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In the late 1980s, a child exposed to fallout from the Chernobyl disaster lay in a hospital bed while doctors told his family there were no clear answers and no reliable path forward. Decades later, that same child, Yan Leyfman, walks into exam rooms as a hematology oncology fellow, expected to deliver clarity inside a system that still runs on delay, uncertainty, and institutional self preservation.This episode traces the throughline from early life shaped by radiation exposure and hospice level uncertainty to a career inside academic medicine, translational research, and oncology media. Yan built his identity around survival and usefulness, moving from patient to physician while carrying the memory of what it feels like to sit on the other side of the table. He helped launch MedNews Week during the COVID crisis to push back on misinformation and expand access to medical knowledge, stepping into a public role while still in training.The conversation stays grounded in the friction between personal narrative and system reality. Clinical training demands efficiency, hierarchy, and emotional distance. Cancer care demands time, clarity, and human connection. Those forces collide in real patient encounters where prior authorization delays, insurance barriers, and fragmented care pathways shape outcomes as much as any treatment protocol.Yan speaks openly about mentorship, belonging, and the drive to make meaning out of survival. The discussion pushes further into what the healthcare system actually rewards, what it quietly strips away, and how quickly empathy can erode under institutional pressure. The episode also examines the role of medical media, where education, industry influence, and narrative control often blur together.This is a conversation about identity under construction, about what happens when someone who remembers powerlessness steps into a role that carries authority, and about whether that memory can survive long enough to change anything.RELATED LINKSYan Leyfman on LinkedInYan Leyfman on InstagramSurviving ChernobylFEEDBACKLike this episode? Rate and review Out of Patients on your favorite podcast platform. For guest suggestions or sponsorship email podcasts@matthewzachary.comSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
What does strong financial progress during residency actually look like? In this Milestones to Millionaire episode, we talk with a physician who is graduating residency with a $200K net worth and discuss the decisions that helped make that milestone possible. We also explore the role military medicine played in this physician's journey, including lessons for doctors considering a military career path. This episode highlights how early financial planning, career decisions, and long-term consistency can influence wealth building before reaching attending income. Since April 2021, more than 650 physicians in the White Coat community have invested over $300 million with DLP Capital, a 12-time Inc. 5000 honoree that offers four private real estate investment funds—one of my favorite ways to invest in real estate. If you're eager to achieve success as a private real estate investor, DLP's impact-focused sponsored funds offer the potential to earn double-digit returns while making an impact on America's affordable housing crisis. Interested in learning more? Head to https://WhiteCoatInvestor.com/DLP today. Celebrating your stories of success along the journey to financial freedom! Tune in every Monday to the Milestones to Millionaire Podcast, where we celebrate the financial achievements of our listeners and share practical tips for reaching your own milestones. We want to celebrate your milestones—no matter how big or small—and help inspire others to follow your lead. Every week, these episodes feature one listener who has recently achieved a milestone they are proud of and want to celebrate, and they give any advice they have for those who want to follow their example. Make sure to listen every Monday to be inspired by your fellow white coat investors. Celebrate YOUR Milestone on the Milestones to Millionaire Podcast: https://whitecoatinvestor.com/milestones Website: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com YouTube: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/youtube Student Loan Advice: https://studentloanadvice.com TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thewhitecoatinvestor Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Twitter: https://twitter.com/WCInvestor Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/whitecoatinvestor Online Courses: https://whitecoatinvestor.teachable.com Newsletter: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/free-monthly-newsletter
In this episode, Erin sits down with double board-certified nurse practitioner and hormone expert Megan del Corral to break down one of the biggest trends in health right now: peptides. They discuss what peptides are, how they work in the body, and why they're gaining attention for metabolism, recovery, hormone balance, energy, inflammation, and healthy aging. Megan also shares her favorite peptides, who may benefit from them, and how personalized care through functional medicine can help address root causes instead of just symptoms. Key Topics: - What peptides actually are and how they work - Why peptides are becoming so popular in wellness and functional medicine - Peptides for metabolism, energy, and recovery - Hormone balance and healthy aging support - Functional medicine vs symptom management - Root-cause approaches to metabolic resistance - Personalized peptide protocols - Women's hormones and peptide therapy - Inflammation, healing, and performance optimization - How patients can work with Vidal Medical Links Mentioned: Website to order: https://vidalshop.com/shop?am_id=Erin_Kerry Megan's Instagram: @megan_delcorrral Podcast: Beyond the White Coat
We're dropping an interview I recently did with Dr. Brian Goldman, host of White Coat, Black Art, an excellent CBC radio show and podcast into our feed. We're chatting about hospital advertising. And because they rely on fundraising, we discuss how effective hospital advertising is. We thought you might find this topic interesting.Enjoy.We know you want to listen to all the ads in this show. On the off-chance you don't, subscribe ad-free here. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
What does building wealth look like as a physician practicing in a smaller community? In this Milestones to Millionaire episode, we chat with a doctor who reached $1 million in investments and the financial decisions that helped make it possible. We also explore the benefits and tradeoffs of practicing in a small town, along with practical advice for physicians considering that career path. This episode highlights how location, lifestyle, and long-term consistency can shape financial outcomes over time. This episode is brought to you by KeyBank! For six years, White Coat member benefit partner, Laurel Road, has been part of KeyBank. As of March 16th, that partnership becomes even stronger as Laurel Road is now officially under the KeyBank brand. With the transition to KeyBank, the same tools and services you rely on now come with enhanced resources and support and the same great experience you trust. WCI members can continue to enjoy the benefits and financial resources as they always have, with even more support from KeyBank. To learn more and for terms and conditions, please visit https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/keybank Celebrating your stories of success along the journey to financial freedom! Tune in every Monday to the Milestones to Millionaire Podcast, where we celebrate the financial achievements of our listeners and share practical tips for reaching your own milestones. We want to celebrate your milestones—no matter how big or small—and help inspire others to follow your lead. Every week, these episodes feature one listener who has recently achieved a milestone they are proud of and want to celebrate, and they give any advice they have for those who want to follow their example. Make sure to listen every Monday to be inspired by your fellow white coat investors. Celebrate YOUR Milestone on the Milestones to Millionaire Podcast: https://whitecoatinvestor.com/milestones Website: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com YouTube: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/youtube Student Loan Advice: https://studentloanadvice.com TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thewhitecoatinvestor Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Twitter: https://twitter.com/WCInvestor Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/whitecoatinvestor Online Courses: https://whitecoatinvestor.teachable.com Newsletter: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/free-monthly-newsletter
On this episode of the podcast, Amanda Head sits down with Justin Goodman of the White Coat Waste Project to discuss explosive whistleblower allegations involving the National Institute of Health's (NIH) Rocky Mountain Laboratories in Hamilton, Montana.Goodman details claims that NIH officials concealed a dangerous laboratory exposure involving Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever after a researcher was reportedly bitten by an infected monkey. He also breaks down allegations that three NIH experimenters smuggled virus samples from Africa back into the United States, triggering an FBI investigation and raising new concerns about oversight, transparency, and biosecurity at some of America's highest-level research facilities.The conversation dives into the culture surrounding Fauci-era leadership at the NIH, ongoing concerns over taxpayer-funded virus research, and why Goodman believes major reforms, budget cuts, and leadership changes are urgently needed. Goodman and Head also discuss the broader push for government accountability and what these revelations could mean for the future of federal public health agencies.You can follow this podcast, Amanda Head, Justin Goodman and White Coat Waste Project on X by searching for their respective handle: @FurthermorePod, @AmandaHead, @JustinRGoodman, @WhiteCoatWaste.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this episode of the White Coat Investor Podcast we explore how physicians and other high-income professionals can approach charitable giving in a more intentional and effective way. We discuss reaching financial independence early, developing a philosophy of giving, and how to maximize the impact of donations over time. Topics include the logistics of giving, tax considerations, and the tradeoffs between giving now versus later. We also cover giving outside of traditional charities, current trends in charitable giving, and how generosity can fit into a broader financial plan. This episode focuses on thoughtful decision-making, aligning giving with values, and making a meaningful impact. Learn more about Yield & Spread: https://YieldandSpread.org This episode is brought to you by KeyBank! For six years, White Coat member benefit partner, Laurel Road, has been part of KeyBank. As of March 16th, that partnership becomes even stronger as Laurel Road is now officially under the KeyBank brand. With the transition to KeyBank, the same tools and services you rely on now come with enhanced resources and support and the same great experience you trust. WCI members can continue to enjoy the benefits and financial resources as they always have, with even more support from KeyBank. To learn more and for terms and conditions, please visit https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/keybank The White Coat Investor Podcast launched in January 2017, and since then, millions have downloaded it. Join your fellow physicians and other high income professionals and subscribe today! Host, Dr. Jim Dahle, is a practicing emergency physician and founder of The White Coat Investor blog. Like the blog, The White Coat Investor Podcast is dedicated to educating medical students, residents, physicians, dentists, and similar high-income professionals about personal finance and building wealth, so they can ultimately be their own financial advisor-or at least know enough to not get ripped off by a financial advisor. We tackle the hard topics like the best ways to pay off student loans, how to create your own personal financial plan, retirement planning, how to save money, investing in real estate, side hustles, and how everyone can be a millionaire by living WCI principles. Website: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com YouTube: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/youtube Student Loan Advice: https://studentloanadvice.com TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thewhitecoatinvestor Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Twitter: https://twitter.com/WCInvestor Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/whitecoatinvestor Online Courses: https://whitecoatinvestor.teachable.com Newsletter: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/free-monthly-newsletter
In today's episode we're hearing from Lou about her precipitous birth. She loved being pregnant and really embraced educating herself and preparing for labour. Lou shares her experience of white coat hypertension and how she managed it with the support of her midwife during pregnancy, so her story beautifully highlights the value of continuity of care. We also talk about how she navigated an unexpectedly fast labour and how the final 40 minutes ended up being some of the best moments of her life. My website: www.serenalouth.com My IG: https://www.instagram.com/serenalouth/
On the phone-in: Dr Brian Goldman, host of "White Coat, Black Art" talks about his new book, "The Casino Shift: Stories from an ER on the Edge". And listeners call with their ER stories. And off the top of the show, we speak with senior citizen, Jeannie Coholan, from Bedford, NS. She's out thousands of dollars after being defrauded.
