health system in Seattle, US
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Be sure to watch this and every episode of the Stronger Marriage Connection Podcast on YouTube: https://youtu.be/FCbpDpXNMpI Today on this episode of Stronger Marriage Connection, Dr. Liz Hale and Dr. DaveSchramm talk with Joni Parthemer, an expert in childbirth education and Director of the Bringing Baby Home program at the Gottman Institute. They discuss the challenges new parents face, how relationship dynamics shift after childbirth, and practical tools to maintain a strong partnership. Joni shares the science behind relationship satisfaction, emotional attunement, and co-parenting strategies that help couples navigate early parenthood successfully. This conversation also highlights the importance of postpartum support, grandparent involvement, and how families can create a shared legacy. Packed with expert insights and actionable tips, this episode is a must-listen for expecting and new parents! About Joni: Joni Parthemer holds a Masters in Curriculum and Instruction/Learning Styles degree and is both a Master Trainer and Education Director for the Bringing Baby Home Program. She also holds certification as a Childbirth Educator and International Childbirth Association Approved Trainer. Joni is a faculty member at Simkin Center for Allied Birth Professions at Bastyr University as well as a Specialist in the Birth and Family Education Department at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. Joni serves as an educator, trainer and consultant for a variety of educational and organizational programs. She serves families and those who support them with engaging authenticity and wit. She is an award-wining, internationally recognized speaker and facilitator who infuses her decades of experience with her charismatic and energetic style. Joni has developed, published, and implemented, a variety of training materials for educators interested in providing support and growth programs for families and communities. She is married and the mother of two children. Insights: Joni: "A child's well-being is deeply influenced by the health of their family environment. The best gift parents can give their children is a strong, healthy relationship—whether married, divorced, or co-parenting. Parents serve as role models for future relationships, shaping how their children connect with others. By maintaining friendship, managing conflict with respect, and creating shared meaning through family rituals, couples can build a supportive and nurturing "family fish tank" that fosters lasting emotional security." Liz: "The CPR approach—Consistency, Predictability, and Responsiveness—is not just valuable for parenting but also strengthens all relationships, including marriage and friendship. By being reliable, steady, and attentive, we create trust and connection in our most important relationships." Dave: "Education is key to growth. With so many resources available today, we have endless opportunities to learn and improve as partners, parents, and individuals." Joni's Links & Resources: https://jptrainsandspeaks.com/ Visit our site for FREE relationship resources and regular giveaways: Strongermarriage.org Podcast.stongermarriage.org Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/strongermarriage/ Facebook Marriage Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/770019130329579 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/strongermarriagelife/ Dr. Dave Schramm: http://drdaveschramm.com http://drdavespeaks.com Dr. Liz Hale: http://www.drlizhale.com This episode is filled with invaluable insights on how to transition smoothly into parenthood while keeping your relationship strong. Tune in and discover practical tools to support your growing family!
Dr. Norland provides practical advice for managing more severe pregnancy symptoms such as gestational diabetes, and hypertension. The episode highlights the importance of regular prenatal care, screenings, and mental health support, equipping expectant mothers with essential knowledge and resources for maintaining a healthy pregnancy. Host Jennifer Semenza welcomes back Dr. Emily Norland, an OB/GYN and chief of the OB/GYN Department at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, to discuss prenatal care and managing pregnancy symptoms. Do you want to know more?The Justice Unity Support Trust, or JUST Birth Network was created to empower and improve the birthing experience of Black, African American, African, Native American, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander birthing women and people from across the sex and gender identity spectrum.The network includes dedicated birth and postpartum doulas, childbirth educators and inpatient cultural navigators, who provide patients and their families with expert care and guidance throughout their pregnancy and birthing experience.If you would like to know more about the role of doulas and midwives, please check out these Wellness Briefs:DoulasMidwives Just a few of the related article from the Providence blog:How to navigate your pregnancy and newborn-related health care expensesTrouble breastfeeding? Lactation consultants can helpWhat you need to know: All the feelings during the postpartum periodYour Culture and Your Pregnancy: 5 Tips for Advocating For Your Ideal ExperienceMoving Past Healthy Mom Healthy Baby for Black MothersCheck out the Providence blog for more information on good prenatal care and all other health related topics. To learn more about our mission programs and services, go to Providence.org.Follow us on social media to get continued information on other important health care topics. You can connect with us on LinkedIn, Facebook, TikTok, Instagram and X.For all your healthcare information on the go, download the Providence app. Whether you're tracking symptoms, scheduling appointments, or connecting with your healthcare providers, the Providence app has your back.To learn more about the app, check out the Wellness Brief podcast episode. Wellness Brief: Simplifying Care-There's an App for That.Connect with Us: Share Your Thoughts!We value your insights and would love to hear your thoughts on our recent discussions. You can reach us at FutureOfHealthPodcasts@providence.org. Let's shape the future of health together!
Dr. Emily Norland dives into the essential steps for a healthy pregnancy, covering everything from visiting an OB/GYN, taking prenatal vitamins, proper nutrition, and monitoring key milestones. She also shares valuable tips on selecting an obstetric care provider, the importance of prenatal visits, and managing common pregnancy symptoms like nausea, heartburn, and constipation. Dr. Norland emphasizes the need for personalized care and addresses both emotional and physical challenges during pregnancy.Join host Jennifer Semenza as she kicks off the first two episodes of the "Talk With A Doc: Lifecycle: Health For A Better World" series with guest Dr. Emily Norland, an obstetrician-gynecologist, and chief of the OB/GYN Department at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. Do you want to know more?The Justice Unity Support Trust, or JUST Birth Network was created to empower and improve the birthing experience of Black, African American, African, Native American, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander birthing women and people from across the sex and gender identity spectrum.The network includes dedicated birth and postpartum doulas, childbirth educators and inpatient cultural navigators, who provide patients and their families with expert care and guidance throughout their pregnancy and birthing experience.If you would like to know more about the role of doulas and midwives, please check out these Wellness Briefs:Doulas (set to publish on February 18)Midwives (set to publish on February 25) Just a few of the related articles from the Providence blog:How to navigate your pregnancy and newborn-related health care expensesTrouble breastfeeding? Lactation consultants can helpWhat you need to know: All the feelings during the postpartum periodYour Culture and Your Pregnancy: 5 Tips for Advocating For Your Ideal ExperienceMoving Past Healthy Mom Healthy Baby for Black MothersCheck out the Providence blog for more information on good prenatal care and all other health related topics. To learn more about our mission programs and services, go to Providence.org.Follow us on social media to get continued information on other important health care topics. You can connect with us on LinkedIn, Facebook, TikTok, Instagram and X.For all your healthcare information on the go, download the Providence app. Whether you're tracking symptoms, scheduling appointments, or connecting with your healthcare providers, the Providence app has your back.To learn more about the app, check out the Wellness Brief podcast episode. Wellness Brief: Simplifying Care-There's an App for That.Connect with Us: Share Your Thoughts!We value your insights and would love to hear your thoughts on our recent discussions. You can reach us at FutureOfHealthPodcasts@providence.org. Let's shape the future of health together!
We are excited to welcome our first-ever Oculoplastic Surgeon onto the Everyday Oral Surgery podcast. Dr. Harkaran Rana is currently a staff member at the Swedish Medical Center in Colorado, and he begins our conversation by walking us through his professional training history and current fellowship setup. Then, we learn about the intricacies of oculoplastic residencies, a comprehensive breakdown of the anatomy of the eye, the severe and non-urgent cases that Dr. Rana comes across, and his surgical and nonsurgical treatment protocols. We also redefine clinical entrapment within orbital floor fractures, discuss the basic principles surrounding open globe inquires, and unpack everything that we can learn from one of Dr. Rana's most recent cases.Key Points From This Episode:Dr. Harkaran Rana's professional background, training, and current fellowship setup. How oculoplastic residencies differ from the rest. Understanding the anatomy of the eye. Critical eye traumas that Dr. Rana encounters, how he identifies them, and how he assesses severity.Treatment and repair options for various eye injuries. Orbital floor fractures and clinical entrapment.Dr. Rana walks us through his common and non-urgent cases. How he knows when surgical intervention in required, and the protocol he follows. Basic principles when dealing with open globe injuries.A case study of one of Dr. Rana's most recent patients. A teaser on using local fat for repairs ahead of our upcoming episode on this topic. The Debt Trap, road running, yoga, the versatile No. 9 scalpel, and Succession.Links Mentioned in Today's Episode:Dr. Harkaran Rana on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/harkaran-rana-aa3637179 Dr. Harkaran Rana Email — harkaran.s.rana@gmail.com Swedish Medical Center — https://www.healthonecares.com/locations/swedish-medical-center Dr. Richard C. Allen on YouTube — https://www.youtube.com/@oculosurg1 American Academy of Ophthalmology — https://www.aao.org/ The Debt Trap — amazon.com/Debt-Trap-Student-Became-National/dp/1501199447 Succession — https://www.imdb.com/title/tt7660850/ Everyday Oral Surgery Website — https://www.everydayoralsurgery.com/ Everyday Oral Surgery on Instagram — https://www.instagram.com/everydayoralsurgery/ Everyday Oral Surgery on Facebook — https://www.facebook.com/EverydayOralSurgery/Dr. Grant Stucki Email — grantstucki@gmail.comDr. Grant Stucki Phone — 720-441-6059
I was just giving a lecture at the 46th annual International Foot & Ankle foundation meeting at the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. A foot surgeon in the audience asked a great question during the question-and-answer period following one of my lectures. Specifically, the lecture was medical imaging strategies to avert misdiagnosis in runners. She asked, “After a runner has been offloaded with crutches and placed in a fracture walking boot or a cast for immobilization, do you incorporate cross training, or only focus on running?” What is the one biggest mistake any doctor can make with a runner who has been on crutches? Well, that is what we're talking about today on the Doc On The Run podcast.
American Journal of Infection Control: Science Into Practice
In this podcast episode of Science into Practice by the American Journal of Infection Control, hosts Nicki Shore and Jessica Swain have a fascinating discussion with infection prevention experts, Dr. Sara Reese and Jordan Zepeda. They discuss an interesting study about the increase in Surgical Site Infections (SSIs) during the COVID-19 pandemic. The experts shed light on whether supply chain disruptions and protocol changes may have contributed to the phenomenon while discussing modifiable risk factors that could impact prevention strategies. A must-listen for anyone seeking to understand the intricate links between the pandemic and other healthcare challenges. With special guests: Sara Reese, PhD, MPH,CIC, FAPIC, Regional Director of Infection Prevention, Intermountain Health and Jordan Zepeda, MPH, CIC, Infection Prevention Manager, Swedish Medical Center
Take a moment to appreciate the humble but essential set of muscles we call the pelvic floor. When the pelvic floor is working well, our bladder, bowels, and sexual functioning are more likely to be trouble-free. If they aren't working well, people can experience incontinence, constipation, pain, and a host of other troubles. Out of embarrassment or discomfort with the topic, people often turn to unreliable sources for information and help. Dr. Peg Maas, DPT, is a Board Certified Pelvic and Women's Health Physical Therapist who has worked and taught in the field for over 30 years. She works with people of all genders and ages, bringing useful pelvic health information to those who are ready to learn — no matter their comfort level with the topic. Dr. Maas's down-to-earth approach and humor will provide attendees with practical health-changing information for people to begin implementing before they even leave the building! Dr. Peg Maas, DPT, works at Swedish Medical Center and is a Clinical Faculty Member at the University of Washington, and a clinical lecturer at University of Puget Sound. In her clinical work, she treats patients of all ages and genders with a broad spectrum of pelvic floor diagnoses. She tries to set everyone she sees at ease so they feel comfortable asking the questions they hope to ask and can learn what they need to learn to reach their goals. Presented by Town Hall Seattle and Northwest Center for Creative Aging.
