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    accolade

    Explore " accolade" with insightful episodes like "South Australian Country Hour", "Ep. 44 : Les Pouvoirs Magiques (et Scientifiques) d'un Bon Câlin", "Adventures in Dosage: the cherry on the sparkling cake", "Reinventing Healthcare After the Pandemic: Dr. Shantanu Nundy, Chief Medical Officer at Accolade" and "Helping Patients Figure Out the Next Step - Dr. Shantanu Nundy, Chief Medical Officer at Accolade" from podcasts like ""South Australian Country Hour", "Une Alchimie de l'Eveil", "Wine Blast with Susie and Peter", "Raise the Line" and "Raise the Line"" and more!

    Episodes (7)

    Ep. 44 : Les Pouvoirs Magiques (et Scientifiques) d'un Bon Câlin

    Ep. 44 : Les Pouvoirs Magiques (et Scientifiques) d'un Bon Câlin

    Dans ce nouvel épisode de votre chaîne de podcasts Une Alchimie de l'Eveil, Iker Aguirre vous révèle les secrets du bien-être que recèle un bon câlin.

    Faisant partie de ce que l'on a appelé "médecine universelle", les hugs ont été un sujet d'étude qui a attiré la curiosité de très nombreuses universités et équipes de scientifiques.

    Dans cet épisode vous découvrirez les nombreuses vertus d'une accolade, prouvées scientifiquement, en plus des caractéristiques essentielles d'un bon hug qui marche ! En plus, vous apprendrez que les câlins de papa ou maman sont vraiment magiques ! Nos enfants en savent un rayon quand il s'agit d'amour !

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    Cet épisode vous est présenté par younity : des formations e-learning pour grandir en conscience.

    Des questions ? Ecrivez nous à : francais@younity.one
    Retrouvez-nous  sur Facebook, ou sur Instagram.

    Cette chaine vous est présentée par Konxus Media, le média pour une Vie Pro et Perso en Conscience.

    Elle a pour but de diffuser au plus grand nombre et gratuitement des clés concrètes et applicables pour la transformation et la croissance personnelles. Nous voulons apporter des contenus positifs, constructifs, pédagogiques, humains et responsables, servis avec pragmatisme et une approche pratique qui donne toute sa place au bon sens et à l’expérience vécue .

    Le moment est venu de réinventer notre humanité et ce n’est pas en restant dans la cadre que nous allons le faire.

    Si vous aimez cette chaine et son contenu, aidez-nous à les rendre accessibles au plus grand nombre !

    • Partagez et faites découvrir cette chaine à vos amis !
    • Donnez votre avis sur Apple Podcasts et Spotify !

    Adventures in Dosage: the cherry on the sparkling cake

    Adventures in Dosage: the cherry on the sparkling cake

    Did you know that sugar and brandy can be added to sparkling wine? Were you aware that champagne was originally a sweet fizz? And that it regularly had things like port, cognac, elderberry, kirsch and raspberry brandy added to it?

    Now there’s a plucky English wine producer adding all sorts of fun things to his fizz – from Sauternes to Sherry, Madeira and Tokaji – to see what’s possible. His aim? To potentially help create, ‘a new category in wine’.

    Welcome to the world of dosage. That small addition that’s commonly popped into to the world’s very finest sparkling wines – but which people don’t talk about very much. 

    Think of it as a ‘good’ wine additive. Yet producers don’t tend to be particularly adventurous in terms of trying new things to add in their dosage. 

    Until now. 

    Our story starts with us trying these bold, experimental new English sparkling wines before launching into fascinating conversations with their maker, English Master of Wine Justin Howard-Sneyd MW, as well as sparkling guru Ed Carr of Accolade and Champagne Louis Roederer chef de cave Jean-Baptiste Lécaillon.

    Along the way we explain what dosage actually is, why it’s used and delve excitedly into its history and future. We look into why people describe dosage as, ‘seasoning’ for fine fizz, and what role oaked wine, brandy and various types of sugar play in its make-up. 

    Some wine pros use the term dosage as shorthand for the level of residual sugar in a sparkling wine. But, as we discuss, that’s an over-simplification that misses the bigger picture and purpose of dosage.

    We consider the trend for zero-dosage wines and explain why we’re not fans of this category – despite Susie having written her Master of Wine dissertation on the topic.

    ‘When it's done well, dosage can help a wine  taste sublime,' says Susie. 'The art of dosage needs more respect and awareness...and more winemakers need to do it properly.’

    We hope you enjoy the programme! Do let us know your thoughts on Instagram or Twitter.

    As ever, all wine details, links and more are on our website: Show notes for Wine Blast S3 E20: Adventures in Dosage.