Welcome to Sherbrooke is a podcast that takes you inside Sherbrooke Community Centre; a long-term care home in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan where 263 residents live and which follows the Eden Alternative Philosophy of Care. In this episode, we are visiting the Tawaw Centre at Sherbrooke, which is our main gathering space, where the room is full of residents, students, families and staff. The reason everyone is here is because the iGen class is hosting a Heritage Fair. iGen is short for Intergenerational Program. Since 2014, Sherbrooke and the Saskatoon Public School Division have partnered on the iGen program. It sees 25 grade six students spent their entire school year at Sherbrooke and is designed to provide close and continuing contact between Sherbrooke Elders and the students throughout the school year. iGen is the only one of its kind in Canada and is an incredible example of the power of intergenerational relationships. There have been several stories done on iGen and its impact on Elders and students, and there are links below in the show notes to those stories if you would like to learn more about how the program works. We also have a Welcome to iGen podcast that you can listen to as well. For this episode, we are focusing on how relationships are formed between iGen students and Sherbrooke Elders. Thank you so much for listening to this episode of the Welcome to Sherbrooke podcast. You can listen to episodes wherever you find your favourite podcasts including Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Visit our website, www.sherbrookecommunitycentre.ca, to learn more about Sherbrooke, and don't forget to follow us on Facebook and LinkedIn. CBC Saskatchewan Web Story on iGen CBC Television Story on iGen CBC Radio's White Coat, Black Art on iGen Episode Credits:Produced, edited, mixed by Eric AndersonExecutive Producer is Kim SchmidtMusic licensed through APM MusicGathered on location at Sherbrooke Community Centre in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada
Show Highlights · Dr. James JC Cooley along with Co-Host Dr. Michael Mantell- renowned and esteemed mental health architect and prolific author have a sit-down conversation with Kim Downey – Physical Therapist, Physician Advocate, and Author. · Every time a doctor shares their story, another doctor feels less alone · Medicine is a life of sacrifice for the whole family · Stories of patient gratitude to their doctors · Upcoming physician retreat Summary: White Coats, Human Hearts: True Stories of Healing, Belonging, and the Courage to Stay Human in Medicine by Kim Downey is a collection of deeply personal narratives that illuminate the emotional realities of healthcare professionals striving to preserve their humanity within a demanding medical system. Building on themes from her earlier work, the book highlights stories of struggle—such as burnout, trauma, and moral injury—while also emphasizing resilience, connection, and the importance of compassion in medicine. Through these firsthand accounts, Downey underscores the need for belonging, empathy, and systemic change, offering a hopeful vision for a more humane healthcare culture that honors both patients and providers as whole people. Biography Kim Downey, founder of Stand Up (for) Doctors!, is a physical therapist, three-time cancer survivor, and fierce advocate for physician well-being. As an Ambassador for the Dr. Lorna Breen Heroes’ Foundation, Clinician Burnout Foundation, and Community Ambassador for Medicine Forward, she brings deep insight into both the clinical and human sides of medicine. She amplifies the voices of doctors and patients, addressing challenges like burnout, moral injury, and loss of autonomy. Kim’s mission is to foster connection and advocacy for healthier doctors and a stronger healthcare system. Website https://standupfordoctors.org/ Social Media https://www.linkedin.com/in/kim-downey-a9307b72/ https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61575836827532 https://www.youtube.com/@StandupforDoctorsSupport the show: http://www.cooleyfoundation.org/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On White Coat, Black Art, trusted ER doctor Brian Goldman brings you honest and surprising stories that can change your health and your life. Expect deep conversations with patients, families and colleagues that show you what is and isn't working in Canadian healthcare.“Pistol” Pete Pearson, a 76-year-old living with a terminal lung disease, says psilocybin-assisted therapy transformed his end-of-life distress after he accessed it outside the medical system. While psilocybin remains illegal in Canada, researchers including UHN psychiatrist Dr. Joshua Rosenblat are running government-funded trials exploring its potential for mood disorders. More episodes of White Coat, Black Art are available wherever you get your podcasts, and here: https://link.mgln.ai/WCBAxIDEAS
A new study is being pushed through the media claiming AI chatbots are dangerous because they struggle to diagnose patients with incomplete information. Really? So do doctors. Every single day. Patients walk in with vague symptoms, missing details, bad memories—and doctors guess. They call it “clinical judgment.” When AI does the same thing, suddenly it’s a crisis? Give me a break. Because buried inside this so-called warning is the truth they don’t want you focused on: when the data is complete, AI doesn’t just compete—it dominates. Accuracy jumps north of 90 percent. So let’s be clear about what this actually is. Not a warning. Not a breakthrough. A narrative. This is the beginning of the medical establishment circling the wagons. Because AI is exposing something they never wanted you to question—that the system isn’t nearly as precise, as consistent, or as untouchable as they’ve claimed. AI doesn’t get tired. It doesn’t have an ego. It doesn’t rush you out of the room in seven minutes. And it doesn’t protect a broken system. So now the messaging begins: “Don’t trust it. It’s dangerous. Stick with us.” But what they’re really saying is this: Don’t replace us. We break down the study, the spin, and why this could be the opening shot in a full-scale war against AI in medicine. If you’re ready to take control of your health without waiting on a broken system, start here
In this 1878th episode of Toronto Mike'd, Mike chats with Dr. Brian Goldman, host of White Coat, Black Art and The Dose, about his latest book The Casino Shift and how Canada's emergency rooms compare to ER and The Pitt. Toronto Mike'd is proudly brought to you by Great Lakes Brewery, Palma Pasta, Ridley Funeral Home, Nick Ainis, and RecycleMyElectronics.ca. If you would like to support the show, we do have partner opportunities available. Please email Toronto Mike at mike@torontomike.com.
The Hippocratic oath moment that turns anxious students into future physicians—even before they’ve treated a single patient You’re on stage at the “White Coat Ceremony,” putting on that short coat for the first time, and honestly? It feels kind of weird. Like you’re playing dress-up in someone else’s costume. That’s where M1s Jonah Albrecht, Anna Royer, Lillian Schmidt, and Lillie Lamont pick up the conversation—because turns out, that awkward feeling might be telling you something important about what this weird garment actually means (and might not mean) in medicine. This episode gets real about white coat symbolism beyond the ceremony photo-op. Our M1 hosts dig into medical student identity, physician hierarchy, the whole clinical attire debate, and whether that coat actually helps with patient trust in healthcare or just makes you feel like an imposter. You’ll hear honest takes on medical professionalism, imposter syndrome medicine, what medical school training teaches you about fitting in, and why healthcare team collaboration might work better without all the hierarchical costume drama. Plus: we adapt the amazing Codenames game–can Lillie’s favorite game reveal anything about med school chaos? If you’re wondering whether you’ll ever feel like you belong in that coat—or whether that particular outer covering is a good idea—hit play. Episode credits: Producer: Jonah Albrecht, Cyrus Barati Co-hosts: Anna Royer, Jonah Albrecht, Lillie Lamont, Lillian Schmidt The views and opinions expressed on this podcast belong solely to the individuals who share them. They do not represent the positions of the University of Iowa, the Carver College of Medicine, or the State of Iowa. All discussions are intended for entertainment purposes only and should not be taken as professional, legal, financial, or medical advice. Nothing said on this podcast should be used to diagnose, treat, or prevent any medical condition. Always seek qualified professional guidance for personal decisions. We Want to Hear From You: YOUR VOICE MATTERS! We welcome your feedback, listener questions, and shower thoughts. Do you agree or disagree with something we said today? Did you hear something really helpful? Can we answer a question for you? Are we delivering a podcast you want to keep listening to? Let us know at https://theshortcoat.com/tellus and we'll put your message in a future episode. Or email theshortcoats@gmail.com. We need to know more about you! https://surveys.blubrry.com/theshortcoat (email a screenshot of the confirmation screen to theshortcoats@gmail.com with your mailing address and Dave will mail you a thank you package!) The Short Coat Podcast is FeedSpot’s Top Iowa Student Podcast, and its Top Iowa Medical Podcast! Thanks for listening! We do more things on… Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theshortcoat YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/theshortcoat You deserve to be happy and healthy. If you’re struggling with racism, harassment, hate, your mental health, or some other crisis, visit http://theshortcoat.com/help, and send additions to the resources there to theshortcoats@gmail.com. We love you. AI disclosure: Voices of host, co-hosts, and guests are human. Some other voices–such as listener questions or questions/comments from the internet–may be AI generated.
