient to finish a public health degree and even went to law school. Despite all the obstacles he had faced, his fierce desire to help people motivated him to navigate the rigorous medical school application process. Let's hear from AJ!!
A review of "Bitten: The Secret History of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons" by Kris Newby. https://www.amazon.com/Bitten-History-Disease-Biological-Weapons/dp/006289627X In this episode Trent reviews the book Bitten, written by a Stanford Medical writer and documentary producer. Trent discusses the controversial confession of William Burgdorfer the man who both discovered and created Lyme disease on behalf of the US Government for biological weapons research. Host: Trent Lapinski: https://twitter.com/trentlapinski Music by kaffekrus: https://soundcloud.com/djkaffekrus More info about Lyme disease and how to diagnosis and treat it: https://techpost.io/hacking-chronic-lyme-disease-and-co-infections/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/techpost/message
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We open with a discussion of the WWDC Lottery as well as about DuckDuckGo's built-in search shortcut. We discuss Spotify's claim that Apple has created an unfair market place. We look at one of the original iPhone prototypes. This week Apple revealed a couple of Apple Pencil compatible iPads: iPad Air and iPad Mini. They have also updated the iMac and Air Pods. Microsoft unveiled Xbox Live at GDC and Google also introduced a new gam space Stadia. Phil Schiller discussed WWDC on the Accidental Tech Podcast. Picks: TIL How to Paste a Number in Apple Phone App, Xcode 10.1 arm64e bug, Where on Google Earth is Carmen Sandiego, BananaPaint for iPad
Learn how humans can beat artificial intelligence by tapping into the wisdom of swarms (with some help from Dr. Louis Rosenberg, CEO of Unanimous AI). Plus: learn about what came before the Big Bang, and get a 5-minute hack for beating procrastination. In this podcast, Cody Gough and Ashley Hamer discuss the following stories from Curiosity.com to help you get smarter and learn something new in just a few minutes: What Came Before the Big Bang? — https://curiosity.im/2wnOt4H The 5-Minute Hack for Beating Procrastination Used by Instagram's Co-Founder — https://curiosity.im/2MNbSla Additional resources from Unanimous AI: Unanimous AI Website — https://unanimous.ai/ Swarm AI Outperforms in Stanford Medical Study — https://unanimous.ai/stanford-radiology/ Unanimous AI achieves 22% more accurate pneumonia diagnoses | VentureBeat — https://venturebeat.com/2018/09/10/unanimous-ai-achieves-22-more-accurate-pneumonia-diagnoses/ This Startup Correctly Predicted the Oscars, World Series, and Super Bowl. Here's What It's Doing Next | Inc. — https://www.inc.com/kevin-j-ryan/unanimous-ai-swarm-intelligence-makes-startlingly-accurate-predictions.html Can Swarm Intelligence Solve Humanity's Biggest Problems? | Full-Length Curiosity Podcast Interview (February 2018) — https://curiosity.im/2MvDueB If you love our show and you're interested in hearing full-length interviews, then please consider supporting us on Patreon. You'll get exclusive episodes and access to our archives as soon as you become a Patron! https://www.patreon.com/curiositydotcom Learn about these topics and more on Curiosity.com, and download our 5-star app for Android and iOS. Then, join the conversation on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Plus: Amazon smart speaker users, enable our Alexa Flash Briefing to learn something new in just a few minutes every day!
