Medical Humanities: Colleen Farrell - Part I
![Medical Humanities: Colleen Farrell - Part I](https://www.podcastworld.io/podcast-images/postcall-podcast-wozhz1li.webp)
Colleen Farrell is a medical resident who started a twitter chat aimed at marrying humanities and medicine.
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Nick Andrews Twitter: @Tribnic
Colleen Farrell is a medical resident who started a twitter chat aimed at marrying humanities and medicine.
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Nick Andrews Twitter: @Tribnic
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Nick Andrews Twitter: @Tribnic
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Nick on Twitter: @tribnic
Alex Leow, MD, PhD, is both a psychiatrist and a classical pianist. She joins host Nick Andrews to discuss her work as a clinician, medical educator, and researcher, as well as how music is a refuge from the daily grind.
Kirti Magudia, MD, and Thomas Ng, MD, continue their conversation with host Nick Andrews, sharing their experiences as parents of young children as well as early career physicians.
Dr. Magudia and Dr. Ng, both diagnostic radiology fellows at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, discuss traditional ways of mitigating against burnout – practices such as exercise, meditation, and carving out self-care time – as well as finding meaning in researching and advocating for work-life integration for residents.
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Nick Andrews Twitter: @Tribnic
Kirti Magudia, MD, and Thomas Ng, MD, join Nick to talk about their research regarding family leave in the nation's top medical schools. The research was published in JAMA. Dr. Magudia talks about their experience doing this research, what they learned, and what the next steps are.
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Nick Andrews Twitter: @Tribnic
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Contact 500 WIM: Medicine@500WomenScientists.org
500 WIM online: http://bit.ly/2DYqMEe
500 WIM Twitter: @500wim
Kate Gerrul Twitter: @KateGerull
Maren Loe Twitter: @maren_loe
Nick Andrews Twitter: @tribnic
Kate Gerrul and Maren Loe founded the non-profit 500 Women in Medicine. Ms. Gerull and Ms. Loe are third-year medical students at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
According to Gerull and Loe, the aim is to create a network of support and advancement for women in medicine. 500 Women in Medicine is a pod of the organization 500 Women Scientists.
In this episode, Nick Andrews speaks with the two innovators about their motivation to found this organization.
Contact us: podcasts@mdege.com
Contact 500 WIM: Medicine@500WomenScientists.org
500 WIM online: http://bit.ly/2DYqMEe
500 WIM Twitter: @500wim
Kate Gerrul Twitter: @KateGerull
Maren Loe Twitter: @maren_loe
Nick Andrews Twitter: @tribnic
Kate Gerulland Maren Loe founded the non-profit 500 Women in Medicine. Ms. Gerull and Ms. Loe are third-year medical students at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.
According to Gerull and Loe, the aim is to create a network of support and advancement for women in medicine. 500 Women in Medicine is a pod of the organization 500 Women Scientists.
In this episode, Nick Andrews speaks with the two innovators about their motivation to found this organization.
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Nick on Twitter: @tribnic
David Henry, MD, is the host of Blood & Cancer, the official podcast of MDedge Hematology/Oncology. In this episode, Nick and Dr. Henry discuss advances and excitement in the oncology as well as the opportunities that podcast provides and tips for dealing with burnout.
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Twitter: @mdedgetweets
Monique Tello, MD, is back this week for part II of her conversation with Nick Andrews. Last week, Dr. Tello spoke about her experience being cyberbullied by anti-vaccination protesters. This week, Dr. Tello talks about how she got her new book published and how you can, too.
Dontact the show: podcasts@mdedge.com
MDedge on Twitter: @MDedgeTweets
Dr. Tello on Twitter: @drmoniquetello
Anti-vaccination protesters targeted Monique A. Tello, MD, MPH (http://bit.ly/2QSYMoB), in late summer 2018 by leaving bad online ratings and writing false and defamatory comments in her online profiles. Dr. Tell wrote about her experience in a blog post (http://bit.ly/2FyR1Dd) where she opened up about how difficult the process has been, and how she has found support in a community of her colleagues.
Contact us: podcasts@mdedge.com
Ray Barfied, MD, is professor of pediatrics and of Christian philosophy at Duke University. In part I of the conversation, Dr. Barfield and MDedge host Nick Andrews discussed physician burnout and Dr. Barfield’s journey back to medicine. In this episode, Dr. Barfield and Nick discuss philosophy and science.
You can listen to part I of this conversation here: http://bit.ly/2QxXAHh
Raymond Barfield, MD (http://bit.ly/2TplWVi), nearly left medicine altogether after experiencing burnout. Now, he joins the Postcall Podcast to discuss why he's back, what he's working on to prevent burnout, and how he wants to remake pre-med education.
You can read more from Dr. Barfield's story here: http://bit.ly/2R78zwn
Introducing the Postcall Podcast from MDedge. In the first edition, MDedge producer and host, Nick Andrews sits down with Lorenzo Norris, MD. Dr. Norris is the host of the MDedge Psychcast (http://bit.ly/2uWxaG6) as well as the editor-in-chief of MDedge Psychiatry and Dean at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.
Carol Bernstein, MD (http://bit.ly/2G1PQNJ), joins Nick Andrews once again this week to talk about physician burnout and physician suicide.
Carol Bernstein on the differences between burnout and depression and why they're important.
Nick Cuneo, MD (http://bit.ly/2PaCYnM), has found his voice in writing narrative voice in medicine. Some of his pieces explore how his ‘97 Toyota Camry taught him about empathy in practice (http://bit.ly/2SiG9vt), why doctors can’t afford to stay out of politics anymore (https://wbur.fm/2SjgeE8), and a narrative perspective on the crushing weight of collateral damage (http://bit.ly/2RpRKJ1). You can find him on Twitter, @nickcuneo
This is part II of the conversation between Nick Andrews (@tribnic) and Craig and Luis (Episode 6).
In this Episode, Nick Andrews (@tribnic) welcomes the first med student and the first muggle to join the program. Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia partnered with the Lantern Theater Company to offer a class that teachers staging, acting, and playwriting. The class is designed specifically for med students, current residents, attending physicians and any other medical professionals. The class eliminates hierarchy, encourages artistic exploration, and can lead to increased empathy when dealing with patients and their families. Nick, Luis, and Craig also recognize the similarities between medicine and art but also highlight what we can learn from different passions.
In this edition of the MDedge Postcall Podcast, Heather Yeo, MD, MHS (http://bit.ly/2qbGW5B), discusses how and why surgical residents are leaving their residency in favor of other specialties.
When Dr. Yeo was a resident, one of her co-residents left surgery. Dr. Yeo says that this resident was highly talented technically and on-point clinically. After this resident left, Dr. Yeo began investigating this and looking into what can be done to keep surgical trainees in surgery.
More on Dr. Yeo:
Twitter:
http://bit.ly/2SjGpLx or @heatheryoemd
Research:
(http://bit.ly/2yHqj6v)
(http://bit.ly/2AsqcNi)
(http://bit.ly/2PVWBRI)
Jaya Aysola, MD, MPH (http://bit.ly/2J65PYJ), joins Nick to talk about workplace inclusivity among genders. Dr. Aysola is an assistant professor of medicine and pediatrics at the Perlman School of Medicine. Her primary appointment in the Divisions of General Internal Medicine.
In early August 2018, Dr. Aysola and her colleagues published a qualitative narrative analysis (http://bit.ly/2R1KmDo) regarding the perceptions of the factors associated with inclusive workplaces in healthcare.
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