Entrepreneurship in academic medicine often means scaling solutions developed in your own clinic so that others can benefit. Ashish Shah, M.D., shares lessons from launching multiple startups while practicing at UAB. Learn how physicians can vet ideas, find mentors, pursue grant support, and work with university innovation programs to bring new solutions to market.
On tonight’s edition of Bring It On!, hosts Clarence Boone and Gloria Howell spend the hour with the founder of “15 White Coats”, Dr. Russell Ledet. “15 White Coats” promotes and celebrates Black physicians and helps the next generation of Black physicians achieve success. It aims to address the problem of the continued whitewashing of …
Rent To Retirement: Building Financial Independence Through Turnkey Real Estate Investing
Click HERE to learn how to earn $10K/month in rental income & access 50% discount on RTR Academyhttps://landing.renttoretirement.com/evg-masterclass-replayThis episode is sponsored by…BAM Capital:Get access to premium real estate assets with BAM Capital. Rent to Retirement's preferred multifamily partner. https://bamcapital.com/rtr/Welcome back to the Rent To Retirement Podcast with hosts Matthew Seyoum and Zach Lemaster.In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Jim Dahle, practicing emergency physician, Air Force veteran, and founder of The White Coat Investor — one of the most trusted financial education platforms for physicians and high-income professionals.Dr. Dahle shares his journey from being frustrated with financial advisors to building a massive community that helps doctors and professionals avoid costly financial mistakes.We dive into real estate investing, financial independence, tax strategies, and how high-income earners can build long-term wealth while avoiding lifestyle inflation.Whether you're a physician, entrepreneur, or investor, this conversation is packed with practical insights to help you design a smarter financial strategy and achieve long-term financial freedom.Key Topics Covered⏱ Timestamps00:00 – Introduction to Dr. Jim Dahle and The White Coat Investor01:29 – Why Dr. Dahle started educating physicians about money05:10 – The truth about financial advisors and conflicts of interest08:16 – DIY investors vs delegators vs validators11:47 – Financial independence and working part-time in medicine17:20 – Dr. Dahle's investment strategy (stocks, bonds, and real estate)21:33 – Why real estate is a powerful asset class25:50 – Tax advantages of real estate investing30:30 – Why owning just one rental property can be painful33:20 – Scaling a real estate portfolio the right way37:43 – When managing rentals is worth your time (and when it's not)45:27 – The first financial step new professionals should take47:41 – Paying off debt vs investing: which is better?49:08 – The biggest financial mistake high earners make51:03 – How AI may impact high-income professions53:27 – Advice for students and future professionals55:17 – Final investing advice from Dr. Dahle
Rent To Retirement: Building Financial Independence Through Turnkey Real Estate Investing
Click HERE to learn how to earn $10K/month in rental income & access 50% discount on RTR Academyhttps://landing.renttoretirement.com/evg-masterclass-replayThis episode is sponsored by…BAM Capital:Get access to premium real estate assets with BAM Capital. Rent to Retirement's preferred multifamily partner. https://bamcapital.com/rtr/Welcome back to the Rent To Retirement Podcast with hosts Matthew Seyoum and Zach Lemaster.In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Jim Dahle, practicing emergency physician, Air Force veteran, and founder of The White Coat Investor — one of the most trusted financial education platforms for physicians and high-income professionals.Dr. Dahle shares his journey from being frustrated with financial advisors to building a massive community that helps doctors and professionals avoid costly financial mistakes.We dive into real estate investing, financial independence, tax strategies, and how high-income earners can build long-term wealth while avoiding lifestyle inflation.Whether you're a physician, entrepreneur, or investor, this conversation is packed with practical insights to help you design a smarter financial strategy and achieve long-term financial freedom.Key Topics Covered⏱ Timestamps00:00 – Introduction to Dr. Jim Dahle and The White Coat Investor01:29 – Why Dr. Dahle started educating physicians about money05:10 – The truth about financial advisors and conflicts of interest08:16 – DIY investors vs delegators vs validators11:47 – Financial independence and working part-time in medicine17:20 – Dr. Dahle's investment strategy (stocks, bonds, and real estate)21:33 – Why real estate is a powerful asset class25:50 – Tax advantages of real estate investing30:30 – Why owning just one rental property can be painful33:20 – Scaling a real estate portfolio the right way37:43 – When managing rentals is worth your time (and when it's not)45:27 – The first financial step new professionals should take47:41 – Paying off debt vs investing: which is better?49:08 – The biggest financial mistake high earners make51:03 – How AI may impact high-income professions53:27 – Advice for students and future professionals55:17 – Final investing advice from Dr. Dahle
Fifteen years ago, Dr. Brian Goldman gave us a front-line account of life in the emergency room with his book The Night Shift. Now, the ER physician and host of CBC's White Coat, Black Art and The Dose is revisiting that setting with his new book The Casino Shift. He joins Piya Chattopadhyay to discuss what's changed for the better and worse at ERs across our country in the last 15 years, and what treatments for our ailing system may look like.
In this episode, the EBB Research Team is answering three questions we received from our Pro Members! We take a close look at the evidence behind doula presence in the operating room, the risk of experiencing another severe perineal tear after a previous injury, and what white coat hypertension in pregnancy can tell us about future risk. Each question reflects real situations birth workers are encountering in practice, where guidance is often inconsistent, policies vary widely, and the research can feel hard to translate into day-to-day care. We walk through what the studies show, where the evidence is limited, and how this information can be used to support informed, individualized decision-making. (06:15) Evidence on doulas in the operating room (12:53) Participant experiences with doulas in the OR (14:20) Risk of severe perineal tears in subsequent births (17:30) Clarifying repeat tear severity and rates (20:27) White coat hypertension vs. preeclampsia (27:02) How blood pressure should be taken correctly (31:10) Research on white coat hypertension and pregnancy outcomes (36:20) Global trends and rising rates of hypertensive disorders Resources See the full list of references: ebbirth.com/387 Learn more about the EBB Pro Membership: ebbirth.com/become-pro-member/ Get the Evidence on: Skin-To-Skin After Cesarean: ebbirth.com/the-evidence-for-skin-to-skin-care-after-a-cesarean/
Fake Fact Check:White Coat, No Degree: Fake Doctor Busted in Midrand by Radio Islam
On this episode we are discussing an article written by the White Coat Investor on Infinite Banking. The article is called 7 truths on Infinite Banking / Bank On Yourself. In this episode: Who is The White Coat Investor? Are the 7 "truths" of this article accurate? ... We discuss each of them today. Is The White Coat Investor consistent? Clarity on some confusion around infinite banking and whole life insurance Direct vs Non Direct recognition. What is an Infinite Banking Policy? Link to Tom McFie's article on the White Coat Investor: https://mcfieinsurance.com/white-coat-investor/?utm_source=YouTube&utm_medium=link&utm_campaign=podcast&utm_content=558 Follow the Wealth Talks Podcast on: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/wealthtalkspodcast/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igshid=OGQ5ZDc2ODk2ZA== Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61554798231074 Listen to the Wealth Talks Podcast on: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/wealth-talks/id978187163 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7MOugefeGkTl5jdkhYdjvQ?si=80ce9359d8e54cc8
Send us a textBeyond Medicines: How Pharmacovigilance Professionals Save Lives Without Wearing a White CoatWhat if saving lives didn't require a stethoscope, a hospital ward, or a white coat?In this deeply insightful episode of The Kapeel Gupta Career PodShow, we explore one of the most underrated yet powerful careers in global healthcare — Pharmacovigilance.Behind every medicine you trust is a silent professional analysing safety reports, identifying patterns, and protecting patients across the world. This episode reveals how Pharmacovigilance Professionals quietly safeguard millions of lives without ever meeting a patient face to face.If you are: ✔ A science student who loves healthcare but not hospital routines ✔ Confused between pharmacy, research, and corporate roles ✔ Looking for a stable, global, future-proof career ✔ Interested in drug safety, ethics, and real-world impact— this episode is for you.In this episode, you'll learn:
Justin Goodman of White Coat Waste project joins Dan to discuss his efforts working along with Sen. Joni Ernst (R-IA) and Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ) to shut down a bat research lab and program at Colorado State University.