Beth Goss joins Dr. Dave Schramm and Dr. Liz Hale to talk about tips for bringing ababy home. She discusses the principles taught in Gottman’s “Bringing Baby Home” program. About Beth Goss Beth Goss is a certified Gottman, educator and a training specialist for the bringing baby home program. She is also a full time faculty member at North Seattle College, where she teaches aparent education and child development classes to families raising children from birth to five years. Additionally, she was previously employed by Swedish Medical Center to teach childbirth, postpartum and sibling classes. She has authored several articles and has been interviewed for several podcasts discussing the transition to parenthood. Beth is originally from Queens, New York, but has called Seattle home for 31 years. She lives there with her husband and loves it when her adult kids visit Insights: “The key for us was what we call the three T's watching our temper, tongue, and tone.” - Dave Schramm “That's not why you got married, you know, you got married because you love each other and your best friends and you have fun together.” - Beth Goss “I think a big piece of advice is don't wait to be asked. Don't wait for your partner to say, could you do X?” - Beth Goss Invites: Download the Gottman App to find the questions relating to the “Bringing Baby Home”program. Enroll in the “Bringing Baby Home” training based on researched tips on how to prepare for starting a family. Learn about tips that will help you to connect with your partner more on Gottman’s “SmallThings Often” podcast. Beth Goss’s Links: Gottman Website: https://www.gottman.com/Personal Website: https://www.bethgoss.com/ Visit our site for FREE relationship resources and regular giveaways: StrongerMarriage.orgpodcast.strongermarriage.orgFacebook: StrongerMarriage.orgInstagram: @strongermarriagelife Dr. Dave Schramm: https://drdaveschramm.com https://drdavespeaks.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrDaveUSU Facebook Marriage Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/770019130329579 Facebook Parenting Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/542067440314642 Dr. Liz Hale: http://www.drlizhale.com/
In this episode of Heart Matters, Matt Ducsik, Associate Vice President of Clinical Institutes at Providence, is joined by Jim Walsh, MD who specializes in Addiction Recovery Services at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, Washington, and James Brevig, MD, FACS, a Cardiac and Cardiothoracic Surgeon at Providence Cardiac Surgery in Everett, Washington.Our panel discusses the important topic of how we treat the whole person when caring for cardiac patients, especially those who are poor and vulnerable. In this case, we will be talking about a specific heart condition that disproportionately affects patients with substance use disorder, many of whom are without stable housing or access to other basic health services. Be sure to tune in and listen to the other episodes of Heart Matters or subscribe to have the latest episode delivered to your favorite podcast platform.For more information and resources, visit:ProvidenceProvidence Heart InstituteBoston ScientificMatt Ducsik's LinkedIn
Contributors: Kalen Abbott, MD - EM Physician and Medical Director for AirLife Denver Brendan Reiss - Flight Nurse AirLife Denver Matt Spoon - Flight Paramedic AirLife Denver Jordan Ourada - EMS Coordinator at Swedish Medical Center and Paramedic Summary: In this episode, hosted by Jordan Ourada, Brendan Reiss and Matt Spoon present a first-hand experience case of hydrofluoric acid exposure in a pediatric patient. Commentary and educational pearls are provided by EM Physician, Kalen Abbott. The case: The patient was a male infant who had spilled a large amount of heavy-duty acid aluminum wheel cleaner on himself while playing in his parent's garage. Unclear if he had ingested any fluid. The cleaning fluid contained a large percentage of hydrofluoric acid. He was brought by EMS to his local hospital, who quickly decided to transport the infant by helicopter to a large Denver hospital. Initial labs were unremarkable and the EKG was normal. Heart rate was in the 140s. Blood pressure was 110/73. Respirations were around 30 and non-labored. Chest and abdominal x-rays were unremarkable. The patient had received a water-based decontamination and 1 gram of calcium gluconate IV. Complications: Immediately before leaving a nurse informed Brendan and Matt that the serum calcium was 6.8 mg/dl (normal range: 8.5 to 10.2). During the flight, the patient went into cardiac arrest. The patient achieved ROSC after CPR was administered in the helicopter. Once on the ground, an I/O line was started and calcium chloride, sodium bicarb, and normal saline were administered. Within the first 2 hours that patient received the equivalent of 310 mg/kg of calcium (the pediatric dose is 20 mg/kg) Care resolution: The patient ended up having a several-week stay in the pediatric ICU. There were some complications such as pulmonary hemorrhage. Calcium gluconate was continued via nebulization for several days. Ultimately, the child was weaned off the ventilator and spontaneous respirations resumed. They were able to wean the child off vasopressors and sedation over the course of several days. A gastric lavage with calcium gluconate was completed as well during the inpatient stay. The child was able to leave the hospital, neurologically intact after about 14 days. Pearls: Lower concentrations of acids can be more dangerous because they don't immediately burn but rather can be absorbed systemically through the skin. Calcium is the antidote to hydrofluoric acid exposure. Calcium chloride has 3 times the elemental calcium as calcium gluconate. The maximum infusion rate of calcium chloride through a peripheral line is 1 gram every 10 minutes, calcium gluconate can be infused at 1 gram every 5 minutes. When intubating a patient with acid exposure, avoid succinylcholine because of the risk of hyperkalemia. References Caravati EM. Acute hydrofluoric acid exposure. Am J Emerg Med. 1988 Mar;6(2):143-50. doi: 10.1016/0735-6757(88)90053-8. PMID: 3281684. Pepe J, Colangelo L, Biamonte F, Sonato C, Danese VC, Cecchetti V, Occhiuto M, Piazzolla V, De Martino V, Ferrone F, Minisola S, Cipriani C. Diagnosis and management of hypocalcemia. Endocrine. 2020 Sep;69(3):485-495. doi: 10.1007/s12020-020-02324-2. Epub 2020 May 4. PMID: 32367335. Strayer RJ. Succinylcholine, rocuronium, and hyperkalemia. Am J Emerg Med. 2016 Aug;34(8):1705-6. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2016.05.039. Epub 2016 May 19. PMID: 27241569. Vallentin MF, Granfeldt A, Meilandt C, Povlsen AL, Sindberg B, Holmberg MJ, Iversen BN, Mærkedahl R, Mortensen LR, Nyboe R, Vandborg MP, Tarpgaard M, Runge C, Christiansen CF, Dissing TH, Terkelsen CJ, Christensen S, Kirkegaard H, Andersen LW. Effect of Intravenous or Intraosseous Calcium vs Saline on Return of Spontaneous Circulation in Adults With Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2021 Dec 14;326(22):2268-2276. doi: 10.1001/jama.2021.20929. PMID: 34847226; PMCID: PMC8634154. Summarized by Jeffrey Olson MS2 | Edited by Jeffrey Olson, Meg Joyce, & Jorge Chalit, OMSII
A transcript is available online Addiction and overdose rates have reached historic levels in the last several years. And while fentanyl and synthetic opioids are responsible for much of the surge, cocaine and other stimulants such as methamphetamine are playing an increasingly common role. Addiction problems are not rare (it's estimated that 10% of the population has substance use disorder) and they don't go away because someone is pregnant. Substance use during pregnancy -- whether of licit or illicit substances -- can complicate pregnancy and may pose a risk for the fetus. And because of the stigma associated with substance use, many people forego prenatal care, further complicating the pregnancy.Host Seán Collins talks with two healthcare professionals about their efforts to reach people with substance use disorders to help them care for themselves and their fetus.Collin Schenk, M.D., is an Addiction Recovery Services physician at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, Wash. Kirsten Lavery, RN, MSN is the Nurse Manager for Addiction Recovery Services. In addition, we hear from Jennifer Justice, a parent ally at the FIRST Legal Clinic in Seattle, about her own story of recovery and her work now helping others during their pregnancies. .An extended excerpt from Jennifer Justice's conversation with Kirsten Lavery is available here. Perinatal Substance Use Disorder Learning Collaborative (WSHA)
Contributors: Andrew White MD & Travis Barlock MD In this follow-up episode Dr. Andrew White, a practicing psychiatrist with an addiction medicine fellowship, and Dr. Travis Barlock, an emergency physician at Swedish Medical Center, discuss mental health holds, psychiatric placement, pharmacologic vs. non-pharmacologic treatments, and outpatient care of psychotic patients. If you missed it, be sure to listen to part I for details on the management of psychotic patients in the ED. Educational Pearls: Mental health holds should be approached on a case-by-case basis; this includes assessing safety risks immediately, over a 24-hour period, and chronically over the last few months. Lastly, collateral information is useful in assessing a mental health hold. What happens after patients get placed in inpatient psychiatry? Typically an antipsychotic is started; in the absence of metabolic risks, patients will often be started on Zyprexa, especially in oral dissolvable form. Doses of Zyprexa ODT start at 2.5 - 5 mg per day. If psychotic patients do not pose direct harm to the environment, they do not necessarily need to be medicated. However, patients will often need medication at some point; for example, some people may be calm during their psychosis but unable to feed themselves or perform other ADLs. The goal of pharmacologic treatment for psychosis is to save the brain; each episode of psychosis damages the brain. Oftentimes, patients will be started on long-acting injectables like aripiprazole or risperidone to give patients 30 days of treatment with one shot. Non-pharmacologic approaches to psychosis are challenging given the nature of the disease. There have been attempts at therapy for psychosis but not have not been hugely successful. Options for support include PT/OT, family support via organizations like NAMI, and other resources for families of patients with psychosis. Outpatient care of patients with psychosis includes contextualizing the events. For example, many people who experience brief psychotic episodes do not go on to develop schizophrenia so it is important to identify a prognosis. On the other hand, someone who has worsening symptoms over several months may require more aggressive treatment. The primary goal of outpatient management of older patients is to reduce the adverse effects of long-term treatments. The CATIE trial in the early 2000s showed that only 25% of people were on antipsychotics by the end of the trial; it is more important to engage patients than focus too much on medications' adverse effects. Summarized and edited by Jorge Chalit, OMSII | Studio production by Jeffrey Olson, MS1
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 5, Seattle Mariners 3 Houston Astros 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Minnesota Twins 16, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 5, Mariners 3 – Greene, Báez, Baddoo lead Tigers past Mariners 5-3 to avoid sweep Riley Greene had three hits, Javier Báez drove in two runs and the Detroit Tigers beat the Seattle Mariners 5-3 to prevent a three-game sweep. With the bases loaded in the seventh inning, Mariners reliever Matt Brash hit Nick Maton on the foot with a pitch to force in the go-ahead run. Brash then walked Andy Ibáñez, making it 5-3. Akil Baddoo knocked in the tying run for Detroit with an RBI double in the sixth. Jason Foley pitched a scoreless seventh for the win and Alex Lange struck out two in the ninth for his seventh save. He worked around two walks, whiffing Teoscar Hernández with two on to end it. Astros 4, White Sox 3 – Diaz homers, Astros hold off White Sox 4-3 Yainer Diaz hit his first major league home run to back rookie Hunter Brown and help the Houston Astros beat the Chicago White Sox 4-3 for their fourth win in five games. Yordan Alvarez hit a two-run double in the first, advanced on shortstop Tim Anderson’s throwing error and scored on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice fly as the Astro built an early lead. Luis Robert Jr. homered for the third consecutive game and Jake Burger also went deep for the White Sox, who have lost four of five and seven of 11. Twins 16, Cubs 3 – Larnach, Gallo help Twins’ offense keep rolling in 16-3 win over Cubs Trevor Larnach hit a three-run homer, Joey Gallo homered for the second straight game and Louie Varland pitched 6 1/3 solid innings for the Minnesota Twins in a 16-3 win against the Chicago Cubs. Varland earned his second career win in his ninth major league start for Minnesota, which won its second consecutive series. Larnach, in his second game since being recalled from Triple-A to replace injured Max Kepler, hit his fourth homer of the season as part of a seven-run third inning that chased Cubs starter Marcus Stroman. Tonight Chicago Cubs (Taillon 0-2) at Houston (Valdez 3-4), 8:10 p.m. Tigers and White Sox are off MLB – Rockies’ Feltner released from hospital after line drive Colorado pitcher Ryan Feltner has a skull fracture and concussion after getting hit by a line drive off the bat of Philadelphia’s Nick Castellanos. Feltner was injured Saturday night and was discharged from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday. He will not need surgery. Feltner was put on the 15-day injured list. When asked whether the 26-year-old right-hander will be out for days, weeks or months, Black said “probably on the longer end of that.” NHL – National Hockey League – 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Vegas Golden Knights 5, Edmonton Oilers 2 (VGK wins 4-2) Golden Knights 5, Oilers 2 – Jonathan Marchessault scores 3 to lead Golden Knights to West final Jonathan Marchessault scored three goals for his second career postseason hat trick as the Vegas Golden Knights beat the Edmonton Oilers 5-2 in Game 6 of their second-round series to advance to the Western Conference final. Reilly Smith and William Karlsson also scored for the Golden Knights, and Ivan Barbashev had two assists. Adin Hill finished with 39 saves. Connor McDavid and Warren Foegele scored early in the first period for Edmonton, which led 2-1 less than three minutes into the game. Stuart Skinner gave up four goals on 17 shots through two periods, and Jack Campbell stopped all four shots he faced in the third. Vegas will next face the winner of the series between Dallas and Seattle, which heads to a Game 7 on Monday night. Tonight Seattle Kraken at Dallas Stars, 8:00 p.m. (Series tied 3-3) NBA – National Basketball Association Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Boston Celtics 112, Philadelphia 76ers 88 (BOS wins 4-3) Celtics 112, Sixers 88 – Tatum sets Game 7 record with 51 points, Celtics beat 76ers 112-88 Jayson Tatum scored 51 points with 13 rebounds and the Boston Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-88 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the second straight year. Tatum’s total is the most in a Game 7 in NBA history. Tatum had a slow start in the past two games but he scored 25 in the back-and-forth first half and 17 more in Boston’s 33-10 third quarter that turned a three-point lead into a runaway. The Celtics will face the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals. They begin on Wednesday in Boston. Tonight No games tonight Tuesday Western Conference Finals Los Angeles Lakers at Denver Nuggets, 8:30 p.m. (Game 1) NBA – Grizzlies suspend Ja Morant after another gun video appears on social media Memphis guard Ja Morant has been suspended by the Grizzlies after another social media video in which he appears to be holding a gun. The NBA is looking into the matter. The Grizzlies say Morant is suspended from all team activities “pending league review.” The video shows Morant in the front seat of a vehicle, appearing to hold the gun while someone filmed him and broadcast it live over Instagram. Morant was suspended by the NBA for eight games this season after the All-Star guard was seen on video holding a gun at a club in the Denver suburbs. The league said the March suspension was for “conduct detrimental to the league.” NASCAR – Byron wins Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway after Chastain wreck William Byron avoided a wreck between Ross Chastain and Kyle Larson on a restart six laps from the end and held on to win the Goodyear 400 in overtime at Darlington Raceway. Byron was pushed out of the lead by eventual winner Joey Logano two laps from the end here a year ago. This time, Byron watched as Chastain and Larson collided, then drove away from Kevin Harvick for his third win this year and the seventh of his career. It was the 100th win for the No. 24 car of Hendrick Motorsports. Golf – PGA – Jason Day gets 1st win in 5 years at Byron Nelson; Scheffler finishes 3 back Jason Day has his first PGA Tour victory in five years at the Byron Nelson. The Australian shot a 9-under 62 for a one-shot victory over Austin Eckroat and Si Woo Kim. Hometown favorite Scottie Scheffler finished three shots back. Day broke a tie with Scheffler with a chip-in birdie at the par-4 12th. Day finished at 23 under playing on Mother’s Day a little more than a year after losing his mom to cancer. Day’s win came the week before the PGA Championship. The only major among the 35-year-old’s 13 victories was the 2015 PGA. Golf – LPGA – Ko wins Founders Cup for 3rd time in 5 years, beating Minjee Lee in playoff Jin Young Ko overcame a four-shot deficit to win the Founders Cup for the third time in five years, getting the victory on the first playoff hole when defending champion Minjee Lee three-putted for bogey. In winning for the 15th time on the LPGA Tour and the second time this year, Ko shot a final-round best 5-under 67 in tough, windy conditions. The 27-year-old South Korean forced the playoff making a clutch downhill birdie from roughly 15 feet on No. 18 to tie for the lead. Ko joins Lilia Vu as the only players with multiple wins on tour this year. Horse Racing – Horse dies at Churchill Downs, 8th recent fatality at home of Debry A horse has died after a race at Churchill Downs, making it the eighth fatality in recent weeks at the home of the Kentucky Derby. Rio Moon died after the sixth race. According to Equibase chart notes on the race, the 3-year-old colt “suffered a catastrophic injury to his left foreleg a few strides after the wire.” The notes say Rio Moon was euthanized. The colt was trained by Dale Romans and was winless in six career starts with earnings of $11,621. Two horses were euthanized after being injured in races on the Kentucky Derby undercard on May 6. Five others were euthanized after training and racing incidents at the track in the days leading up to the Derby. MWL – Midwest League Baseball Last Night West Michigan Whitecaps 6, Lansing Lugnuts 2 Lake County Captains 3, Great Lakes Loons 2 South Bend Cubs 2, Wisconsin Timber Rattlers 1 – F/11 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Baseball Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:30 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Martin, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Lansing Everett at Kal. Loy Norrix, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Softball Lakeshore at Niles, 4:00 p.m. Michigan Lutheran at Benton Harbor, 4:00 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:00 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Decatur, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Mattawan, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Girls Soccer SMAC Tournament – Gold Division – 1st round 4 Lakeshore at 1 Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. 