    Wines featured in the episode:

    • Hart of Gold English sparkling wine Brut, 12%
    • Louis Roederer et Philippe Starck Brut Nature Champagne 2012, 12%
    • House of Arras Cuvée 1601 Brut Elite, 13%
    • Bollinger RD 1976 Champagne Extra Brut, 12%

    Reinventing Healthcare After the Pandemic: Dr. Shantanu Nundy, Chief Medical Officer at Accolade

    Reinventing Healthcare After the Pandemic: Dr. Shantanu Nundy, Chief Medical Officer at Accolade
    "Healthcare needs to become distributed, digitally enabled, and decentralized.” That’s the core message in the new book Care After Covid: What the Pandemic Revealed Is Broken in Healthcare and How to Reinvent It, by Dr. Shantanu Nundy. Between his work as a primary care physician, lecturer in health policy at George Washington University Milken Institute for Public Health, advisor to the World Bank on digital health and innovation and role as chief medical officer at Accolade, Nundy brings a lot to the national conversation about improving healthcare. Although plenty needs to be done by regulators, policymakers and other stakeholders, Nundy is also looking to his fellow providers to drive change. Taking the trajectory of telemedicine as an example he says, “we could have moved to virtual care sooner. Part of it was regulation, but part of it was us. We could have been giving our patients' blood pressure cuffs to take home with them. Part of it was regulation, but part of it was us. I think the pandemic has shown that you don't have to wait for someone in DC to solve a problem for you. There's so much that we all know because we're in exam rooms every day and there are things we can do to make care better.” Tune in for a trenchant discussion with host Rishi Desai on removing barriers to change, patient empowerment, changing medical education, training doctors to be mass communicators and much more.

    Helping Patients Figure Out the Next Step - Dr. Shantanu Nundy, Chief Medical Officer at Accolade

    Helping Patients Figure Out the Next Step - Dr. Shantanu Nundy, Chief Medical Officer at Accolade
    When helping out at his family's small nonprofit in India during college, Shantanu Nundy quickly realized the magic doctors can work in a relatively short amount of time, especially when caring for people who are medically underserved. That formative experience led to a career in primary care medicine that’s been shaped by his aptitude for engineering and “building things.” In fact, in his first week of medical school he devised a new pharmacy sorting system to reduce medication errors. Among the most interesting stops in his career is the Human Diagnosis Project -- sometimes described as “the Wikipedia for medicine” -- which combines input from providers around the world with machine learning to build an online system that maps the best steps for patients to follow. Helping patients figure out what to do next is also part of his work as chief medical officer at Accolade, a company that works with employers and health plans to make it easier for people to understand and use their benefits, hopefully leading to improved health. Listen in as host Shiv Gaglani taps Nundy’s expertise blending innovation and medicine to take a look ahead at healthcare in a post-COVID world, including the risk that the rise in virtual care will create even greater fragmentation and complexity for patients.

    Desmond Frey: Four Key points to grow as a Mentor

    Desmond Frey: Four Key points to grow as a Mentor

    Desmond Frey is the Lead International Pastor at Christliches Zentrum Burhegg in Zurich, Switzerland. He teaches, coaches and helps develop pastors and leaders in their ministry rolls and callings. Desmond is the overseer for several churches in Europe and also helps in missions with an emphasis of fighting against Human Trafficking, especially in Moldova. Desmond along with his wife Sandy host 2-4 "Refresh" marriage seminars each year around the world. 
    Desmond and Sandy have been married for 34+ years and have four children (2 sons and 2 daughters) and 9 grandchildren.

    In this episode I asked 4 key questions that you need to know to help you grow as leader, mentor or what to look for in a mentor. We will take a look at some misconceptions that you feel may keep you from stepping out to fulfill a calling or to even grow in your faith.

    Question #1- What is the one thing that you wish you had known before you started in your ministry or mentoring others?
    Response- Learning to say "NO" at times. You can oversaturate to the point that thoses that you are teaching are unable to retain the material.
    Quote by Zig Ziglar- "The differencef between successful and unsuccessful people is the power to say "No"'.

    Question #2- What is the biggest mistake you have made as a mentor, husband, father, leader or christian?
    Response- To realize the patterns that happen in life. Those times of negative patterns to please people and cause a self sabotage in your life. Neglecting family to get praise from pastors and leaders; and feeding on the praise and accolades that feed into the flesh of pride. 

    Question #3- What is the #1 tip that you can give to help other men as they mentor and disciple other men?
    Response- You need to be careful and selective of who you mentor, or pour your life into. You need to have a healthy balance of helping in healing and growing a calling. Don't take it personal if the person you are help leaves after they feel that they have gotten they help they were seeking. Just as a sick patient goes to a doctor to get healing, some men may come to you for healing the trouble the are facing; while others are seeking to grow and develop a ministry or calling. 
    You must also have the time to invest into those that you are mentoring. Invest in those that are ready and hungry to develop and grow their calling.

    Question #4- Besides the Bible, what is your favorite tool ( material, techniques, study guides or books) that you recommend to train, mentor, strengthen, or disciple men?
    Response- The Majoring in Men materials by Dr. Edwin Louis Cole
    John Maxwell and his Equip courses
    Casey Treat- Renewing the mind
    Frank Demazio- The making of a Leader
    Dr. Caroline Leaf- most of her books use the study of neuroscience and the habits that we deal with in crisis.
    Finally your life experience of what you have faced and learned is a tool that you can use to teach others.

    Resources-
    John Maxwell- https://www.johnmaxwell.com/
    Casey Treat- https://christianfaith.us/successfulliving/

    The following resource material are listed is part of an affiliate links with Amazon that if you use and purchase from, I will receive a portion of the sale:

    John Maxwell- Developing the Leader Within You 2.0- https://amzn.to/2HUJiSd
    Casey Treat- Renewing The Mind 2.0- https://amzn.to/3nkm8VA
    Frank Demazio- The Making of A Leader- https://amzn.to/2GzClp7
    Dr. Caroline Leaf- https://amzn.to/30Cryl5   https://amzn.to/2F4m5fv

    Majoring in Men curriculum material- https://cmn.men/collections/curriculum-sets

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