In this powerful and personal episode of The Sexy Nurse Chronicles, I share my real, unfiltered journey from becoming a CNA to earning my white coat as a Nurse Practitioner—and now continuing the path as a current DNP student.This episode is for anyone who has ever wondered “Can I really do this?”I talk about why I became a CNA, the sacrifices, the setbacks, the motivation it took to keep going, and the moments that made me refuse to quit. From long shifts and self-doubt to purpose, passion, and professional growth—this is the story behind the title.Whether you're:Thinking about becoming a CNAA nursing student feeling overwhelmedA nurse considering the next levelOr someone who needs motivation to keep pushing forwardThis episode is a reminder that your starting point does not determine your destination. Your journey is valid. Your goals are possible. And your white coat—whatever that looks like for you—is worth the work.
Podcast Yes I Can. Dr Sumer Sethi in conversation with the Guests and sharing their stories
The Taproot Therapy Podcast - https://www.GetTherapyBirmingham.com
The Story Science Forgot: Why Psychotherapy Needs Narrative More Than Ever by Joel Blackstock LICSW-S MSW PIP no. 4135C-S | Dec 15, 2025 | 0 comments Joseph Campbell is arguably one of the most influential intellectuals of the twentieth century. If you have watched a Marvel movie or read a modern fantasy novel or sat in a screenwriter's workshop you have encountered his fingerprints. George Lucas explicitly credited Campbell's The Hero with a Thousand Faces as the structural backbone of Star Wars. Every major Hollywood studio has copies of his work floating around their development offices. Even filmmakers who actively deconstruct his monomyth model still have to be in conversation with Campbell to do so. You cannot escape him if you are telling stories in the Western tradition. But here is the thing about Joseph Campbell that we need to hold in our minds when we think about what psychology has become. He was a showman. He was a legitimate scholar but also someone who understood that the truth sometimes needs a little theatrical assistance. The Showman and the Bear Bones One of Campbell's favorite presentation techniques involved showing an image of ancient bear bones that were perhaps two million years old and discovered in a cave. The bones had been arranged in a particular way with pieces shoved back into the bear's mouth. Campbell would present this with his characteristic gravitas and explain that the ancients understood that nature must eat of itself. They knew that to take life is to participate in a cyclical loop of giving and receiving. The bear consuming itself was a ritual recognition that we are all food for something else. It is a beautiful interpretation. It is probably even partially true. We know through depth psychology and early anthropology that prehistoric humans were almost certainly trying to make meaning of existential realities. Ritual practices around death and consumption are well documented across cultures. Campbell was not fabricating this from nothing. But also come on Campbell. These are two million year old bones shoved in a hole. Maybe the jaw just collapsed that way. Maybe soil shifted. Maybe an animal disturbed them centuries after burial. He did not know. He could not know. And yet he presented it with the confidence of revealed truth. Here is why this matters. Campbell's influence is incalculable despite his methodological looseness. He told a story that resonated so deeply with something in the human psyche that it became the invisible architecture of our entire entertainment industry. He was not objectively right about those bear bones but he was pointing at something real about how humans make meaning. The story he told about that meaning making was more powerful than any peer reviewed paper could have been. We need to remember this when we think about psychotherapy and what it has become. The Dream I Had and the World I Found When I first entered the field of psychotherapy I had a fantasy. I thought I was going to be Joseph Campbell. I was going to find my way to someplace like Berkeley and immerse myself in the grand conversation between psychology and mythology and anthropology and philosophy. I imagined something like the Esalen Institute in the 1970s where Fritz Perls developed Gestalt therapy and where researchers and mystics and clinicians sat together in hot springs and argued about the nature of consciousness. Those places barely exist anymore. What I found instead was a competitive model built on H-indexes and impact factors. I found academic departments that had been siloed into increasingly narrow specializations. Each department defended its territorial boundaries against incursion from neighboring disciplines. The institute model where a psychologist might spend an afternoon talking to an anthropologist about ritual has been systematically dismantled. What we have instead are specialists who do not read outside their sub specialty and researchers whose entire careers depend on defending one narrow hypothesis. We have an incentive structure that actively punishes the kind of cross pollination that leads to genuine discovery. The Hollow Room: How the Biomedical Model Fails This is not just an academic inconvenience. It is a catastrophe for the human sciences and for the actual treatment of patients. There is a reason Freud stuck around. It is not because psychoanalysis was rigorously validated through randomized controlled trials. It is because as the science writer John Horgan observed old paradigms die only when better paradigms replace them. Freud lives on because science has not produced a theory of and therapy for the mind potent enough to render psychoanalysis obsolete once and for all. The biomedical model promised us a better story. It told us that humans are biological machines and that suffering is just a mechanical malfunction. It promised that if we could just find the right neurotransmitter or the right gene we could fix the machine. But look at what that looks like in practice. It looks like the 15 minute medication management appointment. A person comes in with their life falling apart. They are grieving a divorce or wrestling with the trauma of their childhood or facing a crisis of meaning. And the doctor looks at a checklist. They ask about sleep. They ask about appetite. They ask about energy levels. They treat the symptoms like check engine lights on a dashboard. They prescribe a pill to dim the lights and they send the person away. It looks like manualized Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. This is the gold standard of evidence based treatment. But in the vacuum of a manual it becomes absurd. A patient might be crying about the loss of a child and a therapist who is strictly adhering to the protocol has to redirect them to the agenda for Module 3 which is identifying cognitive distortions. The model has no room for the tragedy of the situation. It only has room for the erroneous thought that the patient is having about the tragedy. The result is that by most measures we are not actually helping people more effectively than we were fifty years ago. To understand the depth of this failure, we must look at the “smoking gun” of the psychiatric establishment: the STAR*D study. For nearly two decades, this massive, taxpayer-funded study was held up as the irrefutable proof that the “medication merry-go-round” worked. It cost $35 million and was cited thousands of times to justify the idea that if a patient didn't get better on one antidepressant, you simply switched them to another, and then another. The study claimed a “cumulative remission rate” of 67%. It told us that two-thirds of people would be cured if they just complied with the protocol. This was a lie built on methodological quicksand. A forensic re-analysis of the data (Pigott et al., 2023) revealed that the researchers had inflated their success rates through a series of stunning methodological sleights of hand. The original design called for the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) to be the primary outcome measure. But when that scale wasn't showing the numbers they wanted, investigators switched to a secondary, unblinded, self-report questionnaire (the QIDS-SR) which painted a rosier picture. Furthermore, the re-analysis exposed that hundreds of patients who dropped out due to side effects were excluded from the failure count, effectively scrubbing the negative data. Even worse, over 900 patients who didn't even meet the minimum severity for depression were included to boost the numbers. When the data was re-analyzed using the study's original criteria and including all participants, the cumulative remission rate plummeted from 67% to 35%. But the most damning statistic is the sustained recovery rate. Of the 4,041 patients who entered the trial, only a tiny fraction achieved remission and actually stayed well. When accounting for dropouts and relapses over the one-year follow-up period, a mere 108 patients achieved remission and stayed well without relapsing. That is a sustained recovery rate of 2.7%. If a heart surgery or cancer treatment had a failure rate of 97.3%, it would be abandoned. Yet, this study was championed by investigators with deep financial ties to the pharmaceutical industry, and the results were codified into clinical guidelines that still rule the profession today. This is the indictment: we have built an entire system of care on a statistical fabrication, prioritizing the protection of the model over the healing of the human. I have big problems with Freud. I have big problems with classical psychoanalysis. I am more of a Jungian. But here is what the depth psychologists understood that the biomedical model forgot. Humans are not just biological machines. We are meaning making creatures who navigate the world through story. When you take away our stories you do not make us more rational. You make us lost. The Flock of Dodos This separation of science from narrative has hurt the researchers too. In his book The Ghost Lab journalist Matt Hongoltz-Hetling uses the flock of dodos metaphor to describe this phenomenon. He argues that specialized creatures that are perfectly adapted to narrow environments become extinct when conditions change. Academic science has become a flock of dodos. A neuroscientist studies one particular brain region. A psychologist studies one particular therapeutic intervention. An anthropologist studies one particular culture. Nobody is allowed to step back and ask what all of this means together. When you silo information into separate academic disciplines instead of organizing it into a holistic understanding you kill the narratives that are already there. You cannot see the story until you step back far enough to recognize the pattern. Heidegger and the AI Bubble One of the primary functions of a subjective narrative in an objective field like psychotherapy is that it lets us start with things we consider self evident. These are things that do not need evidence because they are the ground upon which evidence stands. Things like humanity is important. Things like we contain multiplicities and conflicting parts. Things like consciousness is a mystery. The biomedical model has no way to accommodate these self evident truths because they are not measurable. You cannot run a randomized controlled trial on human dignity. Martin Heidegger understood this trajectory. He warned that science and technology were becoming self justifying systems that asked only whether something could be done and never whether it should be done. We are watching this play out right now with Large Language Models and Artificial Intelligence. The tech industry is boiling seawater and consuming enormous amounts of our remaining resources to build ever larger systems. As Ed Zitron has documented the current AI boom is likely a bubble that will crash and burn. It may leave us with a Google monopoly on Gemini that will not actually help anybody. Should we be doing this? Should we be fundamentally restructuring our economy around technology whose benefits are speculative at best? The Heideggerian answer is that we are not even capable of asking these questions properly because we have lost the