3 Gull Lake at 2 Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Silver Division – 1st round 8 Portage Northern at 5 St. Joseph, 7:00 p.m. 7 BC Lakeview at 6 Loy Norrix, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Bronze Division 10 BC Central at 9 Kal. Central, 6:30 p.m. Wolverine Vicksburg at Edwardsburg, 6:30 p.m. Otsego at Paw Paw, 6:30 p.m. Niles at Plainwell, 6:30 p.m. Sturgis at Three Rivers, 6:00 p.m. BCS New Buffalo at Michigan Lutheran, 5:00 p.m. Non-Conference Constantine at Dowagiac, 5:00 p.m. SAC Schoolcraft at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Fennville at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Allegan at Holland Black River, 5:30 p.m. Watervliet at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Saugatuck, 6:00 p.m. Southwest 10 Bloomingdale at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Bangor at Marcellus, 5:30 p.m. Girls Tennis Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 3:00 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 5, Seattle Mariners 3 Houston Astros 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Minnesota Twins 16, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 5, Mariners 3 – Greene, Báez, Baddoo lead Tigers past Mariners 5-3 to avoid sweep Riley Greene had three hits, Javier Báez drove in two runs and the Detroit Tigers beat the Seattle Mariners 5-3 to prevent a three-game sweep. With the bases loaded in the seventh inning, Mariners reliever Matt Brash hit Nick Maton on the foot with a pitch to force in the go-ahead run. Brash then walked Andy Ibáñez, making it 5-3. Akil Baddoo knocked in the tying run for Detroit with an RBI double in the sixth. Jason Foley pitched a scoreless seventh for the win and Alex Lange struck out two in the ninth for his seventh save. He worked around two walks, whiffing Teoscar Hernández with two on to end it. Astros 4, White Sox 3 – Diaz homers, Astros hold off White Sox 4-3 Yainer Diaz hit his first major league home run to back rookie Hunter Brown and help the Houston Astros beat the Chicago White Sox 4-3 for their fourth win in five games. Yordan Alvarez hit a two-run double in the first, advanced on shortstop Tim Anderson’s throwing error and scored on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice fly as the Astro built an early lead. Luis Robert Jr. homered for the third consecutive game and Jake Burger also went deep for the White Sox, who have lost four of five and seven of 11. Twins 16, Cubs 3 – Larnach, Gallo help Twins’ offense keep rolling in 16-3 win over Cubs Trevor Larnach hit a three-run homer, Joey Gallo homered for the second straight game and Louie Varland pitched 6 1/3 solid innings for the Minnesota Twins in a 16-3 win against the Chicago Cubs. Varland earned his second career win in his ninth major league start for Minnesota, which won its second consecutive series. Larnach, in his second game since being recalled from Triple-A to replace injured Max Kepler, hit his fourth homer of the season as part of a seven-run third inning that chased Cubs starter Marcus Stroman. Tonight Chicago Cubs (Taillon 0-2) at Houston (Valdez 3-4), 8:10 p.m. Tigers and White Sox are off MLB – Rockies’ Feltner released from hospital after line drive Colorado pitcher Ryan Feltner has a skull fracture and concussion after getting hit by a line drive off the bat of Philadelphia’s Nick Castellanos. Feltner was injured Saturday night and was discharged from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday. He will not need surgery. Feltner was put on the 15-day injured list. When asked whether the 26-year-old right-hander will be out for days, weeks or months, Black said “probably on the longer end of that.” NHL – National Hockey League – 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Vegas Golden Knights 5, Edmonton Oilers 2 (VGK wins 4-2) Golden Knights 5, Oilers 2 – Jonathan Marchessault scores 3 to lead Golden Knights to West final Jonathan Marchessault scored three goals for his second career postseason hat trick as the Vegas Golden Knights beat the Edmonton Oilers 5-2 in Game 6 of their second-round series to advance to the Western Conference final. Reilly Smith and William Karlsson also scored for the Golden Knights, and Ivan Barbashev had two assists. Adin Hill finished with 39 saves. Connor McDavid and Warren Foegele scored early in the first period for Edmonton, which led 2-1 less than three minutes into the game. Stuart Skinner gave up four goals on 17 shots through two periods, and Jack Campbell stopped all four shots he faced in the third. Vegas will next face the winner of the series between Dallas and Seattle, which heads to a Game 7 on Monday night. Tonight Seattle Kraken at Dallas Stars, 8:00 p.m. (Series tied 3-3) NBA – National Basketball Association Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Boston Celtics 112, Philadelphia 76ers 88 (BOS wins 4-3) Celtics 112, Sixers 88 – Tatum sets Game 7 record with 51 points, Celtics beat 76ers 112-88 Jayson Tatum scored 51 points with 13 rebounds and the Boston Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-88 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the second straight year. Tatum’s total is the most in a Game 7 in NBA history. Tatum had a slow start in the past two games but he scored 25 in the back-and-forth first half and 17 more in Boston’s 33-10 third quarter that turned a three-point lead into a runaway. The Celtics will face the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals. They begin on Wednesday in Boston. Tonight No games tonight Tuesday Western Conference Finals Los Angeles Lakers at Denver Nuggets, 8:30 p.m. (Game 1) NBA – Grizzlies suspend Ja Morant after another gun video appears on social media Memphis guard Ja Morant has been suspended by the Grizzlies after another social media video in which he appears to be holding a gun. The NBA is looking into the matter. The Grizzlies say Morant is suspended from all team activities “pending league review.” The video shows Morant in the front seat of a vehicle, appearing to hold the gun while someone filmed him and broadcast it live over Instagram. Morant was suspended by the NBA for eight games this season after the All-Star guard was seen on video holding a gun at a club in the Denver suburbs. The league said the March suspension was for “conduct detrimental to the league.” NASCAR – Byron wins Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway after Chastain wreck William Byron avoided a wreck between Ross Chastain and Kyle Larson on a restart six laps from the end and held on to win the Goodyear 400 in overtime at Darlington Raceway. Byron was pushed out of the lead by eventual winner Joey Logano two laps from the end here a year ago. This time, Byron watched as Chastain and Larson collided, then drove away from Kevin Harvick for his third win this year and the seventh of his career. It was the 100th win for the No. 24 car of Hendrick Motorsports. Golf – PGA – Jason Day gets 1st win in 5 years at Byron Nelson; Scheffler finishes 3 back Jason Day has his first PGA Tour victory in five years at the Byron Nelson. The Australian shot a 9-under 62 for a one-shot victory over Austin Eckroat and Si Woo Kim. Hometown favorite Scottie Scheffler finished three shots back. Day broke a tie with Scheffler with a chip-in birdie at the par-4 12th. Day finished at 23 under playing on Mother’s Day a little more than a year after losing his mom to cancer. Day’s win came the week before the PGA Championship. The only major among the 35-year-old’s 13 victories was the 2015 PGA. Golf – LPGA – Ko wins Founders Cup for 3rd time in 5 years, beating Minjee Lee in playoff Jin Young Ko overcame a four-shot deficit to win the Founders Cup for the third time in five years, getting the victory on the first playoff hole when defending champion Minjee Lee three-putted for bogey. In winning for the 15th time on the LPGA Tour and the second time this year, Ko shot a final-round best 5-under 67 in tough, windy conditions. The 27-year-old South Korean forced the playoff making a clutch downhill birdie from roughly 15 feet on No. 18 to tie for the lead. Ko joins Lilia Vu as the only players with multiple wins on tour this year. Horse Racing – Horse dies at Churchill Downs, 8th recent fatality at home of Debry A horse has died after a race at Churchill Downs, making it the eighth fatality in recent weeks at the home of the Kentucky Derby. Rio Moon died after the sixth race. According to Equibase chart notes on the race, the 3-year-old colt “suffered a catastrophic injury to his left foreleg a few strides after the wire.” The notes say Rio Moon was euthanized. The colt was trained by Dale Romans and was winless in six career starts with earnings of $11,621. Two horses were euthanized after being injured in races on the Kentucky Derby undercard on May 6. Five others were euthanized after training and racing incidents at the track in the days leading up to the Derby. MWL – Midwest League Baseball Last Night West Michigan Whitecaps 6, Lansing Lugnuts 2 Lake County Captains 3, Great Lakes Loons 2 South Bend Cubs 2, Wisconsin Timber Rattlers 1 – F/11 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Baseball Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:30 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Martin, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Lansing Everett at Kal. Loy Norrix, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Softball Lakeshore at Niles, 4:00 p.m. Michigan Lutheran at Benton Harbor, 4:00 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:00 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Decatur, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Mattawan, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Girls Soccer SMAC Tournament – Gold Division – 1st round 4 Lakeshore at 1 Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. 3 Gull Lake at 2 Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Silver Division – 1st round 8 Portage Northern at 5 St. Joseph, 7:00 p.m. 7 BC Lakeview at 6 Loy Norrix, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Bronze Division 10 BC Central at 9 Kal. Central, 6:30 p.m. Wolverine Vicksburg at Edwardsburg, 6:30 p.m. Otsego at Paw Paw, 6:30 p.m. Niles at Plainwell, 6:30 p.m. Sturgis at Three Rivers, 6:00 p.m. BCS New Buffalo at Michigan Lutheran, 5:00 p.m. Non-Conference Constantine at Dowagiac, 5:00 p.m. SAC Schoolcraft at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Fennville at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Allegan at Holland Black River, 5:30 p.m. Watervliet at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Saugatuck, 6:00 p.m. Southwest 10 Bloomingdale at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Bangor at Marcellus, 5:30 p.m. Girls Tennis Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 3:00 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 5, Seattle Mariners 3 Houston Astros 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Minnesota Twins 16, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 5, Mariners 3 – Greene, Báez, Baddoo lead Tigers past Mariners 5-3 to avoid sweep Riley Greene had three hits, Javier Báez drove in two runs and the Detroit Tigers beat the Seattle Mariners 5-3 to prevent a three-game sweep. With the bases loaded in the seventh inning, Mariners reliever Matt Brash hit Nick Maton on the foot with a pitch to force in the go-ahead run. Brash then walked Andy Ibáñez, making it 5-3. Akil Baddoo knocked in the tying run for Detroit with an RBI double in the sixth. Jason Foley pitched a scoreless seventh for the win and Alex Lange struck out two in the ninth for his seventh save. He worked around two walks, whiffing Teoscar Hernández with two on to end it. Astros 4, White Sox 3 – Diaz homers, Astros hold off White Sox 4-3 Yainer Diaz hit his first major league home run to back rookie Hunter Brown and help the Houston Astros beat the Chicago White Sox 4-3 for their fourth win in five games. Yordan Alvarez hit a two-run double in the first, advanced on shortstop Tim Anderson’s throwing error and scored on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice fly as the Astro built an early lead. Luis Robert Jr. homered for the third consecutive game and Jake Burger also went deep for the White Sox, who have lost four of five and seven of 11. Twins 16, Cubs 3 – Larnach, Gallo help Twins’ offense keep rolling in 16-3 win over Cubs Trevor Larnach hit a three-run homer, Joey Gallo homered for the second straight game and Louie Varland pitched 6 1/3 solid innings for the Minnesota Twins in a 16-3 win against the Chicago Cubs. Varland earned his second career win in his ninth major league start for Minnesota, which won its second consecutive series. Larnach, in his second game since being recalled from Triple-A to replace injured Max Kepler, hit his fourth homer of the season as part of a seven-run third inning that chased Cubs starter Marcus Stroman. Tonight Chicago Cubs (Taillon 0-2) at Houston (Valdez 3-4), 8:10 p.m. Tigers and White Sox are off MLB – Rockies’ Feltner released from hospital after line drive Colorado pitcher Ryan Feltner has a skull fracture and concussion after getting hit by a line drive off the bat of Philadelphia’s Nick Castellanos. Feltner was injured Saturday night and was discharged from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday. He will not need surgery. Feltner was put on the 15-day injured list. When asked whether the 26-year-old right-hander will be out for days, weeks or months, Black said “probably on the longer end of that.” NHL – National Hockey League – 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Vegas Golden Knights 5, Edmonton Oilers 2 (VGK wins 4-2) Golden Knights 5, Oilers 2 – Jonathan Marchessault scores 3 to lead Golden Knights to West final Jonathan Marchessault scored three goals for his second career postseason hat trick as the Vegas Golden Knights beat the Edmonton Oilers 5-2 in Game 6 of their second-round series to advance to the Western Conference final. Reilly Smith and William Karlsson also scored for the Golden Knights, and Ivan Barbashev had two assists. Adin Hill finished with 39 saves. Connor McDavid and Warren Foegele scored early in the first period for Edmonton, which led 2-1 less than three minutes into the game. Stuart Skinner gave up four goals on 17 shots through two periods, and Jack Campbell stopped all four shots he faced in the third. Vegas will next face the winner of the series between Dallas and Seattle, which heads to a Game 7 on Monday night. Tonight Seattle Kraken at Dallas Stars, 8:00 p.m. (Series tied 3-3) NBA – National Basketball Association Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Boston Celtics 112, Philadelphia 76ers 88 (BOS wins 4-3) Celtics 112, Sixers 88 – Tatum sets Game 7 record with 51 points, Celtics beat 76ers 112-88 Jayson Tatum scored 51 points with 13 rebounds and the Boston Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-88 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the second straight year. Tatum’s total is the most in a Game 7 in NBA history. Tatum had a slow start in the past two games but he scored 25 in the back-and-forth first half and 17 more in Boston’s 33-10 third quarter that turned a three-point lead into a runaway. The Celtics will face the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals. They begin on Wednesday in Boston. Tonight No games tonight Tuesday Western Conference Finals Los Angeles Lakers at Denver Nuggets, 8:30 p.m. (Game 1) NBA – Grizzlies suspend Ja Morant after another gun video appears on social media Memphis guard Ja Morant has been suspended by the Grizzlies after another social media video in which he appears to be holding a gun. The NBA is looking into the matter. The Grizzlies say Morant is suspended from all team activities “pending league review.” The video shows Morant in the front seat of a vehicle, appearing to hold the gun while someone filmed him and broadcast it live over Instagram. Morant was suspended by the NBA for eight games this season after the All-Star guard was seen on video holding a gun at a club in the Denver suburbs. The league said the March suspension was for “conduct detrimental to the league.” NASCAR – Byron wins Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway after Chastain wreck William Byron avoided a wreck between Ross Chastain and Kyle Larson on a restart six laps from the end and held on to win the Goodyear 400 in overtime at Darlington Raceway. Byron was pushed out of the lead by eventual winner Joey Logano two laps from the end here a year ago. This time, Byron watched as Chastain and Larson collided, then drove away from Kevin Harvick for his third win this year and the seventh of his career. It was the 100th win for the No. 24 car of Hendrick Motorsports. Golf – PGA – Jason Day gets 1st win in 5 years at Byron Nelson; Scheffler finishes 3 back Jason Day has his first PGA Tour victory in five years at the Byron Nelson. The Australian shot a 9-under 62 for a one-shot victory over Austin Eckroat and Si Woo Kim. Hometown favorite Scottie Scheffler finished three shots back. Day broke a tie with Scheffler with a chip-in birdie at the par-4 12th. Day finished at 23 under playing on Mother’s Day a little more than a year after losing his mom to cancer. Day’s win came the week before the PGA Championship. The only major among the 35-year-old’s 13 victories was the 2015 PGA. Golf – LPGA – Ko wins Founders Cup for 3rd time in 5 years, beating Minjee Lee in playoff Jin Young Ko overcame a four-shot deficit to win the Founders Cup for the third time in five years, getting the victory on the first playoff hole when defending champion Minjee Lee three-putted for bogey. In winning for the 15th time on the LPGA Tour and the second time this year, Ko shot a final-round best 5-under 67 in tough, windy conditions. The 27-year-old South Korean forced the playoff making a clutch downhill birdie from roughly 15 feet on No. 18 to tie for the lead. Ko joins Lilia Vu as the only players with multiple wins on tour this year. Horse Racing – Horse dies at Churchill Downs, 8th recent fatality at home of Debry A horse has died after a race at Churchill Downs, making it the eighth fatality in recent weeks at the home of the Kentucky Derby. Rio Moon died after the sixth race. According to Equibase chart notes on the race, the 3-year-old colt “suffered a catastrophic injury to his left foreleg a few strides after the wire.” The notes say Rio Moon was euthanized. The colt was trained by Dale Romans and was winless in six career starts with earnings of $11,621. Two horses were euthanized after being injured in races on the Kentucky Derby undercard on May 6. Five others were euthanized after training and racing incidents at the track in the days leading up to the Derby. MWL – Midwest League Baseball Last Night West Michigan Whitecaps 6, Lansing Lugnuts 2 Lake County Captains 3, Great Lakes Loons 2 South Bend Cubs 2, Wisconsin Timber Rattlers 1 – F/11 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Baseball Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:30 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Martin, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Lansing Everett at Kal. Loy Norrix, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Softball Lakeshore at Niles, 4:00 p.m. Michigan Lutheran at Benton Harbor, 4:00 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:00 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Decatur, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Mattawan, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Girls Soccer SMAC Tournament – Gold Division – 1st round 4 Lakeshore at 1 Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. 