Lennihan / AP file RICHMOND, Va. — Virginia is suspending a newly introduced policy that would have barred women who visit inmates at state prisons from wearing tampons or menstrual cups. ------------------- NFL heiress accused of anti-Semitic rant may be headed to trial The NFL heiress who allegedly hit a lawyer with her glass purse while spewing anti-Semitic comments on New Year's Eve may be heading to trial. Jacqueline Kent Cooke, the 29-year-old daughter of late Washington Redskins owner Jack Kent Cooke, appeared in Manhattan Criminal Court on Tuesday where a judge adjourned the case to Oct. 23, the New York Daily News reported. -------------------- To startup founder and Stanford Medical graduate Jesse Karmazin, blood is the next big government-approved drug. Karmazin recently launched Ambrosia Medical— a startup that fills the veins of older people with fresh blood from young donors — in the hopes that the procedure will help conquer aging by rejuvenating the body's organs. The company plans to open its first clinic in New York City by the end of this year, Karmazin told Business Insider. ---------------------- Cory Michael Hatzl, 30, was arrested after he allegedly stripped naked and challenged people to a fight in a Florida Chick-fil-A parking lot. (Flagler County Sheriff's Office) ---------------------- An NYPD cop was busted in Queens for messaging a woman he was ordered to stay away from — just hours after he was released without bail for assaulting and nearly strangling her, police said for allegedly violating an order of protection by sending messages to his ex-girlfriend through social media, police
This is our second episode where we tackle the ins and outs of retirement plan discrimination and compliance testing. The first episode we released a few weeks ago hit on some of the core concepts around discrimination testing and laid five strategies to improve your results. Today, we pick up where we left off with the last episode and address some more complex concepts around discrimination testing. Thankfully, I have Chad Johnson, a fellow admitted 401(k) nerd, and Third Party Administrator with Plan Design Consultants to help us out. Over the years I have had numerous conversations with retirement service providers of all shapes and sizes on M&A, Control Groups, Grace Periods and Discrimination testing. In my humble opinion, I think Chad provided one of the better explanations of all this that I have heard! Let me know if you agree, disagree or if we missed something you have questions about, shoot us an email at info@401kfridays.com. Guest Bio Chad Johansen is a self-proclaimed retirement-plan-aholoic. As a frequent speaker at the 401(k) Academy, Retireholi(k)s and other national venues, Chad is passionate about helping advisors and plan sponsors understand the intricacies of the 401(k) market place. Chad takes great pride in translating complicated retirement into 401(k) EasySpeak with the goal of creating educated and confident decisions. Chad joined Plan Design Consultants, Inc. in March 2010. As an Internal Retirement Plan Consultant, Chad was assigned to advisor support throughout Northern California. Chad was also responsible for producing the PDC comprehensive retirement plan comparative analysis and aided in vendor research, product knowledge and PDC marketing efforts. In January 2011, Chad made the transition as our External Retirement Plan Consultant covering the California territory. In 2014 Chad joined in ownership of the firm and was promoted to Sales Director now acting as a player/coach to the PDC Sales Team. Chad also sits on the Board of Directors for The Kyle MacFarlane Foundation. In partnership with legendary bike builder Arlen Ness, Stanford Medical and Victory Motorcycles the foundation is teaming up to build a “Hands on Nutrition” motorcycle to raise awareness to the many stomach conditions plaguing Americans. Chad earned his Bachelors of Science Degree in Business Administration from William Woods University in Fulton, Missouri. While attending WWU on a baseball scholarship Chad excelled in both business and finance. He was honored as Business Student of the Year and graduated summa cum laude. Chad and his wife Brooke live in San Jose, California and recently welcomed their second child. They enjoy being outdoors, golfing and skiing/snowboarding. 401(k) Fridays Podcast Overview Struggling with a fiduciary issue, looking for strategies to improve employee retirement outcomes or curious about the impact of current events on your retirement plan? We've had conversations with retirement industry leaders to address these and other relevant topics! You can easily explore over fifty prior on-demand audio interviews here. Don't forget to subscribe as we release a new episode each Friday!
Dr. Benjamin Berk shares his entrepreneurial journey and passion for improving healthcare systems and patient outcomes. The ModernMD: Dr. Benjamin Berk Dr. Benjamin Berk, MD, MS&E provides strategic and operational consulting services to innovative payers, providers, health services organizations, and investors. Benjamin is a Senior Advisor and Content Consultant for Advanced Practice Strategies (APS) and Faculty member for The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy & Clinical Practice. Previously, Dr. Berk was the Vice President of Population Health for Iora Health and Principle at Boston Consulting Group. Success Quote: “Population health is created one patient at a time.” - Benjamin White Coat to Business Suit: Benjamin started as a software engineer building clinical information systems and clinical decision support software. As he did not want to spend his career behind a computer screen, he decided to go to Stanford Medical school. During medical school, he realized he was more interested in the ‘big picture' and made the decision to purse his ‘business residency' at BCG. Listen as Dr. Berk shares his journey, reasons for going into consulting, and his start-up adventures. Idea to Venture: The Idea: How can you transform primary care and improve patient outcomes? Listen as Dr. Berk shares his journey at Iora Health and his passion for transforming primary care. Failures: Benjamin shares his thoughts on the value of failure as a learning opportunity that drives innovation. He also shares insights into fear of failure and success motivators in the US vs. UK healthcare marketplace. Lessons Learned: The buy vs. build technology decision - Learn when buy software and when to build and promote rapid innovation. Business Rounds: Best Advice: “Opportunity is everywhere.” - Benjamin's parents Daily Success Habit: Takes personal time daily to relax away from work without distractions. Healthcare Trends: Value Based Healthcare: Healthcare is moving to larger systems with value based care and accountable care. Healthcare Technology: Clinical dashboards are being brought to the point of care with actionable data. Links: http://tdi.dartmouth.edu/ http://www.aps-web.com/
Lloyd Minor became Dean of the School of Medicine on December 1. He discusses what he has learned about Stanford since coming here in September, what he values in himself and other people, and where health care is headed. (December 3, 2012)