narrative framework within which “should” makes sense. When everything is reduced to capability and efficiency the concept of values disappears. The Perennial and the Possible Can we just recognize that having a livable planet is probably a self evidencing goal? Can we recognize that having a psychotherapy willing to engage with perennial philosophy might be more valuable than another meta analysis demonstrating small effect sizes for manualized interventions? This is what I mean by reintroducing narrative. I do not mean replacing evidence with myth. I mean recognizing that the facts do not speak for themselves. Data requires interpretation. Interpretation requires a framework. And frameworks are stories about what matters. The story science forgot is the story of science itself. It is the story of how inquiry emerged from human communities trying to understand their world. We can recover this story. We can rebuild the connections that the academic silos have severed. The path is there. It always has been. We just need to be brave enough to walk it. The Exodus of the Sick If academic science has become a flock of dodos clinical practice has become something arguably worse. It has become a reenactment of the Milgram experiment where the system plays the role of the authority figure and the patient plays the victim. We often remember Stanley Milgram's famous 1961 study as a lesson about the capacity for evil but its deeper lesson was about the capacity for distance. When the subject had to physically touch the victim compliance with the order to harm them dropped to 30 percent. The White Coat only retained its authority when it created a buffer between the human actions and their consequences. Modern psychotherapy has built a massive administrative White Coat that separates the healer from the healed. This is not just a metaphor. It is a structural reality that is actively driving patients out of the profession and into the arms of pseudoscience. The Bureaucracy as Trauma For a patient in crisis the Evidence Based system often functions as a machine of exclusion. A study on healthcare administrative burdens reveals that the psychological cost of navigating billing and insurance denials and intake forms acts as a friction that hits the most vulnerable the hardest. We ask trauma survivors to retell their stories to three different intake coordinators before they ever see a therapist. This process is itself retraumatizing. When they finally reach a provider they are often met with the biomedical gaze which is a checklist driven assessment that reduces their complex narrative of suffering to a code for billing. As the Australian Psychological Society has noted the chemical imbalance theory and the medicalization of distress have failed to reduce stigma and have instead left patients feeling defective and unheard. The result is a profound Low Trust environment. Theodore Porter in his book Trust in Numbers argues that we only rely on strict mechanical numbers when we do not trust people. We use the DSM and manualized protocols because insurers do not trust clinicians to judge and clinicians do not trust themselves to deviate. The Great Split: Why Research and Practice Are Divorcing This creates a fundamental schism that explains why the profession feels like it is cracking in half. On one side you have the academic researchers who are incentivized by grant funding and publication metrics. To get these rewards they must isolate variables and create reproducible manualized protocols. This means they must strip away the very thing that makes therapy work which is the messy and unrepeatable human relationship. On the other side you have the clinicians who are incentivized by patient outcomes. They are in the room with the messiness. They see that the manualized protocol fails the complex trauma patient so they improvise. They integrate. They use intuition. The academic looks at the clinician and sees a cowboy who ignores the data. The clinician looks at the academic and sees a bureaucrat who has never treated a suicidal patient. This is why the research is no longer informing the practice. We have created two different languages. The researcher speaks in p-values and population averages while the clinician speaks in case studies and individual breakthroughs. Why Pseudoscience Wins the Trust War This low trust environment creates a vacuum that wellness influencers are all too happy to fill. We often mock the public for turning to unverified supplements and TikTok diagnosticians and quantum mysticism. But we have to ask what these influencers are providing that we are not. They are providing narrative. They are providing connection. They are providing a. parasocial yes but still, High Trust experience. A recent analysis suggests that wellness fads thrive not because people are stupid but because the influencers offer a feeling of personal validation that the medical system denies. Even AI chatbots are now being described by users as more humane than doctors because the AI listens to the whole story without looking at a watch or a checklist. When a patient is told by a doctor that their pain is idiopathic or psychosomatic because it does not show up on a lab test and then an influencer tells them I see you and I believe you and here is a story about why this is happening the patient will choose the influencer every time. The trust gap drives them away from care that might actually help and toward solutions that feel good but do nothing. The Clinician's Moral Injury This leaves the ethical psychotherapist in a state of moral injury. We are forced to participate in a system that we know is alienating the very people we are trying to help. We are trained to value the therapeutic alliance or the bond of trust above all else yet we work in a system designed to sever it with paperwork and time limits and standardized protocols. We have to put down the White Coat of administrative distance. We have to stop hiding behind the Evidence Based label when that label is being used to deny the reality of the person in front of us. Proposals for a Unified Future If we want to stop this exodus and heal the split we need specific structural changes. We cannot just hope for better insurance reimbursement. We need to change what we consider valid science. First we must re-legitimize the systematic case study. For a century the detailed narrative of a single patient was the gold standard of learning. We replaced it with the aggregate data of the randomized controlled trial. We need to bring it back. We need journals that publish rigorous detailed accounts of what actually happens in the room when a patient gets better. Second we need to build open source repositories for clinical observation. Currently the wisdom of the field is locked behind for profit paywalls or lost in the private notes of isolated therapists. We need a Wikipedia of Clinical Practice where thousands of clinicians can document what they are seeing in real time. If ten thousand therapists report that somatic processing helps complex trauma that is a data set that rivals any RCT. Third we need to teach philosophy and narrative in graduate school again. We are training technicians when we should be training healers. A therapist who knows how to read a spreadsheet but does not know how to understand a story is useless to a human being in crisis. If we do not offer a therapy that is human and narrative and deeply relational we will continue to lose our patients to those who do even if what they are offering is a lie. The Mirror and the Map: Why Math is a Story We often treat mathematics as if it were the bedrock of reality itself. We act as though a p-value is a piece of the universe, like a rock or a proton. But we must remember that math is not the thing itself. It is a representation of the thing. It is a map, not the territory. It is a mirror, not the face. Theodore Porter's work in Trust in Numbers reminds us that we reach for these mirrors when we do not trust our own eyes. But the mirror is useless without someone to look into it and interpret the reflection. Data by itself is pointless. It is a pile of bricks without an architect. It requires interpretation to become meaning, and interpretation is fundamentally a narrative act. When we try our best to make a purely objective study, we are still telling a story. We are saying, “These numbers represent this phenomenon.” Then another researcher comes along, looks at the same numbers, and tells a different story: “No, they represent that.” This conflict isn't a failure of science; it is science. The Storytellers of Science The greatest breakthroughs in history did not come from people who just crunched numbers. They came from people who could see the story the numbers were trying to tell. These stories are really damn interesting, often stranger and more beautiful than fiction. Consider August Kekulé. He didn't discover the structure of the benzene molecule by staring at a spreadsheet. He discovered it by dreaming of a snake eating its own tail—the Ouroboros. His subjective, narrative brain provided the image that unlocked the objective chemical reality. The data was there, but it needed a myth to make it intelligible. Look at Quantum Physics. The raw math of quantum mechanics is cold and abstract. But when physicists like Erwin Schrödinger or Werner Heisenberg looked at that data, they saw a story about uncertainty, about cats that are both alive and dead, about a universe that only decides what it is when it is observed. They didn't just calculate; they interpreted. They told a story about reality that was so radical it changed how we understand existence. Even in psychology, the data of the “talking cure” was messy and anecdotal until Freud and Jung gave us the language of the Unconscious and the Archetype. Were they objectively “right” in every detail? No. But they gave us a framework—a story—that allowed us to navigate the chaos of the human mind. They provided the map that allowed us to enter the territory. The Final Integration We have spent the last fifty years trying to strip this storytelling capacity out of our profession in a misguided attempt to be taken seriously by the “hard” sciences. In doing so, we have thrown away our most powerful tool. The brain is a story-processing machine. To treat it with checklists and spreadsheets is to deny its fundamental nature. We need to be brave enough to pick up the mirror again. We need to be brave enough to look at the data—whether it's the 2.7% recovery rate of STAR*D or the trembling pupil of a trauma patient—and ask, “What is the story here?” The path forward isn't about choosing between science and narrative. It is about realizing that science is a narrative. It is the grandest, most complex, most rigorous story we have ever tried to tell. And it is time we started telling it properly again. More @ https://gettherapybirmingham.com/
The day (and show) begins with the revelation of amazingly positive economic news for the U.S. Gross Domestic Product growth exceeded, in dramatic fashion, what the' expectations were. We break that all down at the top of today's show.Rosie ODonell -- former actor and comedian -- has a brand new one-word name for President Trump. She now calls Trump "IT". Of course, she thinks, that's going to make a difference to everyone else who dislikes Trump. Me? I wonder why I even cared enough to cover this story on today's show!At the top of our second hour we share a mind-boggling audio segment that contains an unbelievable account of there having been an actual operation called "White Coat" perpetrated in south Florida by a group of doctors, pharmacists, and overseas very-connected individuals who for years operated a process of quietly killing people who checked into a Florida hospital for some mild surgery that were quietly murdered by medication disguised as something other than it was labeled that killed numerous individuals. That's just the beginning. The medicine killed them. However, in most cases, they actually sold that person's major organs to Chinese leaders and industry titans for millions of dollars. No one ever caught on! Fortunately, the system they established is gone, though an unknown number of family members are living without husbands, wives, or children.