3 Gull Lake at 2 Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Silver Division – 1st round 8 Portage Northern at 5 St. Joseph, 7:00 p.m. 7 BC Lakeview at 6 Loy Norrix, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Bronze Division 10 BC Central at 9 Kal. Central, 6:30 p.m. Wolverine Vicksburg at Edwardsburg, 6:30 p.m. Otsego at Paw Paw, 6:30 p.m. Niles at Plainwell, 6:30 p.m. Sturgis at Three Rivers, 6:00 p.m. BCS New Buffalo at Michigan Lutheran, 5:00 p.m. Non-Conference Constantine at Dowagiac, 5:00 p.m. SAC Schoolcraft at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Fennville at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Allegan at Holland Black River, 5:30 p.m. Watervliet at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Saugatuck, 6:00 p.m. Southwest 10 Bloomingdale at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Bangor at Marcellus, 5:30 p.m. Girls Tennis Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 3:00 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 5, Seattle Mariners 3 Houston Astros 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Minnesota Twins 16, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 5, Mariners 3 – Greene, Báez, Baddoo lead Tigers past Mariners 5-3 to avoid sweep Riley Greene had three hits, Javier Báez drove in two runs and the Detroit Tigers beat the Seattle Mariners 5-3 to prevent a three-game sweep. With the bases loaded in the seventh inning, Mariners reliever Matt Brash hit Nick Maton on the foot with a pitch to force in the go-ahead run. Brash then walked Andy Ibáñez, making it 5-3. Akil Baddoo knocked in the tying run for Detroit with an RBI double in the sixth. Jason Foley pitched a scoreless seventh for the win and Alex Lange struck out two in the ninth for his seventh save. He worked around two walks, whiffing Teoscar Hernández with two on to end it. Astros 4, White Sox 3 – Diaz homers, Astros hold off White Sox 4-3 Yainer Diaz hit his first major league home run to back rookie Hunter Brown and help the Houston Astros beat the Chicago White Sox 4-3 for their fourth win in five games. Yordan Alvarez hit a two-run double in the first, advanced on shortstop Tim Anderson’s throwing error and scored on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice fly as the Astro built an early lead. Luis Robert Jr. homered for the third consecutive game and Jake Burger also went deep for the White Sox, who have lost four of five and seven of 11. Twins 16, Cubs 3 – Larnach, Gallo help Twins’ offense keep rolling in 16-3 win over Cubs Trevor Larnach hit a three-run homer, Joey Gallo homered for the second straight game and Louie Varland pitched 6 1/3 solid innings for the Minnesota Twins in a 16-3 win against the Chicago Cubs. Varland earned his second career win in his ninth major league start for Minnesota, which won its second consecutive series. Larnach, in his second game since being recalled from Triple-A to replace injured Max Kepler, hit his fourth homer of the season as part of a seven-run third inning that chased Cubs starter Marcus Stroman. Tonight Chicago Cubs (Taillon 0-2) at Houston (Valdez 3-4), 8:10 p.m. Tigers and White Sox are off MLB – Rockies’ Feltner released from hospital after line drive Colorado pitcher Ryan Feltner has a skull fracture and concussion after getting hit by a line drive off the bat of Philadelphia’s Nick Castellanos. Feltner was injured Saturday night and was discharged from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday. He will not need surgery. Feltner was put on the 15-day injured list. When asked whether the 26-year-old right-hander will be out for days, weeks or months, Black said “probably on the longer end of that.” NHL – National Hockey League – 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Vegas Golden Knights 5, Edmonton Oilers 2 (VGK wins 4-2) Golden Knights 5, Oilers 2 – Jonathan Marchessault scores 3 to lead Golden Knights to West final Jonathan Marchessault scored three goals for his second career postseason hat trick as the Vegas Golden Knights beat the Edmonton Oilers 5-2 in Game 6 of their second-round series to advance to the Western Conference final. Reilly Smith and William Karlsson also scored for the Golden Knights, and Ivan Barbashev had two assists. Adin Hill finished with 39 saves. Connor McDavid and Warren Foegele scored early in the first period for Edmonton, which led 2-1 less than three minutes into the game. Stuart Skinner gave up four goals on 17 shots through two periods, and Jack Campbell stopped all four shots he faced in the third. Vegas will next face the winner of the series between Dallas and Seattle, which heads to a Game 7 on Monday night. Tonight Seattle Kraken at Dallas Stars, 8:00 p.m. (Series tied 3-3) NBA – National Basketball Association Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Boston Celtics 112, Philadelphia 76ers 88 (BOS wins 4-3) Celtics 112, Sixers 88 – Tatum sets Game 7 record with 51 points, Celtics beat 76ers 112-88 Jayson Tatum scored 51 points with 13 rebounds and the Boston Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-88 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the second straight year. Tatum’s total is the most in a Game 7 in NBA history. Tatum had a slow start in the past two games but he scored 25 in the back-and-forth first half and 17 more in Boston’s 33-10 third quarter that turned a three-point lead into a runaway. The Celtics will face the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals. They begin on Wednesday in Boston. Tonight No games tonight Tuesday Western Conference Finals Los Angeles Lakers at Denver Nuggets, 8:30 p.m. (Game 1) NBA – Grizzlies suspend Ja Morant after another gun video appears on social media Memphis guard Ja Morant has been suspended by the Grizzlies after another social media video in which he appears to be holding a gun. The NBA is looking into the matter. The Grizzlies say Morant is suspended from all team activities “pending league review.” The video shows Morant in the front seat of a vehicle, appearing to hold the gun while someone filmed him and broadcast it live over Instagram. Morant was suspended by the NBA for eight games this season after the All-Star guard was seen on video holding a gun at a club in the Denver suburbs. The league said the March suspension was for “conduct detrimental to the league.” NASCAR – Byron wins Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway after Chastain wreck William Byron avoided a wreck between Ross Chastain and Kyle Larson on a restart six laps from the end and held on to win the Goodyear 400 in overtime at Darlington Raceway. Byron was pushed out of the lead by eventual winner Joey Logano two laps from the end here a year ago. This time, Byron watched as Chastain and Larson collided, then drove away from Kevin Harvick for his third win this year and the seventh of his career. It was the 100th win for the No. 24 car of Hendrick Motorsports. Golf – PGA – Jason Day gets 1st win in 5 years at Byron Nelson; Scheffler finishes 3 back Jason Day has his first PGA Tour victory in five years at the Byron Nelson. The Australian shot a 9-under 62 for a one-shot victory over Austin Eckroat and Si Woo Kim. Hometown favorite Scottie Scheffler finished three shots back. Day broke a tie with Scheffler with a chip-in birdie at the par-4 12th. Day finished at 23 under playing on Mother’s Day a little more than a year after losing his mom to cancer. Day’s win came the week before the PGA Championship. The only major among the 35-year-old’s 13 victories was the 2015 PGA. Golf – LPGA – Ko wins Founders Cup for 3rd time in 5 years, beating Minjee Lee in playoff Jin Young Ko overcame a four-shot deficit to win the Founders Cup for the third time in five years, getting the victory on the first playoff hole when defending champion Minjee Lee three-putted for bogey. In winning for the 15th time on the LPGA Tour and the second time this year, Ko shot a final-round best 5-under 67 in tough, windy conditions. The 27-year-old South Korean forced the playoff making a clutch downhill birdie from roughly 15 feet on No. 18 to tie for the lead. Ko joins Lilia Vu as the only players with multiple wins on tour this year. Horse Racing – Horse dies at Churchill Downs, 8th recent fatality at home of Debry A horse has died after a race at Churchill Downs, making it the eighth fatality in recent weeks at the home of the Kentucky Derby. Rio Moon died after the sixth race. According to Equibase chart notes on the race, the 3-year-old colt “suffered a catastrophic injury to his left foreleg a few strides after the wire.” The notes say Rio Moon was euthanized. The colt was trained by Dale Romans and was winless in six career starts with earnings of $11,621. Two horses were euthanized after being injured in races on the Kentucky Derby undercard on May 6. Five others were euthanized after training and racing incidents at the track in the days leading up to the Derby. MWL – Midwest League Baseball Last Night West Michigan Whitecaps 6, Lansing Lugnuts 2 Lake County Captains 3, Great Lakes Loons 2 South Bend Cubs 2, Wisconsin Timber Rattlers 1 – F/11 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Baseball Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:30 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Martin, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Lansing Everett at Kal. Loy Norrix, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Softball Lakeshore at Niles, 4:00 p.m. Michigan Lutheran at Benton Harbor, 4:00 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:00 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Decatur, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Mattawan, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Girls Soccer SMAC Tournament – Gold Division – 1st round 4 Lakeshore at 1 Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. 3 Gull Lake at 2 Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Silver Division – 1st round 8 Portage Northern at 5 St. Joseph, 7:00 p.m. 7 BC Lakeview at 6 Loy Norrix, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Bronze Division 10 BC Central at 9 Kal. Central, 6:30 p.m. Wolverine Vicksburg at Edwardsburg, 6:30 p.m. Otsego at Paw Paw, 6:30 p.m. Niles at Plainwell, 6:30 p.m. Sturgis at Three Rivers, 6:00 p.m. BCS New Buffalo at Michigan Lutheran, 5:00 p.m. Non-Conference Constantine at Dowagiac, 5:00 p.m. SAC Schoolcraft at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Fennville at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Allegan at Holland Black River, 5:30 p.m. Watervliet at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Saugatuck, 6:00 p.m. Southwest 10 Bloomingdale at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Bangor at Marcellus, 5:30 p.m. Girls Tennis Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 3:00 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 5, Seattle Mariners 3 Houston Astros 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Minnesota Twins 16, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 5, Mariners 3 – Greene, Báez, Baddoo lead Tigers past Mariners 5-3 to avoid sweep Riley Greene had three hits, Javier Báez drove in two runs and the Detroit Tigers beat the Seattle Mariners 5-3 to prevent a three-game sweep. With the bases loaded in the seventh inning, Mariners reliever Matt Brash hit Nick Maton on the foot with a pitch to force in the go-ahead run. Brash then walked Andy Ibáñez, making it 5-3. Akil Baddoo knocked in the tying run for Detroit with an RBI double in the sixth. Jason Foley pitched a scoreless seventh for the win and Alex Lange struck out two in the ninth for his seventh save. He worked around two walks, whiffing Teoscar Hernández with two on to end it. Astros 4, White Sox 3 – Diaz homers, Astros hold off White Sox 4-3 Yainer Diaz hit his first major league home run to back rookie Hunter Brown and help the Houston Astros beat the Chicago White Sox 4-3 for their fourth win in five games. Yordan Alvarez hit a two-run double in the first, advanced on shortstop Tim Anderson’s throwing error and scored on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice fly as the Astro built an early lead. Luis Robert Jr. homered for the third consecutive game and Jake Burger also went deep for the White Sox, who have lost four of five and seven of 11. Twins 16, Cubs 3 – Larnach, Gallo help Twins’ offense keep rolling in 16-3 win over Cubs Trevor Larnach hit a three-run homer, Joey Gallo homered for the second straight game and Louie Varland pitched 6 1/3 solid innings for the Minnesota Twins in a 16-3 win against the Chicago Cubs. Varland earned his second career win in his ninth major league start for Minnesota, which won its second consecutive series. Larnach, in his second game since being recalled from Triple-A to replace injured Max Kepler, hit his fourth homer of the season as part of a seven-run third inning that chased Cubs starter Marcus Stroman. Tonight Chicago Cubs (Taillon 0-2) at Houston (Valdez 3-4), 8:10 p.m. Tigers and White Sox are off MLB – Rockies’ Feltner released from hospital after line drive Colorado pitcher Ryan Feltner has a skull fracture and concussion after getting hit by a line drive off the bat of Philadelphia’s Nick Castellanos. Feltner was injured Saturday night and was discharged from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday. He will not need surgery. Feltner was put on the 15-day injured list. When asked whether the 26-year-old right-hander will be out for days, weeks or months, Black said “probably on the longer end of that.” NHL – National Hockey League – 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Vegas Golden Knights 5, Edmonton Oilers 2 (VGK wins 4-2) Golden Knights 5, Oilers 2 – Jonathan Marchessault scores 3 to lead Golden Knights to West final Jonathan Marchessault scored three goals for his second career postseason hat trick as the Vegas Golden Knights beat the Edmonton Oilers 5-2 in Game 6 of their second-round series to advance to the Western Conference final. Reilly Smith and William Karlsson also scored for the Golden Knights, and Ivan Barbashev had two assists. Adin Hill finished with 39 saves. Connor McDavid and Warren Foegele scored early in the first period for Edmonton, which led 2-1 less than three minutes into the game. Stuart Skinner gave up four goals on 17 shots through two periods, and Jack Campbell stopped all four shots he faced in the third. Vegas will next face the winner of the series between Dallas and Seattle, which heads to a Game 7 on Monday night. Tonight Seattle Kraken at Dallas Stars, 8:00 p.m. (Series tied 3-3) NBA – National Basketball Association Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Boston Celtics 112, Philadelphia 76ers 88 (BOS wins 4-3) Celtics 112, Sixers 88 – Tatum sets Game 7 record with 51 points, Celtics beat 76ers 112-88 Jayson Tatum scored 51 points with 13 rebounds and the Boston Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-88 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the second straight year. Tatum’s total is the most in a Game 7 in NBA history. Tatum had a slow start in the past two games but he scored 25 in the back-and-forth first half and 17 more in Boston’s 33-10 third quarter that turned a three-point lead into a runaway. The Celtics will face the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals. They begin on Wednesday in Boston. Tonight No games tonight Tuesday Western Conference Finals Los Angeles Lakers at Denver Nuggets, 8:30 p.m. (Game 1) NBA – Grizzlies suspend Ja Morant after another gun video appears on social media Memphis guard Ja Morant has been suspended by the Grizzlies after another social media video in which he appears to be holding a gun. The NBA is looking into the matter. The Grizzlies say Morant is suspended from all team activities “pending league review.” The video shows Morant in the front seat of a vehicle, appearing to hold the gun while someone filmed him and broadcast it live over Instagram. Morant was suspended by the NBA for eight games this season after the All-Star guard was seen on video holding a gun at a club in the Denver suburbs. The league said the March suspension was for “conduct detrimental to the league.” NASCAR – Byron wins Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway after Chastain wreck William Byron avoided a wreck between Ross Chastain and Kyle Larson on a restart six laps from the end and held on to win the Goodyear 400 in overtime at Darlington Raceway. Byron was pushed out of the lead by eventual winner Joey Logano two laps from the end here a year ago. This time, Byron watched as Chastain and Larson collided, then drove away from Kevin Harvick for his third win this year and the seventh of his career. It was the 100th win for the No. 24 car of Hendrick Motorsports. Golf – PGA – Jason Day gets 1st win in 5 years at Byron Nelson; Scheffler finishes 3 back Jason Day has his first PGA Tour victory in five years at the Byron Nelson. The Australian shot a 9-under 62 for a one-shot victory over Austin Eckroat and Si Woo Kim. Hometown favorite Scottie Scheffler finished three shots back. Day broke a tie with Scheffler with a chip-in birdie at the par-4 12th. Day finished at 23 under playing on Mother’s Day a little more than a year after losing his mom to cancer. Day’s win came the week before the PGA Championship. The only major among the 35-year-old’s 13 victories was the 2015 PGA. Golf – LPGA – Ko wins Founders Cup for 3rd time in 5 years, beating Minjee Lee in playoff Jin Young Ko overcame a four-shot deficit to win the Founders Cup for the third time in five years, getting the victory on the first playoff hole when defending champion Minjee Lee three-putted for bogey. In winning for the 15th time on the LPGA Tour and the second time this year, Ko shot a final-round best 5-under 67 in tough, windy conditions. The 27-year-old South Korean forced the playoff making a clutch downhill birdie from roughly 15 feet on No. 18 to tie for the lead. Ko joins Lilia Vu as the only players with multiple wins on tour this year. Horse Racing – Horse dies at Churchill Downs, 8th recent fatality at home of Debry A horse has died after a race at Churchill Downs, making it the eighth fatality in recent weeks at the home of the Kentucky Derby. Rio Moon died after the sixth race. According to Equibase chart notes on the race, the 3-year-old colt “suffered a catastrophic injury to his left foreleg a few strides after the wire.” The notes say Rio Moon was euthanized. The colt was trained by Dale Romans and was winless in six career starts with earnings of $11,621. Two horses were euthanized after being injured in races on the Kentucky Derby undercard on May 6. Five others were euthanized after training and racing incidents at the track in the days leading up to the Derby. MWL – Midwest League Baseball Last Night West Michigan Whitecaps 6, Lansing Lugnuts 2 Lake County Captains 3, Great Lakes Loons 2 South Bend Cubs 2, Wisconsin Timber Rattlers 1 – F/11 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Baseball Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:30 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Martin, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Lansing Everett at Kal. Loy Norrix, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Softball Lakeshore at Niles, 4:00 p.m. Michigan Lutheran at Benton Harbor, 4:00 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:00 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Decatur, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Mattawan, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Girls Soccer SMAC Tournament – Gold Division – 1st round 4 Lakeshore at 1 Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. 