As the reaction to the Bondi terror attacks continues, we travel back in time and head to what was once Australia's most controversial mosque where 15-year-old Muslim school boy turned Islamic State terrorist, Farhad Jabar was allegedly radicalised and given a gun. In part two, we do the rounds with the White Coats, an Islamic charity run out of a Mosque in nearby Granville, responsible for feeding Sydney's homeless and, in a round about way, combatting extremism. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This episode is sponsored by Lightstone DIRECT. Lightstone DIRECT invites you to partner with a $12B AUM real estate institution as you grow your portfolio. Access the same single-asset multifamily and industrial deals Lightstone pursues with its own capital – Lightstone co-invests a minimum of 20% in each deal alongside individual investors like you. You're an institution. Time to invest like one. _____________ This Episode is also sponsored by Ryze Health Every minute counts in medicine—so why waste it on clunky admin work? With Ryze Health, practice management becomes effortless. Our all-in-one platform streamlines scheduling, patient communications, and insurance verification, giving you fewer no-shows, faster check-ins, and happier patients. Free yourself from paperwork and phone tag so you can focus on what truly matters: providing care. Visit http://ryzehealth.com/BootstrapMD today and see how simple running your practice can be. ______________ That quiet voice asking, "What if I walked away from patient care forever?" isn't weakness, it's clarity. In this powerful episode of Bootstrap MD, Dr. Mike Woo-Ming tackles the question almost every burned-out physician has asked in silence: "What if I leave patient care… for good?" With physician burnout at an all-time high and more doctors quietly exploring nonclinical exits than ever before, Mike delivers the real-talk conversation you won't hear in the doctors' lounge. He walks through the emotional rollercoaster; grief, fear, guilt, and the full-blown identity crisis, then flips the script: your MD isn't a life sentence to the exam room. It's a superpower you can take anywhere. From pharma and biotech roles to CMO tracks, education and content empires, and full-blown entrepreneurship, Mike maps the proven nonclinical paths and shares exactly how to test the waters without blowing up your life or your license. If you're burned out, questioning your identity, or wondering what's on the other side of clinical medicine, this episode is your permission slip to explore what's next—without guilt, without shame, and with a real plan. Three Actionable Takeaways: Journal the truth today: Answer these three questions honestly (1) If I weren't a doctor, what would my ideal workday look like? (2) What parts of medicine do I genuinely love vs. dread? (3) What am I most afraid people will think if I step away? Clarity starts on paper. Talk to people ahead of you: Talk to 2 or 3 physicians who have already left patient care and are genuinely thriving, not just complaining;. Ask about their emotional journey, money realities, and the one thing they wish they knew sooner. Come meet dozens of them at DrPodFest.com this January. Calculate your exact financial runway this weekend; how many months of expenses do you have saved? Knowing your real number turns "What if I fail?" into "I have X months to experiment." Then start one tiny nonclinical side project (chart review, an article, a paid consult) to gather evidence there's life beyond the bedside. About the Show: Bootstrap MD is the ultimate podcast for physician entrepreneurs looking to escape traditional healthcare and control their financial futures. Hosted by Dr. Mike Woo-Ming, a successful physician, entrepreneur, and investor, the show delivers actionable insights on starting businesses, creating passive income, and navigating healthcare entrepreneurship. Featuring interviews with industry leaders, physicians, and experts in telemedicine and digital health, it's your guide to building a profitable, fulfilling career. Tune in weekly at http://bootstrapmd.com About the Host: Dr. Mike Woo-Ming has over 20 years of experience as a physician entrepreneur. He's built and sold multiple seven-figure companies and now leads Executive Medical, a group of clinics specializing in age management and aesthetics. Through BootstrapMD, he mentors physicians in business, content creation, and autonomy. Let's Connect: www.https://www.bootstrapmd.com Want to start a podcast? Check out the Doctor Podcast Network!
I was recently interviewed by Amanda Baron from the podcast, Behind the White Coat. I just had to share it here because it's such a fun interview, jam-packed with relationship wisdom! Buy your copy of It Just Takes One on Amazon here. Write a review here. Sign up for weekly inspiration here.
Let's talk about the racism that Black doctors experience.
In this episode, we talk with Dr. Jim Dahle with some tips and tricks on making your income and dollars work for you! He is the face and voice of finances in EM and we pick his brain for some of his vast fund of knowledge.
What really happens after your doctor closes the exam room door? How do physicians feel when they can't give you the time you deserve? The healthcare system has trained us to focus on symptoms, tests, and diagnoses, but we rarely discuss the human experiences on both sides of medicine.Drawing from nearly two decades in healthcare, I'm pulling back the curtain to reveal what doctors wish every patient understood about their reality. The truth might surprise you: physicians carry your stories home, cry over difficult cases, and often work while sicker than the patients they're treating. Behind the professional demeanor lies deep caring that extends far beyond the brief medical encounter.The modern healthcare system places impossible demands on both doctors and patients. With specialists facing hundreds of new consultation requests monthly while already working at capacity, the math simply doesn't add up. Most physicians work 50-60 hour weeks with months-long waitlists, yet still face criticism for seeming rushed during appointments. This episode explains why canceling a clinic creates cascading problems that follow a doctor for months, and why your physician might choose to work through illness rather than reschedule patients who've waited months for care.Beyond time constraints, we explore the power of lifestyle medicine, the uncertainty inherent in medical practice, and the need for collaborative healthcare models. I've witnessed patients reverse chronic conditions through consistent lifestyle changes, but guiding these transformations requires time that our current system rarely allows. The future likely involves integrated teams of specialists working together to support patients holistically.Whether you're frustrated with your healthcare experience or simply curious about what happens behind the scenes, this episode offers perspective that could transform your next medical visit. Want to help create a better system? Start by understanding the realities your healthcare providers face every day.Go check out my website for tons of free resources on how to transition towards a healthier diet and lifestyle.You can download my free plant-based recipes eBook and a ton of other free resources by visiting the Digital Downloads tab of my website at https://www.plantbaseddrjules.com/shopDon't forget to check out my blog at https://www.plantbaseddrjules.com/blog You can also watch my educational videos on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMpkQRXb7G-StAotV0dmahQCheck out my upcoming live events and free eCourse, where you'll learn more about how to create delicious plant-based recipes: https://www.plantbaseddrjules.com/Go follow me on social media by visiting my Facebook page and Instagram accountshttps://www.facebook.com/plantbaseddrjuleshttps://www.instagram.com/plantbased_dr_jules/Last but not least, the best way to show your support and to help me spread my message is to subscribe to my podcast and to leave a 5 star review on Apple and Spotify!Thanks so much!Peace, love, plants!Dr. Jules
He's back in the white coat! Actor Jason George joins Café Mocha to talk about his role as Dr. Ben Warren on Grey's Anatomy, what it means to see a strong Black husband and father on screen, and why fans keep coming back after 22 seasons. #JasonGeorge #GreysAnatomy #CafeMochaRadio Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We delve into the transformative intersection of art and healing, examining how creativity can serve as a powerful tool for emotional and spiritual healing. Dr. Vasu Tolia shares invaluable insights, emphasizing the importance of being a perpetual student and the wisdom passed down from parents about listening and observing. As we discuss the healing potential of art, we learn how it has helped our guest process decades of experience in medicine and personal loss. From navigating the challenges of being a woman in both medicine and art to the profound impact her work has had on others, this conversation uncovers the nuances of creativity as a bridge to peace and understanding. Join us as we celebrate the resilience of the human spirit through the lens of artistic expression.The episode captures an enriching dialogue about the intersection of art and healing, where we both share our thoughts on how these realms influence and enrich each other. From the very beginning, I felt the warmth and enthusiasm as we discussed the role of listening—not just in medicine but in the artistic journey. Vasu beautifully articulates the wisdom passed down from their parents, emphasizing the importance of being a lifelong learner and an attentive listener. This serves as a foundation for our exploration of how these principles manifest in both medicine and art, revealing the shared values of compassion and observation that are crucial in both fields.As the conversation unfolds, we delve into personal stories that highlight the healing potential of art. Dr. Tolia shares touching experiences of how their artworks have brought comfort to patients and caregivers alike, illustrating the profound impact art can have on emotional well-being. We reflect on the idea that creating art can be a therapeutic process, allowing artists to navigate their own emotions and experiences while simultaneously offering solace to others. This dual aspect of art—as a personal journey and a communal healing tool—forms the crux of our discussion.Towards the end, we tackle the challenges faced by artists in today's world, particularly regarding the fear of artificial intelligence in the creative space. My guest's pragmatic approach to this concern—embracing technology while maintaining authenticity—provides valuable insights for both budding and established artists. We wrap up our conversation by recognizing the legacy we aim to create, one that emphasizes the importance of using art as a means of healing and connection in a world that often feels fragmented. This episode stands as a testament to the belief that creativity is not just an outlet for expression, but a vital force for healing and understanding.Takeaways: The importance of being a perpetual student and the value of lifelong learning is emphasized in both art and medicine. Listening beyond the obvious is crucial, whether treating patients or creating art, as it reveals deeper meanings. Art has the power to heal, providing peace and calmness not only to the creator but also to those who experience it. Navigating the art world requires perseverance and building connections, regardless of formal training or mentorship. Creativity can serve as a powerful healing force, helping individuals process emotions and experiences through various art forms. It's essential for artists to start with their feelings and honesty, rather than just striving for beauty in their work.