3 Gull Lake at 2 Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Silver Division – 1st round 8 Portage Northern at 5 St. Joseph, 7:00 p.m. 7 BC Lakeview at 6 Loy Norrix, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Bronze Division 10 BC Central at 9 Kal. Central, 6:30 p.m. Wolverine Vicksburg at Edwardsburg, 6:30 p.m. Otsego at Paw Paw, 6:30 p.m. Niles at Plainwell, 6:30 p.m. Sturgis at Three Rivers, 6:00 p.m. BCS New Buffalo at Michigan Lutheran, 5:00 p.m. Non-Conference Constantine at Dowagiac, 5:00 p.m. SAC Schoolcraft at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Fennville at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Allegan at Holland Black River, 5:30 p.m. Watervliet at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Saugatuck, 6:00 p.m. Southwest 10 Bloomingdale at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Bangor at Marcellus, 5:30 p.m. Girls Tennis Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 3:00 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MLB – Major League Baseball Yesterday Detroit Tigers 5, Seattle Mariners 3 Houston Astros 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Minnesota Twins 16, Chicago Cubs 2 Tigers 5, Mariners 3 – Greene, Báez, Baddoo lead Tigers past Mariners 5-3 to avoid sweep Riley Greene had three hits, Javier Báez drove in two runs and the Detroit Tigers beat the Seattle Mariners 5-3 to prevent a three-game sweep. With the bases loaded in the seventh inning, Mariners reliever Matt Brash hit Nick Maton on the foot with a pitch to force in the go-ahead run. Brash then walked Andy Ibáñez, making it 5-3. Akil Baddoo knocked in the tying run for Detroit with an RBI double in the sixth. Jason Foley pitched a scoreless seventh for the win and Alex Lange struck out two in the ninth for his seventh save. He worked around two walks, whiffing Teoscar Hernández with two on to end it. Astros 4, White Sox 3 – Diaz homers, Astros hold off White Sox 4-3 Yainer Diaz hit his first major league home run to back rookie Hunter Brown and help the Houston Astros beat the Chicago White Sox 4-3 for their fourth win in five games. Yordan Alvarez hit a two-run double in the first, advanced on shortstop Tim Anderson’s throwing error and scored on Kyle Tucker’s sacrifice fly as the Astro built an early lead. Luis Robert Jr. homered for the third consecutive game and Jake Burger also went deep for the White Sox, who have lost four of five and seven of 11. Twins 16, Cubs 3 – Larnach, Gallo help Twins’ offense keep rolling in 16-3 win over Cubs Trevor Larnach hit a three-run homer, Joey Gallo homered for the second straight game and Louie Varland pitched 6 1/3 solid innings for the Minnesota Twins in a 16-3 win against the Chicago Cubs. Varland earned his second career win in his ninth major league start for Minnesota, which won its second consecutive series. Larnach, in his second game since being recalled from Triple-A to replace injured Max Kepler, hit his fourth homer of the season as part of a seven-run third inning that chased Cubs starter Marcus Stroman. Tonight Chicago Cubs (Taillon 0-2) at Houston (Valdez 3-4), 8:10 p.m. Tigers and White Sox are off MLB – Rockies’ Feltner released from hospital after line drive Colorado pitcher Ryan Feltner has a skull fracture and concussion after getting hit by a line drive off the bat of Philadelphia’s Nick Castellanos. Feltner was injured Saturday night and was discharged from Swedish Medical Center on Sunday. He will not need surgery. Feltner was put on the 15-day injured list. When asked whether the 26-year-old right-hander will be out for days, weeks or months, Black said “probably on the longer end of that.” NHL – National Hockey League – 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Vegas Golden Knights 5, Edmonton Oilers 2 (VGK wins 4-2) Golden Knights 5, Oilers 2 – Jonathan Marchessault scores 3 to lead Golden Knights to West final Jonathan Marchessault scored three goals for his second career postseason hat trick as the Vegas Golden Knights beat the Edmonton Oilers 5-2 in Game 6 of their second-round series to advance to the Western Conference final. Reilly Smith and William Karlsson also scored for the Golden Knights, and Ivan Barbashev had two assists. Adin Hill finished with 39 saves. Connor McDavid and Warren Foegele scored early in the first period for Edmonton, which led 2-1 less than three minutes into the game. Stuart Skinner gave up four goals on 17 shots through two periods, and Jack Campbell stopped all four shots he faced in the third. Vegas will next face the winner of the series between Dallas and Seattle, which heads to a Game 7 on Monday night. Tonight Seattle Kraken at Dallas Stars, 8:00 p.m. (Series tied 3-3) NBA – National Basketball Association Playoffs – Round 2 (Best of 7) Last Night Boston Celtics 112, Philadelphia 76ers 88 (BOS wins 4-3) Celtics 112, Sixers 88 – Tatum sets Game 7 record with 51 points, Celtics beat 76ers 112-88 Jayson Tatum scored 51 points with 13 rebounds and the Boston Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers 112-88 to advance to the Eastern Conference finals for the second straight year. Tatum’s total is the most in a Game 7 in NBA history. Tatum had a slow start in the past two games but he scored 25 in the back-and-forth first half and 17 more in Boston’s 33-10 third quarter that turned a three-point lead into a runaway. The Celtics will face the Miami Heat in the Eastern Conference finals. They begin on Wednesday in Boston. Tonight No games tonight Tuesday Western Conference Finals Los Angeles Lakers at Denver Nuggets, 8:30 p.m. (Game 1) NBA – Grizzlies suspend Ja Morant after another gun video appears on social media Memphis guard Ja Morant has been suspended by the Grizzlies after another social media video in which he appears to be holding a gun. The NBA is looking into the matter. The Grizzlies say Morant is suspended from all team activities “pending league review.” The video shows Morant in the front seat of a vehicle, appearing to hold the gun while someone filmed him and broadcast it live over Instagram. Morant was suspended by the NBA for eight games this season after the All-Star guard was seen on video holding a gun at a club in the Denver suburbs. The league said the March suspension was for “conduct detrimental to the league.” NASCAR – Byron wins Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway after Chastain wreck William Byron avoided a wreck between Ross Chastain and Kyle Larson on a restart six laps from the end and held on to win the Goodyear 400 in overtime at Darlington Raceway. Byron was pushed out of the lead by eventual winner Joey Logano two laps from the end here a year ago. This time, Byron watched as Chastain and Larson collided, then drove away from Kevin Harvick for his third win this year and the seventh of his career. It was the 100th win for the No. 24 car of Hendrick Motorsports. Golf – PGA – Jason Day gets 1st win in 5 years at Byron Nelson; Scheffler finishes 3 back Jason Day has his first PGA Tour victory in five years at the Byron Nelson. The Australian shot a 9-under 62 for a one-shot victory over Austin Eckroat and Si Woo Kim. Hometown favorite Scottie Scheffler finished three shots back. Day broke a tie with Scheffler with a chip-in birdie at the par-4 12th. Day finished at 23 under playing on Mother’s Day a little more than a year after losing his mom to cancer. Day’s win came the week before the PGA Championship. The only major among the 35-year-old’s 13 victories was the 2015 PGA. Golf – LPGA – Ko wins Founders Cup for 3rd time in 5 years, beating Minjee Lee in playoff Jin Young Ko overcame a four-shot deficit to win the Founders Cup for the third time in five years, getting the victory on the first playoff hole when defending champion Minjee Lee three-putted for bogey. In winning for the 15th time on the LPGA Tour and the second time this year, Ko shot a final-round best 5-under 67 in tough, windy conditions. The 27-year-old South Korean forced the playoff making a clutch downhill birdie from roughly 15 feet on No. 18 to tie for the lead. Ko joins Lilia Vu as the only players with multiple wins on tour this year. Horse Racing – Horse dies at Churchill Downs, 8th recent fatality at home of Debry A horse has died after a race at Churchill Downs, making it the eighth fatality in recent weeks at the home of the Kentucky Derby. Rio Moon died after the sixth race. According to Equibase chart notes on the race, the 3-year-old colt “suffered a catastrophic injury to his left foreleg a few strides after the wire.” The notes say Rio Moon was euthanized. The colt was trained by Dale Romans and was winless in six career starts with earnings of $11,621. Two horses were euthanized after being injured in races on the Kentucky Derby undercard on May 6. Five others were euthanized after training and racing incidents at the track in the days leading up to the Derby. MWL – Midwest League Baseball Last Night West Michigan Whitecaps 6, Lansing Lugnuts 2 Lake County Captains 3, Great Lakes Loons 2 South Bend Cubs 2, Wisconsin Timber Rattlers 1 – F/11 Tonight No games tonight MHSAA – High School Sports Today Baseball Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:30 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Martin, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Lansing Everett at Kal. Loy Norrix, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Softball Lakeshore at Niles, 4:00 p.m. Michigan Lutheran at Benton Harbor, 4:00 p.m. Constantine at Berrien Springs, 4:15 p.m. Kalamazoo Central at Watervliet, 4:00 p.m. Fennville at Allegan, 4:30 p.m. Saugatuck at Delton-Kellogg, 4:30 p.m. Schoolcraft at Lawton, 4:30 p.m. Gobles at Decatur, 4:30 p.m. Bangor at Bloomingdale, 4:30 p.m. Mendon at Centreville, 4:30 p.m. Cassopolis at Hartford, 4:30 p.m. Lawrence at White Pigeon, 4:30 p.m. Battle Creek Central at Mattawan, 4:00 p.m. Portage Northern at Three Rivers, 4:00 p.m. Girls Soccer SMAC Tournament – Gold Division – 1st round 4 Lakeshore at 1 Mattawan, 6:30 p.m. 3 Gull Lake at 2 Portage Central, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Silver Division – 1st round 8 Portage Northern at 5 St. Joseph, 7:00 p.m. 7 BC Lakeview at 6 Loy Norrix, 6:30 p.m. SMAC Tournament – Bronze Division 10 BC Central at 9 Kal. Central, 6:30 p.m. Wolverine Vicksburg at Edwardsburg, 6:30 p.m. Otsego at Paw Paw, 6:30 p.m. Niles at Plainwell, 6:30 p.m. Sturgis at Three Rivers, 6:00 p.m. BCS New Buffalo at Michigan Lutheran, 5:00 p.m. Non-Conference Constantine at Dowagiac, 5:00 p.m. SAC Schoolcraft at Bridgman, 5:00 p.m. Fennville at Delton-Kellogg, 6:00 p.m. Allegan at Holland Black River, 5:30 p.m. Watervliet at Kalamazoo Christian, 5:00 p.m. Lawton at Saugatuck, 6:00 p.m. Southwest 10 Bloomingdale at Hartford, 5:00 p.m. Bangor at Marcellus, 5:30 p.m. Girls Tennis Lakeshore at Edwardsburg, 3:00 p.m.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Contributors: Andrew White MD & Travis Barlock MD In this episode of Mental Health Monthly, Dr. Andrew White, a practicing psychiatrist with an addiction medicine fellowship, and Dr. Travis Barlock, an emergency physician at Swedish Medical Center, discuss the various presentations and etiologies of acute psychosis. They explore the medical presentations compared with primary psychiatric manifestations and how to narrow the differential. Furthermore, Dr. Barlock discusses the management of psychotic patients from the ED perspective while Dr. White provides invaluable insight into their respective psychiatric care. Educational Pearls: Auditory hallucinations are more consistent with primary psychiatric psychosis, whereas visual hallucinations are indicative of drug-induced or withdrawal psychosis. Negative symptoms in schizophrenia can be remembered by the four A's: Alogia, Affect, Ambivalence, and Associations. Typical primary psychosis presents before age 40, except for in perimenopausal and post-partum women, who are at higher risk of psychiatric psychosis. Medical etiology clues: acute and rapid onset, focal neurologic deficits, abnormal vital signs (especially fever), drugs, endocrine sources, autoimmune diseases, infectious disease, and brain lesions. To LP or not to LP? Dr. Barlock discusses indications for LP including fever, rapid onset, and change in level of consciousness. Summarized by Jorge Chait, OMSI | Edited by Jorge Chalit, OMSI | Studio production by Jeffrey Olson
In this episode, we've convened a panel of three physicians to open a window on a day in the life of a Direct Primary Care practice. And while it's true that if you've seen one Direct Primary Care practice, you've seen one Direct Primary Care practice, our panelists show us how they made the leap, grew their practices, and made it all work. Each panelist shares how they crafted their DPC practices, with stories and perspectives on what it means to provide patient care in this model, while embracing the challenges of being a business owner. Our panelists: Erika Bliss, MD Marguerite Duane, MD, MHA, FAAFPByron Jasper, MD, MPH Hosted by Saria Saccocio, MD.Copyright © Society of Teachers of Family Medicine, 2023Resources:Why the Direct Primary Care Model Would Benefit Poor Patients (Part 1 of 2)Why the Direct Primary Care Model Would Benefit Poor Patients (Part 2 of 2) AAFP Direct Primary CareAAFP Direct Primary Care Toolkit: DPC OverviewDefining the Place of Direct Primary Care in a Value-Based Care SystemGuest Bios:Erika Bliss, MD:Dr. Erika Bliss is a family physician and former CEO of Qliance, a direct primary care company that operated in the Puget Sound for 10 years with several clinics serving individuals, employers, and Medicaid. She is currently in solo practice in Seattle in the DPC model. Dr. Bliss has been active in the DPC movement since its inception and has been involved in local and national education and advocacy on the model. She currently has a solo DPC practice in Seattle called Equinox Primary Care.Dr. Bliss received her medical education at University of California at San Diego and completed her residency training at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. She has served in state and national medical leadership roles including the Washington Academy of Family Medicine, The American Academy of Family Medicine, The American Board of Family Medicine, and the Direct Primary Care Coalition. Prior to studying medicine, Dr. Bliss studied Latin American History at San Francisco State University and received a Master's in Latin American Studies at Stanford University. Marguerite Duane, MD, MHA, FAAFP:Dr. Marguerite Duane, a board-certified family physician, currently cares for patients in the DC metropolitan area via a direct primary care house-calls based practice, MD for Life. While she provides the full range of services to patients of all ages, she has additional expertise in restorative reproductive medicine and focuses her practice on females from adolescence through menopause. Dr. Duane is also co-founder and Executive Director of FACTS about Fertility, an organization dedicated to educating medical professionals and students about the scientific evidence supporting fertility awareness-based methods (FABMs). She serves as an Adjunct Associate Professor at Duquesne University and Georgetown University, where she directs an elective on FABMs and their role in women's health and family planning. Additionally, she has served on the board of the American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) and the Family Medicine Education Consortium (FMEC). Dr. Duane received her M.D. degree from the State University of New York at Stony Brook and completed her Family Medicine residency at L
There's no paucity of studies for biologic therapies used to treat psoriatic disease, but the number of head-to-head trials comparing these agents is limited. Enter network meta-analysis, a statistical methodology that has emerged over the past few years to compare medication. Philip Mease, MD, a clinical professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine and director of rheumatology research at the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, and Dr. Wolf-Henning Boehncke, chair of the division of dermatology and venereology at Geneva University Hospitals, Switzerland, and full professor at the Department of Pathology and Immunology at Geneva University, discuss the use of network meta-analyses and potential pitfalls in choosing biologic therapies for patients with psoriasis and psoriatic arthritis in this episode of Practical Dermatology: The Podcast.
In the late 90s, the little town of Tulia, Texas, was up to its ass in drugs. At least, that's what the local sheriff thought. So he hired a guy named Tom Coleman to work as an undercover narcotics agent. What Tom discovered was truly unbelievable. As it turned out, the little town of approximately 5,000 people was home to *at least* 46 drug dealers. On top of that, the drug dealers in this economically depressed community dealt oodles of powder cocaine! Oh, and guess what?? Even though Tulia had a pretty small Black community, almost every single drug dealer that Tom encountered was Black! What are the odds??? Thanks to Tom's undercover work, authorities arrested 46 people on drug charges. But Tom hadn't worn a wire during these drug buys. Nothing was videoed or photographed. He hadn't even worked alongside another undercover agent. Hell, he hadn't even written his notes on a notepad. He'd written every pertinent detail about those drug deals on his leg. Then Brandi tells us about the murder of Ingrid Lyne. Indrid was a newly divorced, busy mom. She shared three daughters with her ex-husband, Phillip, and she worked as a nurse at Seattle's Swedish Medical Center. She'd just recently begun online dating. Through an app, she met John Charlton. John seemed like a nice enough guy, so Ingrid went out with him a few times. But on the morning after Ingrid went to a Seattle Mariners game with John, her friends and family couldn't get a hold of her. And now for a note about our process. For each episode, Kristin reads a bunch of articles, then spits them back out in her very limited vocabulary. Brandi copies and pastes from the best sources on the web. And sometimes Wikipedia. (No shade, Wikipedia. We love you.) We owe a huge debt of gratitude to the real experts who covered these cases. In this episode, Kristin pulled from: “Tulia drug bust of 1999,” by Alex Hunt for the Texas State Historical Association “The color of justice,” by Nate Blakeslee for the Texas Observer “Tulia Texas: Scenes from the drug war,” documentary “Racist arrests in Tulia, Texas,” ACLU.org “Tulia 46: Impacts 20 years later,” by Mari Salazar for Everything Lubbock.com “Prosecutor in Tulia case says he'll show Coleman lied,” Associated Press, Jan 12 2005 “Former Tulia drug agent guilty of one perjury count,” Associated Press, Jan 15 2005 “Tulia saga still a wound unhealed for some,” Associated Press, July 22, 2009 Crime stories episode, “Miscarriage of justice in Tulia Texas,” “Tulia,Texas” ABC News 20/20 video on YouTube 60 Minutes clips on YouTube In this episode, Brandi pulled from: “Ingrid Lyne” chillingcrimes.com “The Murder of Ingrid Lyne” by Kylie, It's Crime O Clock Somewhere “Date With The Devil” episode Sex and Murder “Man Who Found Dismembered Remains of Wash. Mom in Trash Can Recounts Horrific Discovery” by Harriet Sokmensuer, People “Man pleads guilty to killing, dismembering Renton mother of 3” by Steve Miletich, The Seattle Times “Grisly details revealed in murder of Renton mom; suspect claimed he was too drunk to remember, prosecutors say” by Brandi Kruse, Janet Kim, Hana Kim, and Steve Kiggins, Fox13 News “'When he walks, Ingrid won't': Man sentenced for dismembering Renton nurse” by Lynsi Burton, SeattlePI.com YOU'RE STILL READING? My, my, my, you skeezy scunch! You must be hungry for more! We'd offer you some sausage brunch, but that gets messy. So how about you head over to our Patreon instead? (patreon.com/lgtcpodcast). At the $5 level, you'll get 40+ full length bonus episodes, plus access to our 90's style chat room!
The stereotype stepparents we saw in the movies growing up are outdated.The stereotype stepparents we saw in the movies growing up are outdated. Step-parents of all genders, blended families, co-parenting, and more are becoming more the norm.Elizabeth Meade is a pediatric hospitalist, the Medical Director of Patient Safety for Pediatrics at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, and a step-parent herself!She joins Melanie Cole in this encore episode from August 2020 to talk about the journey of introducing a new parent figure to children, how and when to discipline as a step-parent, and tips to settle disputes.
The stereotype stepparents we saw in the movies growing up are outdated.The stereotype stepparents we saw in the movies growing up are outdated. Step-parents of all genders, blended families, co-parenting, and more are becoming more the norm.Elizabeth Meade is a pediatric hospitalist, the Medical Director of Patient Safety for Pediatrics at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, and a step-parent herself!She joins Melanie Cole in this encore episode from August 2020 to talk about the journey of introducing a new parent figure to children, how and when to discipline as a step-parent, and tips to settle disputes.
The script has been flipped! Dr. Dave Gordon interviews me about my medical school experiences and the journey ahead into family medicine residency at Swedish Medical Center in Colorado and beyond! Check out Dr. Gordon at https://4pillarsdenver.com/ Enjoy the show. Subscribe if you haven't already! Check out past episodes and don't forget to share it with a friend. Give it a rating and a review!
MedAxiom HeartTalk: Transforming Cardiovascular Care Together
On MedAxiom HeartTalk, we are diving deeper with part two on the PEARLS Paper - a blueprint structural heart programs can use to optimize care. Host, Melanie Lawson, speaks with Elizabeth Perpetua, DNP, ACNP-BC, FACC, Patricia Keegan, DNP, NP-C, AACC, Roseanne Palmer, MSN, RN, and Susan Schnell, MSN, ACNP-BC, all co-authors of the paper. They share how their geographical challenges influenced their perspectives writing the paper and discuss practical steps that organizations can take now, to implement guidelines and care pathways for future crises.Guest Bios: Elizabeth Perpetua, DNP, ACNP-BC, FACC: Founder of Empath Health Services and faculty at University of Washington in Seattle – Dr. Perpetua led the efforts and development of the PEARLS paper and the first published study describing the Structural Heart Coordinator role and Coordination in the U.S. She is a Doctor of Nursing Practice with 15 years of experience in structural heart program development and research. She was the Director of the structural heart programs at Swedish Medical Center and University of Washington before starting her work in consulting and education. Dr. Perpetua has trained thousands of nurses, physicians, and administrators in structural heart disease. Patricia Keegan, DNP, NP-C, AACC: the original coordinator and nurse practitioner at Emory Healthcare with the PARTNER trial, now the Director of Strategic and Programmatic Initiatives across all of Emory Heart and Vascular (system-wide). Many areas of expertise including but not limited to structural heart, congenital heart disease, nurse-led sedation, minimalist approach, same day discharge, program efficiencies, quality improvement, and clinical program development. Roseanne Palmer, MSN, RN: the original coordinator and nurse leader at Dartmouth Hitchcock with the PARTNER trial, now the Program Manager for Structural Heart. Many areas of expertise including but not limited to structural heart, shared decision making, patient stated goals, crisis management including work with the Red Cross, clinical program development. Susan Schnell, MSN, ACNP-BC: the original coordinator and nurse practitioner at Columbia University Irving Medical Center at the time when TAVR was in the first-in-man experience in 2007 (REVIVAL trial, preceded the PARTNER trial). Sue is currently the Chief Operating Officer for Columbia HeartSource. Many areas of expertise including but not limited to structural heart and interventional cardiology, system wide healthcare quality improvement and change management, clinical program development. Bonus Links:PEARLS Paper - Elsevier: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2474870622008089 PEARLS Paper Video Extras - TCT: https://www.tctmd.com/PEARLShttps://www.tctmd.com/videos/pearls-the-heart-team-in-action.6270320173001
If you've struggled to maintain your passion and excitement for teaching, and particularly if you've struggled with imposter syndrome this episode is for you. We talk candidly about how Natalie: Found her tribe Realized what her product is (it's not Pilates) Discovered what it means to her to teach well Natalie is a breast cancer survivor and is currently using Pilates to rehabilitate after a double mastectomy. We discuss her rehab journey so far and what she's learning. -------------------------------- About Natalie Wilson: Born and raised in Hawaii, Natalie's foundation in movement comes from years of training in the native dances of Hawaii and Tahiti. After college, Natalie pursued a career in social work and mental health. She discovered Pilates after the birth of her second child and loved how the practice gave her renewed strength, energy, and focus. Desiring a career shift, Natalie enrolled in a comprehensive Pilates training program, graduating in early 2017. In addition, Natalie received her National Pilates Certification in 2020 and her Pilates Certification from Breathe Education in February 2022. She currently teaches at Vitality Pilates as well as the Multiple Sclerosis Center at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, Washington, where she lives with her husband, two kids, and too many houseplants. How to Connect with Natalie:Find Natalie on https://www.instagram.com/nataliewilsonpilates/ (Instagram) About Raphael Bender: Raph believes everyone deserves the opportunity to transform into a better version of themselves. His main strength as a teacher and movement professional is the ability to distill complex research findings into a simple, science-based approach to help people move fearlessly, thoughtlessly, and painlessly. He LOVES running, weights, cycling, and Contrology. Raph holds a Master's degree in Clinical Exercise Physiology (Rehabilitation), a Bachelor's degree in Exercise and Sports Science, Diploma of Pilates Movement Therapy, and STOTT PILATES full certification. How to Connect with Raphael: Find Breathe Education on https://www.instagram.com/breathe.education/ (Instagram), https://www.facebook.com/BreatheEducation (Facebook), https://www.linkedin.com/company/breathe-education (LinkedIn), https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLJEGo7eoFSQ6K7Zb7P5u6A (Youtube), and https://twitter.com/BreatheEdu (Twitter) Find Raphael Bender on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/the_raphaelbender/?hl=en (@the_raphaelbender) Purchase Raph's new book: Strengthen The Person Not Just The Body Part http://strengthentheperson.com/book (here) Ways to engage with us for FREE: Join ourhttps://breathe-education.com/pilates_elephants-register/ ( FREE Live Community Session) Get our free ebook onhttps://breathe-education.com/posture/ ( Posture Myths in Pilates) https://breatheeducation.as.me/raphael (Book a time to talk with Raph) to share your story Have Questions? https://breathe-education.com/coachingcall (Book a time to talk with our team) DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast is not intended to constitute or be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified healthcare providers with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast. This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: AdBarker - https://adbarker.com/privacy
This week, CancerNetwork® spoke with Christine Chung, DO, of the Swedish Medical Center, Englewood, Colorado, about “Characterization of Blood-Based Molecular Profiling in Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma,” a retrospective review published in the journal ONCOLOGY. Chung detailed this research, which characterizes the mutational landscape of patients with metastatic pancreatic adenocarcinoma who received blood-based molecular profiling. A total of 77 consecutive patients were included in the analysis. Chung also spoke about pancreatic adenocarcinoma, the study's main findings, and how this research can inform future treatment decision-making processes moving forward. Don't forget to subscribe to the “Oncology Peer Review On-The-Go” podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or anywhere podcasts are available.
Direct Primary Care! Dr. Brie Seefeldt is an awesome guest on the podcast. She talks about how she got out of the world of corporate medicine to start her own small, independent practice that functions as direct primary care (DPC), circumventing insurance and giving her patients quality time and quality care. She talks about the details regarding DPC and how it functions. We hit on other topics such as osteopathy in general, and how she uses OMT. Funny enough, she trained in family medicine at the very program that I will train at! Shout out to Swedish Medical Center. So that's very fun. Check out her website for Direct Osteopathic Primary Care: https://www.mydenverdo.com/ Reach out to her and tell her you heard her on the Primary Care Podcast! Leave a rating and a review! Thanks!