As healthcare prioritizes profits over people, doctors are organizing to reclaim their profession and protect patients
Defining Moments Podcast: Conversations about Health and Healing
As medicine heeds the call of patient-centered care, it is easy to overlook the other person in the clinic room. Physicians, like patients, have stories. Within the everyday demands of clinical practice, however, their stories are seldom invited and remain untold. In this episode of Defining Moments, medical students Libby Hill and Sumedha Kappagantula join host Dr. Joe Bianco to share their experiences as Executive Producers of Behind the White Coat, an annual storytelling event at Ohio University's Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine. Founded in 2019 by medical students, Behind the White Coat invites students, physicians, medical educators, and staff to reveal their defining moments on the path toward medicine. The conversation invites us to reimagine the white coat as a blank page, ready to receive and reveal our innermost stories. You can learn more about Behind the White Coat and view story archives from previous years here: https://www.ohio.edu/medicine/behind-white-coat. To learn more about the Open Book Project referenced in this episode, listen to Lynn Harter's conversation with Dr. Tracy Shaub: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/defining-moments-podcast-conversations-about-health/id1456643447?i=1000445540298 and read the accompanying Health Communication article: https://doi.org/10.1080/10410236.2018.1551302
Send us a textIn episode 272 of Beyond The Story, Sebastian Rusk interviews Stan Sukhinin, Financial Expert and Fractional CFO for medical clinic owners. Stan shares his journey from corporate lending and investment banking to launching his own hedge fund, as well as the lessons that have shaped his career.Tune in to discover how these formative experiences shaped his career and led him to where he is today.TIMESTAMPS[00:01:02] Business inspiration from childhood.[00:05:39] Financial mismanagement in entrepreneurship.[00:08:49] Fractional CFO for medical clinics.[00:12:11] Fractional CFO benefits for businesses.QUOTES "My mission is to help entrepreneurs never be out of the game because of their financial mismanagement." -Stan Sukhinin"The most important thing is to explain to you where you're wrong and deliver this message in a proper way so that you get it." -Stan Sukhinin"If your best method to manage your finances is just logging in your bank account and checking if it's higher or lower, it's also a symptom, probably at least like, so then just schedule one or two strategic sessions with anyone." -Stan Sukhinin==========================Need help launching your podcast?Schedule a Free Podcast Strategy Call TODAY!PodcastLaunchLabNow.com==========================SOCIAL MEDIA LINKSSebastian RuskInstagram:https://www.instagram.com/podcastlaunchlab/Facebook: Facebook.com/sruskLinkedIn: LinkedIn.com/in/sebastianrusk/YouTube: Youtube.com/@PodcastLaunchLabStan SukhininLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/stan-sukhinin/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stan.sukhinin/ WEBSITEStan Sukhinin: https://www.sukhinin.org/ ==========================Take the quiz now! https://podcastquiz.online/==========================Need Money For Your Business? Our Friends at Closer Capital can help! Click here for more info: PodcastsSUCK.com/money==========================PAYING RENT? Earn airlines when you do with the Bilt Rewards MastercardAPPLY HERE: https://bilt.page/r/2H93-5474
What happens when the job that defined you for decades no longer fits? Dr. Jennifer Edwards returns to discuss that transition from skilled veterinary professional and hospital owner to leadership coach and speaker. Dr. Jennifer Edwards is a veterinarian of over 25 years, a leadership coach and active speaker. She build and sold a successful veterinary practice, and now helps veterinary professionals create positive changes in both their personal and professional lives through proven leadership strategies and evidence-based coaching methods. She currently serves as the Wellness Committee Chair for the New Hampshire Veterinary Medical Association. Find out more about Dr. Edwards at Drjenniferedwards.com Contect Julie at theveterinarylifecoach.com
Today we are talking with a hand surgeon later in his career who has become a multimillionaire. This inspiring doc shared his successes as well as his mistakes on his journey to becoming financially secure. He is a great example of not having to do it perfectly the second you get out of training. Slow and steady learning, growth and savings will pay off in the long run. He feels strongly about the importance of paying yourself first and giving generously. After the interview we are talking about annuities for Finance 101. Since April 2021, more than 650 physicians in the White Coat community have invested over $300 million with DLP Capital, a 12-time Inc. 5000 honoree that offers four private real estate investment funds—one of my favorite ways to invest in real estate. If you're eager to achieve success as a private real estate investor, DLP's impact-focused sponsored funds offer the potential to earn double-digit returns while making an impact on America's affordable housing crisis. Interested in learning more? Head to https://WhiteCoatInvestor.com/DLP today. The White Coat Investor has been helping doctors, dentists, and other high-income professionals with their money since 2011. Our free personal finance resource covers an array of topics including how to use your retirement accounts, getting a doctor mortgage loan, how to manage your student loans, buying physician disability and malpractice insurance, asset allocation & asset location, how to invest in real estate, and so much more. We will help you learn how to manage your finances like a pro so you can stop worrying about money and start living your best life. If you're a high-income professional and ready to get a "fair shake" on Wall Street, The White Coat Investor is for you! Have you achieved a Milestone? You can be on the Milestones to Millionaire Podcast too! Apply here: https://whitecoatinvestor.com/milestones Find 1000's of written articles on the blog: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com Our YouTube channel if you prefer watching videos to learn: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/youtube Student Loan Advice for all your student loan needs: https://studentloanadvice.com Join the community on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Join the community on Twitter: https://twitter.com/WCInvestor Join the community on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Join the community on Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/whitecoatinvestor Learn faster with our Online Courses: https://whitecoatinvestor.teachable.com Sign up for our Newsletter here: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/free-monthly-newsletter
Science journalist Roland Pease asks whether the rounds of cuts, reorganisations and political strong-arming in US science can be weathered, and how they will likely affect us all. Eighty years ago Vannevar Bush proposed what became the pact between government and universities that led to decades of global scientific dominance. Today, US scientists fear the Trump administration is ripping up that agreement, mandating what and what can't be studied, who can study it, and redefining expertise. The specialist agencies are either being closed down or defunded to the extent that tens of thousands of government scientists are already unemployed. Multi-year experiments are being closed down uncompleted. Top universities are besieged by mandates on who and how they hire, tied to their future funding. Data streams that benefit researchers around the globe are being switched off. Even definitions of what counts as evidence are being redrafted. Can the administration's declared aim of "restoring gold standard science", be achieved?