In this podcast episode, host Dr. Steven H. Linder talks with three other expert physicians who are leaders in the fight against the opioid epidemic: Dr. Casey Grover, Dr. Don Stader, and Dr. Scott Weiner. The panel explores the power of naloxone, the emergency intervention that has saved countless people after accidental overdose with fentanyl, the illicit drug now appearing in pill form and in illegal drugs of all kinds. The physicians give a moving inside look at the actual situation on the front lines, as healthcare professionals and communities join forces to save their loved ones. With opioid-related deaths at an all-time high in 2022, the panelists explore how we can make a difference, whether by carrying naloxone personally, raising awareness of fentanyl's dangers, or advocating for much-needed investment in addiction medicine. The podcast begins with a 4 minute introduction and background to the subject, followed by the panel discussion at 4:00. Featuring: Steven H. Linder, MD, FCCP, American Board of Internal Medicine, American Board of Pulmonary Medicine, Staff Physician, VA Medical Center Palo Alto, California Casey Grover, MD, FACEP, Chair of the Division of Emergency Medicine, Community Hospital of the Monterey Peninsula and Physician Champion of the Monterey County Prescribe Safe Initiative. Don Stader, MD, FACEP, Founder & President, Stader Opioid Consultants and Chair of the Colorado Naloxone Project. Physician, Swedish Medical Center and Lincoln Health in Colorado. Scott Weiner, MD, MPH, Director, Brigham Comprehensive Opioid Response and Education Program, Brigham Women's Hospital
Olga and her husband were having the vacation of a lifetime. They hooked up a teardrop trailer to their Subaru in NJ and headed out west. The planned to explore the gorgeous landscapes of the Washington State parks before jumping on ferry to Alaska. On July 19, 2021, at a campground in Deception Pass State Park on the Washington State Peninsula, things started to unravel. Olga had a brain stem stroke. She felt tingling up and down one side of her body and could not stop vomiting. She felt it was a stroke. Her husband called 911 and they made it out of the woods to a fire house. The EMT said she wasn't having a stroke. The ambulance that arrived said she wasn't having a stroke. The ER staff said she wasn't having a stroke. The neurologist said she probable wasn't having a stroke and specifically discouraged the tPA that could have solved the problem And no one sent her to the more advanced hospitals in Seattle for stroke treatment. The window for tPA came and went. This whole time, Olga was having a stroke. Olga shares her story in this conversation. If you don't see the audio player below, visit http://Strokecast.com/Olga Click here for a machine-generated transcript. Who is Olga Wright? Olga is a married mother, grandmother, and recently retired educator. She lives in central New Jersey, where she practices extreme gardening. She and her husband recently returned from a six-month, 24,000-mile road trip to Alaska and back, with their ultra-light, solar-powered camper. Her goal is to educate the public and medical professionals at all levels to recognize nausea, vomiting, and tingling as stroke symptoms so that no one else is misdiagnosed as she was. Olga can be reached at olgawrightstrokestory@gmail.com Deception Pass Deception Pass State Park is a gorgeous corner of the state. It's filled with hiking trails (including accessible trails), lakes, salt water shoreline, and campgrounds. It's also just an amazingly beautiful part of the state. It seems remote but it's also within just a couple hours of Seattle to the Southeast and 90 minutes from Canada to the north. It's easy to see why Olga and her husband chose to camp there. Zofran and the Brain Zofran is a medication I was not familiar with, and it's what finally got Olga's vomiting under control. It's typically used to help treat nausea associated with chemotherapy. In Olga's case, it was used to treat a malfunctioning brain that was sending the signal of, "OKAY! Everyone out the way you came in!" even though there was nothing left. The brain tries to protect us in lots of ways. Sometimes those threats are real and sometimes they are not. In Olga's case, her dying brain stem knew something was wrong but didn't know what. It went to an early reflex for poison and just kept trying the expulsion solution because it didn't know what else to do. Meanwhile, Olga's higher level brain functions were still working and trying to seek medical treatment for the stroke. And this conflict is an illustration that the brain is not one, cohesive unit. It's different parts grabbing different pieces of data and attempting to execute a solution based on the tools at its disposal. The brain does not always work as a single unit. But back to Zofran. One of the interesting things I learned while reading about it is that Serotonin, one of the brain's "happy" chemicals is also responsible for the vomiting function/command. Zofran works by suppressing Serotonin. And that makes me wonder how its use as an antiemetic impacts things like depression. I suppose that will be a future research project. Swedish ARU The reason Olga and I connected is that she spent her inpatient rehab time at Swedish Medical Center. It's the same place I lived for the month following my stroke. You can learn more about the Acute Rehab Unit here. Olga was lucky enough to work with OT Emilee who told her about the Strokecast. Emilee was also one of my OTs 4 years before Olga made it there. I interviewed Emilee in episode 20. You can hear that conversation here: http://Strokecast.com/Emilee I've stayed engaged with members of my rehab team over the years. I've also met other folks on the stroke team at Swedish. Here are some other interviews I've done with the team at Swedish: http://strokecast.com/Swedish Licensing for PT and OT The pandemic has brought a dramatic increase in the availability of telemedicine. This is great because a lot of follow up appointments really don't need to be in person. I'd much rather do a 15 minute video appointment versus a 15 minute in person appointment I have to travel to and back from. In Olga's case, it almost worked out for Outpatient PT. She would be able to continue her travels after leaving the hospital and get therapy on the road via the internet! It's a great idea, but it didn't work. Not because of technology or willingness, but because of state level bureaucracy. A Washington licensed physical therapist cannot legally treat a patient who happens to be in Alaska or whatever other state Olga happened to be travelling through. Hack of the week Walking is one of the best ways to drive recovery. At certain points, walking 100 feet may be the most you can do. At other points, a mile or two may be achievable. Regardless of the distance, walking as much as you can helps to drive recovery. The most important thing, though, is to do it safely. Olga uses traction cleats for all her hiking activities. Traction cleats are basically snow chains for your feet. Even if there's no snow, they help traverse the wilds with less slipping and falling. You can find an assortment on Amazon here: https://strokecast.com/Hack/TractionCleats *. A walker or cane can be great in a city environment, but they are less usable on the trail. What is usable whether hiking in Alaska or going down to the corner bodega is a pair of trekking poles. These are much taller than a cane. As you use them they give many folks plenty of stability and an upper body work out. You can find them on Amazon at http://strokecast./com/Hack/TrekkingPoles *. Links Where do we go from here? Connect with Olga via email at OlgaWrightstrokestory@Gmail.com Share this episode with the road trip lover or medical professional in your life by giving them the link http://Strokecast.com/Olga Subscribe to the free Strokecast newsletter for more updates at http://Strokecast.com/News Don't get best…get better.
MedAxiom HeartTalk: Transforming Cardiovascular Care Together
Do you have a reliable roadmap for optimizing care during a crisis? On MedAxiom HeartTalk, host Melanie Lawson speaks with guests Elizabeth Perpetua, DNP, ACNP-BC, FACC, Kimberly Guibone, DNP, ACNP-BC, FACC, Martina Kelly Speight, MSN, FNP-BC, and Joan Michaels, RN, MSN, CPHQ. They share insights from their PEARLS paper – a blueprint for structural heart programs to optimize care and improve outcomes while facing profound obstacles.Guest Bios:Elizabeth Perpetua, DNP, ACNP-BC, FACC: Founder of Empath Health Services and faculty at University of Washington in Seattle – Dr. Perpetua led the efforts and development of the PEARLS paper and the first published study describing the Structural Heart Coordinator role and Coordination in the U.S. She is a Doctor of Nursing Practice with 15 years of experience in structural heart program development and research. She was the Director of the structural heart programs at Swedish Medical Center and University of Washington before starting her work in consulting and education. Dr. Perpetua has trained thousands of nurses, physicians, and administrators in structural heart disease.Kimberly Guibone, DNP, ACNP-BC, FACC: Structural Heart Clinical Program Manager at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. Dr. Guibone brings extensive experience as a Doctor of Nursing Practice and the first valve coordinator of her structural heart program. She has contributed to multiple research papers helping to define the role of the valve center coordinator.Martina Kelly Speight, MSN, FNP-BC: Board-certified Nurse Practitioner in the Structural Heart Program at Stanford Health Care in California. Martina established her role on the Stanford multidisciplinary heart team in 2008 where she coordinated research efforts and greatly contributed to program development. In her role as Nurse Practitioner, Martina Speight has become a clinical expert in the care and management of patients undergoing treatment for Valvular Heart Disease. She is passionate about leading efforts that improve program outcomes, efficiencies, and patient experiences. Martina has contributed to multiple publications and speaks nationally about Heart Valve Disease and Structural Heart Program development.Joan Michaels, RN, MSN, CPHQ: Director of Cardiac Registries for the American College of Cardiology in D.C. Joan brings more than 30 years of experience in cardiology as a registered nurse and expertise overseeing the STS/ACC TVT Registry.
Unfortunately, the mental health stigma and shame continue to permeate our communities and families across the country. Join us as Sister Jenna welcomes mental health professional, Josh Cutler MSW, LICSW to The Next Normal. Josh is a regular contributor to the national conversation about mental health. He is passionate about sharing his own struggles with diagnosis of, and recovery from a serious mental illness, in the hopes that this vulnerability will lead others to seek help. Josh is an experienced psychotherapist, clinical social worker and people leader. His work focuses on improving access to mental health services. He works in private practice and is formerly a behavioral health leader for Providence, one of the largest health systems in the United States. He is on the medical staff at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. In addition to that, and where he is particularly unique, Josh has written a new book titled, The Day Hospital, which takes an honest look at his own mental health journey, including a suicide attempt, and struggle to be a "normal person," while helping others to do the same. Visit https://www.joshcutler.net. Check out Sister Jenna's new book, Meditation: Intimate Experiences with the Divine through Contemplative Practices. Listen to the Om Shanti album by Sister Jenna on Spotify. Visit www.americameditating.org and if you like this show, please subscribe and leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts, so other people can find us.
Unfortunately, the mental health stigma and shame continue to permeate our communities and families across the country. Join us as Sister Jenna welcomes mental health professional, Josh Cutler MSW, LICSW to The Next Normal. Josh is a regular contributor to the national conversation about mental health. He is passionate about sharing his own struggles with diagnosis of, and recovery from a serious mental illness, in the hopes that this vulnerability will lead others to seek help. Josh is an experienced psychotherapist, clinical social worker and people leader. His work focuses on improving access to mental health services. He works in private practice and is formerly a behavioral health leader for Providence, one of the largest health systems in the United States. He is on the medical staff at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. In addition to that, and where he is particularly unique, Josh has written a new book titled, The Day Hospital, which takes an honest look at his own mental health journey, including a suicide attempt, and struggle to be a "normal person," while helping others to do the same. Visit https://www.joshcutler.net. Check out Sister Jenna's new book, Meditation: Intimate Experiences with the Divine through Contemplative Practices. Listen to the Om Shanti album by Sister Jenna on Spotify. Visit www.americameditating.org and if you like this show, please subscribe and leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts, so other people can find us.
Unfortunately, the mental health stigma and shame continue to permeate our communities and families across the country. Join us as Sister Jenna welcomes mental health professional, Josh Cutler MSW, LICSW to The Next Normal. Josh is a regular contributor to the national conversation about mental health. He is passionate about sharing his own struggles with diagnosis of, and recovery from a serious mental illness, in the hopes that this vulnerability will lead others to seek help. Josh is an experienced psychotherapist, clinical social worker and people leader. His work focuses on improving access to mental health services. He works in private practice and is formerly a behavioral health leader for Providence, one of the largest health systems in the United States. He is on the medical staff at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle. In addition to that, and where he is particularly unique, Josh has written a new book titled, The Day Hospital, which takes an honest look at his own mental health journey, including a suicide attempt, and struggle to be a "normal person," while helping others to do the same. Visit https://www.joshcutler.net. Check out Sister Jenna's new book, Meditation: Intimate Experiences with the Divine through Contemplative Practices. Listen to the Om Shanti album by Sister Jenna on Spotify. Visit www.americameditating.org and if you like this show, please subscribe and leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts, so other people can find us.
Nearly two years into this pandemic, doctors still don't know much about why some people develop long lasting COVID symptoms and why others don't. But, a study published last week by the scientific journal Cell, found several factors that were identified early in a person's coronavirus infection that could show increased risk of developing long-term symptoms. Some studies show that as many as half of COVID-19 survivors experience some sort of lingering symptoms, these patients are known as “Covid long-haulers.” We heard from listeners about their long-term Covid symptoms and from one of the leaders of a Covid long hauler group. We also spoke with Dr. Jason Goldman, infectious disease clinician and researcher at the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, Washington and lead clinical author of this study on long-Covid.
Nearly two years into this pandemic, doctors still don't know much about why some people develop long lasting COVID symptoms and why others don't. But, a study published last week by the scientific journal Cell, found several factors that were identified early in a person's coronavirus infection that could show increased risk of developing long-term symptoms. Some studies show that as many as half of COVID-19 survivors experience some sort of lingering symptoms, these patients are known as “Covid long-haulers.” We heard from listeners about their long-term Covid symptoms and from one of the leaders of a Covid long hauler group. We also spoke with Dr. Jason Goldman, infectious disease clinician and researcher at the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, Washington and lead clinical author of this study on long-Covid.
Much of what is thought about hormone replacement therapy is outdated and untrue. We do a deep dive into what is HRT, what are the benefits, and who should and should not be taking it. What happens during a women's hormone journey from childhood to post-menopausal? How are hormones and a woman's brain connected? What happens in a women's body during menopause? What is hormone replacement therapy? Does HRT increase the risk of breast cancer? What is the relation between hormones and the cardiovascular system? How does menopause impact sleep? Dr. Rebecca Dunsmoor-Su is the Medical Director of Menopause services at the Women's Wellness and Gyn Specialties Clinic at Swedish Medical Center. She is also the Chief Medical Officer at Gennev. Dr. Dunsmoor-Su joins us on the SuperAge podcast for an information-dense episode all about menopause. She explains what happens leading up to and during menopause, some of the symptoms like weight gain, trouble sleeping, brain fog, and how they are addressed, how we can use hormone replacement therapy to improve symptoms and longevity for women post-menopause, and much more. What you will learn in this episode:What a woman's body goes through in terms of hormones from childhood all the way through post-menopause The impact of menopause on the brainEverything we need to know about hormone replacement therapy and some of the myths around itHow menopause impacts sleep and what can help How menopause impacts brain health and the cardiovascular system “Estrogen replacement does not cause breast cancer. And I like to shout that from the rooftops. We have many studies that tell us that estrogen replacement does not cause breast cancer.” “Women who start hormone replacement therapy within 5 years of their last period actually reduce their cardiovascular risk. They also slightly reduce their risk of colon cancer and they reduce their all cause mortality overtime.” “When women are transitioning through menopause, we're talking about 5-10 years of disrupted sleep. That's a lot of impact to the brain.” “Menopause is fine and functional if you're going to live to be 65. You've got 10 years to survive menopause, you're going to be okay. We live to 95, 100, 105! That's a long time, that's almost half your life without the hormones that sort of keep things going. So I think that we need to adjust.” Listen to the SuperAge podcast wherever you get your pods. Connect with Dr. Rebecca Dunsmoor-Su: https://swedishfoundation.org/frontline-Dunsmoor-Su LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rebecca-dunsmoor-su-92a4997b/ Check out the app, CBT-i Coach, that Dr. Dunsmoor-Su recommends for at home Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for insomnia: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/cbt-i-coach/id655918660
In this podcast, we are back again with host, Jordan Ourada, and neurosurgeon, Dr. Eddie Tsvankin as they discuss an exciting and mind-blowing array of topics pertaining to neurosurgery. Listen as Dr. Tsvankin shares his views on not only the history of neurosurgery, but also the medical, surgical, and engineering advancements that are taking place today. You'll also hear Dr. Tsvankin give intriguing details into how neurosurgeries are performed with cutting-edge technology including the exoscopes that are presently utilized at Swedish Medical Center. Finally, Jordan and Dr. Tsvankin delve into predictions for future advancements in neurosurgery and neurooncology, as well as why cancer seems more prevalent today than ever. The Emergency Medical Minute is excited to announce that we are now offering AMA PRA Category 1 credits™ via online course modules. To access these and for more information, visit our website at https://emergencymedicalminute.org/cme-courses/ and create an account. Donate to EMM today! Diversity and Inclusion Award
This episode features a selection of a session from our ASC Virtual Event in August 2021, "ASC Payer Landscape: How To Build ASC Total Joint Programs the Right Way". Tune in and hear from John S Woodward, Jr., MD, Board Certified Orthopaedic Surgeon, Orthopaedic Physicians of Colorado; Chair, Orthopaedic Surgery Section, Swedish Medical Center, Eric Grossman, MD, Orthopedic Surgeon, Rothman Orthopedic Institute and Chris Dougherty, MD, Orthopedic Surgeon, Agility Center Ortthopedics .
Radiology reaches thousands of underserved areas, both at home and abroad, thanks to aid work. Hear personal perspectives of two women who are active in the global health radiology space, how they got started in their work, and some tips on getting involved yourself. Dr. Katrina McGinty is an alumna of New York Medical College and clinical associate professor of radiology at the University of North Carolina. Her research interests include education and quality improvement in radiology. Val Brod completed her ultrasound training at the University of Colorado and is a staff sonographer at Swedish Medical Center in Englewood, Colorado, a level one trauma center. RAD AID International Website: https://rad-aid.org/ at 4:15 meet a special guest: Dr. McGinty's kitten Help Fiona raise funds for Doctors Without Borders at Gaelforce West, her first 70k ultra endurance race, a year after major ortho surgery https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/fiona-c-doolan The 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDG's): https://sdgs.un.org/goals 1. No poverty 2. Zero hunger 3. Good health and wellbeing 4. Quality Education 5. Gender Equality 6. Clean Water and sanitation 7. Affordable and clean energy 8. Decent work and economic growth 9. Industry, innovation and infrastructure 10. Reduced inequalities 11. Sustainable cities and communities 12. Responsible consumption and production 13. Climate action 14. Healthy oceans 15. Healthy land 16. Peace, justice, and strong institutions 17. Partnerships to realise UN goals
Dr. Glenda Quan, trauma surgeon from Swedish Medical Center joins our host Jordan Ourada to review a case of an incorrectly placed IO and how to avoid it. The Emergency Medical Minute is excited to announce that we are now offering AMA PRA Category 1 credits™ via online course modules. To access these and for more information, visit our website at https://emergencymedicalminute.org/cme-courses/ and create an account.