GDP Script/ Top Stories for August 14th Publish Date: August 14th From the BG AD Group Studio Welcome to the Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast. Today is Thursday, August 14th and Happy birthday to Magic Johnson I’m Peyton Spurlock and here are your top stories presented by KIA Mall of Georgia. Gwinnett students outperform state on many milestones tests — but trail in science Buford's David Clark joins race to be Georgia’s next lieutenant governor Police contacted weeks earlier due to CDC shooter's 'thoughts of suicide,' GBI says Plus, Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets on Food Apps All of this and more is coming up on the Gwinnett Daily Post podcast, and if you are looking for community news, we encourage you to listen daily and subscribe! Break 1: MONSTER JAM STORY 1: Gwinnett students outperform state on many milestones tests — but trail in science Gwinnett County Public Schools has some bragging rights—but also some glaring gaps. The latest Milestones and end-of-course test scores show the district outperforming the state in most areas, but science? That’s a different story. The eighth-grade science results are, frankly, shocking: just 0.3% of students scored proficient or higher. Compare that to 28% statewide. Yes, you heard that right—0.3%. GCPS says most of its eighth-graders take the tougher high school physical science test instead, but even there, only 44% hit proficiency, trailing the state’s 57%. There are bright spots, though. Fifth-grade science scores beat state averages, and high school biology students held their own. Math and social studies also showed solid results, with Gwinnett consistently outpacing state averages. English/language arts? Mixed bag. Less than half of students in every grade tested were proficient, with third-graders struggling the most—just 39% hit the mark. The district plans to dig into the data at the Aug. 21 school board meeting. STORY 2: Buford's David Clark joins race to be Georgia’s next lieutenant governor The race for Georgia’s next lieutenant governor just got more crowded. On Tuesday, Rep. David Clark, R-Buford, threw his hat in the ring, becoming the fifth state lawmaker to join the campaign. Clark’s announcement follows state Sen. Blake Tillery, R-Vidalia, who launched his campaign just a day earlier. Both Republicans are hitting familiar notes—tax cuts, immigration crackdowns, and opposition to transgender rights. They join Sens. John F. Kennedy and Steve Gooch, both running on MAGA-friendly platforms aimed squarely at Trump’s base. On the other side of the aisle, Sen. Josh McLaurin, D-Sandy Springs, is the lone Democrat in the race. A vocal Trump critic, McLaurin has made no secret of his disdain for the former president’s policies and legal defiance during this year’s legislative session. The lieutenant governor’s role? Presiding over the Senate and stepping in when the governor’s out. But this race? It’s shaping up to be anything but ordinary. STORY 3: Police contacted weeks earlier due to CDC shooter's 'thoughts of suicide,' GBI says The Georgia Bureau of Investigation shared new details Tuesday about Friday’s shooting outside the CDC’s Atlanta headquarters—a tragedy that left DeKalb County Officer David Rose dead and the suspect, Patrick Joseph White, 30, of Kennesaw, taking his own life. GBI Director Chris Hosey said White had no criminal history but had recently expressed suicidal thoughts, prompting a call to law enforcement weeks earlier. At White’s home, investigators found writings criticizing COVID-19 vaccines—angry, but not overtly threatening. White fired over 500 rounds, hitting six CDC buildings. His weapons, a mix of rifles and a shotgun, belonged to his father, who told investigators White broke into the gun safe. Officer Rose, one of the first responders, was fatally shot by White. “He died a hero,” said FBI Special Agent Paul Brown. “His sacrifice won’t be forgotten.” The investigation is ongoing, and anyone with information is urged to contact the GBI tip line. We have opportunities for sponsors to get great engagement on these shows. Call 770.874.3200 for more info. We’ll be right back Break 2: Ingles Markets 6 STORY 4: PCOM Georgia holds White Coat ceremony On Aug. 8, nearly 200 students from PCOM Georgia’s Physician Assistant and Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine programs slipped into their crisp white coats for the first time—a moment that felt both surreal and monumental. The ceremony, held at the Gas South Convention Center, wasn’t just about the coats. It was about stepping into something bigger: the responsibility, the privilege, the weight of caring for others. Students recited their oath and class mission statement, pledging to lead with compassion and professionalism. For many, it wasn’t just a milestone—it was the start of a dream they’d been chasing for years. STORY 5: Trump throws support behind Jones’ bid for Georgia governor President Donald Trump has thrown his weight behind Lt. Gov. Burt Jones in Georgia’s governor’s race, giving his “complete and total” endorsement in a social media post Monday. Trump praised Jones as a loyal ally who worked “tirelessly” for his campaigns, calling him an early supporter of the MAGA movement. The endorsement could be a game-changer in the GOP primary, where Trump’s base still holds serious sway. Jones faces Attorney General Chris Carr, but he’s already got a fundraising edge—thanks to a 2021 law that lets him raise unlimited funds through a leadership committee. Carr, who doesn’t have that advantage, has taken the fight to federal court, accusing Jones of abusing the system. Meanwhile, the Democratic primary is heating up, with big names like Keisha Lance Bottoms, Jason Esteves, and Michael Thurmond already in the mix. We’ll be right back. Break 3: MONSTER JAM And now here is Leah McGrath from Ingles Markets on Food Apps Break 4: 07.14.22 KIA MOG We’ll have closing comments after this Break 5: MONSTER JAM Signoff – Thanks again for hanging out with us on today’s Gwinnett Daily Post Podcast. If you enjoy these shows, we encourage you to check out our other offerings, like the Cherokee Tribune Ledger Podcast, the Marietta Daily Journal, or the Community Podcast for Rockdale Newton and Morgan Counties. Read more about all our stories and get other great content at www.gwinnettdailypost.com Did you know over 50% of Americans listen to podcasts weekly? Giving you important news about our community and telling great stories are what we do. Make sure you join us for our next episode and be sure to share this podcast on social media with your friends and family. Add us to your Alexa Flash Briefing or your Google Home Briefing and be sure to like, follow, and subscribe wherever you get your podcasts. Produced by the BG Podcast Network Show Sponsors: www.ingles-markets.com www.kiamallofga.com #NewsPodcast #CurrentEvents #TopHeadlines #BreakingNews #PodcastDiscussion #PodcastNews #InDepthAnalysis #NewsAnalysis #PodcastTrending #WorldNews #LocalNews #GlobalNews #PodcastInsights #NewsBrief #PodcastUpdate #NewsRoundup #WeeklyNews #DailyNews #PodcastInterviews #HotTopics #PodcastOpinions #InvestigativeJournalism #BehindTheHeadlines #PodcastMedia #NewsStories #PodcastReports #JournalismMatters #PodcastPerspectives #NewsCommentary #PodcastListeners #NewsPodcastCommunity #NewsSource #PodcastCuration #WorldAffairs #PodcastUpdates #AudioNews #PodcastJournalism #EmergingStories #NewsFlash #PodcastConversations See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Energetic Health Institute Radio with Holly Whalen – Shannon's story began long before credentials were earned — before language even fully formed — guided by the hands of her Muscogee grandfather, who passed down the sacred knowing of plant and Earth medicine. By the age of three, she was already immersed in the rhythms of nature, learning to listen to the whispers of the wind, the pulse of the...
Protect Your Retirement W/ a PHYSICAL Gold IRA https://www.sgtreportgold.com/ CALL( 877) 646-5347 - Noble Gold is Who I Trust This is incredible news. The EU is turning on the white coat killers and holding each "doctor" individually responsible for the genocide in which they willingly took part. Meanwhile, astonishing new research from Caroline Mansfield & Matt Hazen about the vaxed, the unvaxed, MAC codes and extinguishing the nanotech machines, graphene and satanic toxic agenda from our bodies. Remove MAC codes, heavy metals, graphene oxide & nanotech from your blood w/ MaterPeace: https://masterpeacebyhcs.com/?ref=4094 Give Send Go for Dr. Robert Young: https://www.givesendgo.com/helpdryoung TRUTH ON TRIAL documentary: https://x.com/MikkiWillis/status/1926001909325832231 https://rumble.com/embed/v6thxbb/?pub=2peuz
Protect Your Retirement W/ a PHYSICAL Gold IRA https://www.sgtreportgold.com/ CALL( 877) 646-5347 - Noble Gold is Who I Trust As the "peaceful" felons engage in another George-Floyd style Soros-CIA Colour Revolution on the streets of Los Angeles, John Richardson returns to SGT Report to explain how when the white coat killers recently told him "Let us cut out your intestines or you'll be dead within ten days", he said NO THANKS - and then fully recovered! STAY CANCER-FREE: Get the miracle of B17, B15 [& Apricot seeds] HERE! https://rncstore.com/SGTREPORT Apply Your Discount Code at Checkout: SGTREPORT Get the NANO-TECH, Graphene & Heavy Metals out of your blood w/ Master Peace https://masterpeacebyhcs.com/?ref=4094 https://rumble.com/embed/v6selk1/?pub=2peuz
Today we are talking with a CRNA who has reached a net worth of a half million dollars. She has followed the White Coat way and lived frugally and saved a healthy portion of her income and has watched her wealth grow over time. She has a supportive partner who has always been on the same page. After the interview we will be talking about investing cash for Finance 101. Doc2Doc is a lending solution built by doctors, for doctors, offering tailored financial products to support every stage of a physician's career. Whether you're a fourth-year medical student preparing for residency, transitioning into practice, or an experienced physician, Doc2Doc provides loans to cover relocation, consolidate debt, or tackle unexpected expenses. With a quick online application, no prepayment penalties, and millions of dollars already funded to White Coat Investor members, we make financing simple and stress-free. Empowering doctors with the funds they need for both work and play, Doc2Doc is here to support your journey from training to practice. Visit https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/doc2doc to learn more. The White Coat Investor has been helping doctors with their money since 2011. Our free financial planning resource covers a variety of topics from doctor mortgage loans and refinancing medical school loans to physician disability insurance and malpractice insurance. Learn about loan refinancing or consolidation, explore new investment strategies, and discover loan programs specifically aimed at helping doctors. If you're a high-income professional and ready to get a "fair shake" on Wall Street, The White Coat Investor channel is for you! Be a Guest on The Milestones to Millionaire Podcast: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/milestones Main Website: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com Student Loan Advice: https://studentloanadvice.com YouTube: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/youtube Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Twitter: https://twitter.com/WCInvestor Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thewhitecoatinvestor Subreddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/whitecoatinvestor Online Courses: https://whitecoatinvestor.teachable.com Newsletter: https://www.whitecoatinvestor.com/free-monthly-newsletter
Justin Goodman joins the show to discuss the White Coat Waste Project, then it's time for Mechanic Monday! Visit the Howie Carr Radio Network website to access columns, podcasts, and other exclusive content.