Lead author, Dr. Philip Mease, MD, Director of Rheumatology Research at the Swedish Medical Center/Providence St. Joseph Health and Clinical Professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine, discusses new data from the Phase 3 DISCOVER-1 and DISCOVER-2 studies published in "The Lancet Rheumatology" (July 2021) on the efficacy of guselkumab on axial symptoms in patients with active psoriatic arthritis. Up to 70% of PsA patients experience axial symptoms. #TREMFYA #PsoriaticArthritis Philip J Mease, MD, is a Clinical Professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine and Director of Rheumatology Research at the Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, WA. Dr Mease's clinical practice is based at Seattle Rheumatology Associates. He received his undergraduate and medical degrees at Stanford University Medical School, and he completed his residency in internal medicine at the University of Washington's School of Medicine, where he also served as chief resident and fellow in rheumatology. Dr Mease conducts clinical trials on emerging therapies for rheumatic diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, fibromyalgia, osteoarthritis, and lupus. He also conducts research in disease state metrics and is the co-chair of three working groups for OMERACT (Outcome Measures in Rheumatology Clinical Trials) on psoriatic arthritis, fibromyalgia, and single-joint assessment, as well as a member of the Soluble Biomarker working group. Dr Mease is a founding organizer and President of GRAPPA (Group for Research and Assessment of Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis), a member of SPARTAN (Spondyloarthritis Research & Treatment Network), and a member of TREG (The Rheumatology Education Group). He has published 18 book chapters and nearly 400 journal articles.
In the premiere episode of His Health, host Rick Malambri speaks with Urologist, Dr. James Kuan of Swedish Medical Center in Seattle about the basics of men's health. What check-ups and health screenings men need and when they need them. His Health is sponsored by Boston Scientific and produced by Providence. Be sure to SUBSCRIBE to the His Health podcast to hear more important topics on men's health!!
Dr. Hanscom developed the DOC Journey, a pathway out of physical and mental pain (anxiety). He delivers a sequence of insights, exercises, interactive webinars, and an app that teaches you how to calm your nervous system, lower your anxietyand decrease pain. He has witnessed over a thousand patients resolve multiple physical and mental symptoms.Each person has a desire to thrive, which is compromised by endless suffering. The Direct your Own Care process evolved from his personal experience escaping from over 15 symptoms and is based on deep medical research. It is self-directed and systematically applying these approaches will enable you to create a new life. Join us on this trip at thedocjourney.com.Dr. David A. Hanscom is a board-certified orthopedic surgeon specializing in the surgical correction of complex problems in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spine. A significant part of his practice was devoted to performing surgery on patients who had undergone multiple prior spine surgeries. Around 2001 he began to share his own stress management tool with his patients that were in pain but had no indications of surgery. He had spent much of his career with rehabilitation physicians learning non-operative care. Nowadays, he is focusing his efforts on bringing effective medical treatments for chronic mental and physical pain back into mainstream medicine. His last practice position was Orthopedic Spine Surgeon, Swedish Neuroscience Specialists, Swedish Medical Center, Seattle, WA (retired in December 2018).
A Sassy Little Podcast for Getting Over It with Sandra Ann Miller
Dr. Rebecca Dunsmoor-Su is a board certified OBGYN, a certified menopause practitioner, the Medical Director of Menopause at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle, and the Chief Medical Officer at Gennev. Clearly, she knows her menopause. In this episode, we talk about: Menopause being taboo, women avoiding the subject, how it's normal and natural, it's not doomsday, perimenopause symptoms (sleep problems, mood changes, anxiety and/or depression); how menopause is, for many, a happier, healthier, positive time, managing symptoms, how we all experience it differently, the average age of menopause is 52, and perimenopause happens about 2-3 years before; the fun of flooding, varying hormone levels, hormone replacement therapy, evidence-based wisdom, no need for hormone testing, choosing FDA regulated hormones, avoiding compounded medication, risks, how "bio-identical" is a marketing term, breast cancer, cardiovascular risk, brain tattoos, ESTROGEN MATTERS (book; see line below), misogyny, Dr. Jen Gunter, the safer window, high-dose longevity clinics, Big Pharma, charlatans, John Oliver, quality control, herbal remedies, placebo effect, Gennev, no one pathway for all women, mindfulness and stress reduction, cortisol, a plant-based diet, colorful plates, choosing white wine over red, exercise (30 mins x 5 days/week), vaginal estrogen, North American Menopause Society, accountability, lifestyle as the pillar of health, community, small balls, doctor shopping.You can find Dr. Rebecca on Twitter and Clubhouse @DrRebeccaDSu and at Gennev.comMentioned in this episode:Gennev https://gennev.com/Estrogen Matters https://estrogenmatters.com/North American Menopause Society https://www.menopause.org/John Oliver on Compounding Pharmacies Episode recorded on 02/12/21Episode released on 03/17/21For more information on the podcast or its host, please visit sassylittlepodcast.com. There, you will find links to social media and an opportunity to become a member of the podcast community. We are on Twitter and Instagram @SassyLittlePod and Facebook @SassyLittlePodcast.Thanks for listening! If you like this sassy little podcast, please subscribe to it, rate it and review it, and tell your friends about it. Become a patron on Patreon. Cheers!
David Hanscom, an orthopedic complex spinal deformity surgeon for 35 years, quit practicing at Swedish Medical Center in Seattle to dedicate his life to stopping unnecessary and harmful surgeries and ending chronic pain. Dr. Hanscom understands that most back surgeries should never happen – that they create further problems including more pain. Now, based in SFB area, he is on a mission to re-introduce true healing into medicine. He has developed the DOC Journey (Direct Your Own Care) that has helped countless people from around the world go pain free. He discusses this program as well as giving much needed and useful information in his new book, “Do You Really Need Spine Surgery?: Take Control with a Surgeon's Advice.” In his book, Dr. David Hanscom covers things such as: · 3 things you must know before having surgery · Can surgery stop chronic pain · Are surgeries contributing to the Opioid crisis · The truth about unnecessary surgeries · When medical care kills · Performing surgery on Anxiety Dr. Hanscom also clearly outlines his DOC Journey, a combination of things such as somatic work, expressive writing, meditation, listening, forgiveness, identifying triggers, getting enough sleep, and getting your joy back. His website is loaded with valuable information to help people in chronic pain get their lives back and live in complete and whole wellness. During the Pandemic, he has been working with clients all over the world via Zoom. Find out more about Dr. David Hanscom at https://backincontrol.com/ and https://www.thedocjourney.com/
Art Wolfe on Planning Ahead & Taking Action, Entrepreneurship, Dissecting Inspiration & Publishing Multiple Books.Art Wolfe (@artwolfe | artwolfe.com) Art Wolfe was born on September 13, 1951 in Seattle, Washington, and still calls the city home. He graduated from the University of Washington with Bachelor's degrees in fine arts and art education in 1975, where he studied under professors such as Jacob Lawrence. His photography career has spanned five decades, a remarkable testament to the durability and demand for his images, his expertise, and his passionate advocacy for the environment and indigenous culture. During that time he has worked on every continent, in hundreds of locations, and on a dazzling array of projects.Wolfe's photographic mission is multi-faceted. By employing artistic and journalistic styles, he documents his subjects and educates the viewer. His unique approach to photography is based on his training in the arts and his love of the environment. His goal has always been to win support for conservation issues by “focusing on what's beautiful on the Earth.” Hailed by William Conway, former president of the Wildlife Conservation Society, as “the most prolific and sensitive recorder of a rapidly vanishing natural world,” Wolfe has created millions of images in his lifetime and travels nearly nine months out of the year photographing for new projects, leading photographic tours and seminars, and giving inspirational presentations to corporate, educational, conservation, and spiritual groups.Long before the genre of ‘conservation photography' was conceived, Wolfe was practicing it. In 1997 he created a conservation-themed photography contest as “an event for the advancement of photography as a unique medium capable of bringing awareness and preservation to our environment through art.” The contest culminated in 2012 in which the International Conservation Photography Awards drew entries from around the world and was exhibited and traveled by The Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture in Seattle.In 1978 he published his first book Indian Baskets of the Northwest Coast with the late Dr. Allan Lobb, a close friend and mentor, who also gave Wolfe a start by putting the young photographer's work into patients' rooms at Swedish Medical Center. Wolfe was soon photographing for the world's top magazines such as National Geographic, Smithsonian, Audubon, GEO, and Terre Sauvage. Magazines all over the world publish his photographs and stories, and his work is licensed for retail products and advertising, as well as products such as USPS stamps, of which he has three.Numerous US and international venues have featured monographs of his work as well his traveling exhibitions, Earth Is My Witness, Travels to the Edge, and Beyond the Lens. He has had four major exhibitions at Seattle's Frye Art Museum, including One World, One Vision. Today his work is available online at www.artwolfe.com and at the Carnevale Gallery inLas Vegas.Since 1988 he has published at least one book a year—1997 alone saw seven titles in the United States and abroad. He has released over 100 books in eight languages, including the popular titles The New Art of Photographing Nature and The Art of the Photograph, Vanishing Act, and award-winning titles Human Canvas, The High Himalaya, Water: Worlds between Heaven & Earth, Tribes, Rainforests of the World, Pacific Northwest – Land of Light and Water, as well as numerous children's titles, including O is for Orca and Animal Action Alphabet. Graphis included his books Light on the Land and the controversial Migrations on its list of the 100 best books published in the 1990s.In 2000 he formed Wildlands Press and subsequently published his signature work: The Living Wild, which has more than 70,000 copies in print worldwide and garnered awards from the National Outdoor Book Awards, Independent Publisher, Applied Arts and Graphis; Africa (2001) and Edge of the EarthCorner of the Sky (2003), both of which captured significant publishing awards, including IPPY (Independent Publishers), Benjamin Franklin (Publishers MarketingAssociation), and National Outdoor Book Award.In 2014 Wolfe began a publishing relationship with Earth Aware Editions. This has resulted in numerous award-winning books including the encyclopedic Earth Is My Witness, also published in German, French, and Italian language editions by National Geographic; an all-new edition of Migrations, and in 2018 the Nautilus Award-winning Trees: Between Earth and Heaven. 2019 will see the publication of Wild Elephants: Conservation in the Age of Extinction and the trade edition of Human Canvas.Wolfe has ventured into the world of television production with On Location with Art Wolfe, Techniques of the Masters and as host of American Photo's Safari, which aired on ESPN 1993-1995. In May 2007 Art made his public television debut with the high definition series Art Wolfe's Travels to the Edge, an intimate and upbeat series that offers unique insights on nature, culture, and the realm of digital photography. The thirteen-episode first season garnered American Public Television's 2007 Programming Excellence Award—unprecedented for a first season show. The thirteen-episode second season garnered five Silver Telly Awards, their highest honor, for outstanding achievement. It has been broadcast hundreds of thousands times in the United States on PBS and CreateTV affiliates and in global syndication, and on Amazon Prime. Wolfe is the on-screen talent for two of the six episodes of Season I of Tales By Light, first airing in 2015 in Australia and New Zealand and now in distribution on Netflix. The show was produced by Canon Australia and National Geographic Channel in conjunction with Untitled Film Works.Education is a major component of Wolfe's work, whether it is about the environment or about photography. He leads photographic tours worldwide as well as regularly giving the groundbreaking Photography as Art seminar. He has been a Phase One Digital Artists Series instructor, and is collaborating with two of the most renowned nature photographers inthe world, Frans Lanting and Thomas Mangelsen, on the Masters of Nature Photography workshops.Wolfe is in demand as a keynote speaker around the world, giving talks. His presentations brim with humor and anecdotes. They deliver both an environmental message and the promise that following dreams with determination will lead to a well-lived life. He illustrates his presentations with inspiring, awarding-winning photography displaying an astonishing array of subjects, from intense wildlife images and landscapes to intimate views of cultures almost untouched by civilization.Along with his numerous book and television awards, Wolfe is the proud recipient of the Nature's Best Photographer of the Year Award, the North American Nature Photography Association's Lifetime Achievement Award and the Photographic Society of America's Progress Medal for his contribution to the advancement of the art and science of photography; he has been awarded with a coveted Alfred Eisenstaedt Magazine Photography Award. The National Audubon Society recognized Wolfe's work in support of the national wildlife refuge system with its first-ever Rachel Carson Award. In 1999 he was named to the UW Alumni Association's magazine list of 100 “most famous, fascinating and influential” alumni of the 20th century. He is the Honorary Chair of Washington Wild, a member of the American Society of Media Photographers; he is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Photographic Society, a Fellow of the International League of Conservation Photographers, a Member National of The Explorers Club, a Paul Harris Fellow of The Rotary Foundation, and has served on the advisory boards for the Wildlife Conservation Society. Wolfe has been a member of Canon's elite list of renowned photographers Explorers of Light, Microsoft's Icons of Imaging, Fujifilm's Talent Team, and Nikon's NPS Pros.Wolfe maintains his office, stock agency, and production company in Seattle.Please enjoy!***If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really helps makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests.Follow Matthew:Twitter: twitter.com/matthewdawalker Instagram: instagram.com/matthewdawalker
In today's episode, we speak to Dr. Letizia Alto about her amazing blog: SemiRetiredMD.com and how she and her husband have become very successful in the real estate investing space. She shares all of her best advice to get started with real estate, make solid investing choices, shelter tax dollars and start living a semi-retired lifestyle. In this episode, you will learn: Why she got into the world of real estate investing and blogging about it. How her and her husband get along while working together on all of their businesses. Where you can get a loan and a down payment to start investing. How you can skip paying federal income taxes by becoming a Real Estate Professional. Why she feels that real estate investing is an easy way to quickly increase wealth. How they purchase B and C class housing for working class people. Why they choose to provide housing for developmentally disabled people through a company called: Supported Living. What information they offer on their blog regarding real estate investing and beyond. Letizia Alto, MD is a board-certified family medicine physician. She did her undergraduate degree at Hamilton College and completed a graduate degree in anthropology at George Washington University. After finishing medical school at University of Vermont, Letizia did her residency at Swedish Family Medicine, followed by a hospitalist fellowship. She has been a hospitalist since 2011, working at Good Samaritan Hospital, Queen's Medical Center, and Swedish Medical Center. She also started a company with her husband and served as Chief Medical Officer from 2015-2016. She currently splits her time between hospital work, traveling, real estate investing, raising three children and working on her blog: SemiRetiredMD.com along with her husband and business partner, Dr. Kenji Asakura. Links we discussed in the show: Check out her website and blog at: SemiRetiredMD.com. Peter Kim's Passive Income MD conference Virtual Pass is available here: HippocraticHustle.com/PassiveIncome Get on the wait list for Letizia and Kenji's amazing course: Zero to Freedom. Thank you for listening to the Hippocratic Hustle! I know that time is your most valuable resource so I really appreciate you spending some of it with me. If you enjoyed today's show, please share it! If you'd like to help me improve and grow the podcast, send your suggestions to: Carrie@HippocraticHustle.com Lastly, don't forget to subscribe to the podcast, so you won't miss an episode!
Many of you know I was given only months to live after being diagnosed with a malignant glioblastoma (brain tumor) in 2010. Doctors at Swedish Medical Center in Denver, Colorado, told my parents to “make the best of what little time we had left together.” Never Stop Chasing Your Dreams My mom knew that I'm […]