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    primary care today

    Explore " primary care today" with insightful episodes like "Patients on the Crossroads of Care: Clinical Perspectives on the Baby Boomer Generation", "Keeping Track of Changing Guidelines in Cervical Cancer Screening", "Protect the Head: A Former Pro Football Player's Mission to Prevent Concussions", "New Understandings on the Rise of Kidney Stones Among Children & Adolescents" and "A Crisis in Slow Motion: Why the Rise of Sedentary Lifestyles Matters" from podcasts like ""Geriatrics", "OB/GYN and Women's Health", "Neurology and Neurosurgery", "Public Health" and "Public Health"" and more!

    Episodes (100)

    Patients on the Crossroads of Care: Clinical Perspectives on the Baby Boomer Generation

    Patients on the Crossroads of Care: Clinical Perspectives on the Baby Boomer Generation
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    The Baby Boomer generation is fast-approaching a critical period in health care decision-making, the choices of which may dictate continued health or rapid decline. What are the care priorities that clinicians should keep in mind with this special population?

    Joining Dr. Brian McDonough is Marcia Feldt, author of The Oys & Joys, a novel that crystalizes many of the challenges facing Baby Boomers through the eyes of four women. Ms. Feldt describes the personal journeys of her characters, drawn from several years of advocacy for patients in this generation, and she shares tips that clinicians can consider to help these patients address priority health needs.

    Keeping Track of Changing Guidelines in Cervical Cancer Screening

    Keeping Track of Changing Guidelines in Cervical Cancer Screening
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Guidelines in testing intervals and recommended methods for cervical cancer screening have been changing rapidly. What's the bottom line on helping primary care clinicians best protect their patients from this disease development? Joining Dr. Brian McDonough on the floors of Omnia Education's Women's Health Annual Visit in New York to discuss updated strategies drive down cervical cancer risk is Dr. Edward Mayeaux, Professor and Chairman of the Department of Family and Preventive Medicine at the University of South Carolina School of Medicine.

    Protect the Head: A Former Pro Football Player's Mission to Prevent Concussions

    Protect the Head: A Former Pro Football Player's Mission to Prevent Concussions
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes John Roman, CEO of Defend Your Head, a sports safety company based in Chester County, PA. Mr. Roman is a former offensive lineman in the NFL with the New York Jets (1976-1983) before launching a 30-year successful career on Wall Street. He joins Primary Care Today to discuss technological advances in helmet design and construction for football players of all ages. His company has recently developed ProTech, a football helmet product using a soft outer-shell technology designed to improve energy and force dissipation and reduction.

    New Understandings on the Rise of Kidney Stones Among Children & Adolescents

    New Understandings on the Rise of Kidney Stones Among Children & Adolescents
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Kidney stones are on the rise, particularly among adolescents, females, and African-Americans in the U.S. This marks a striking change from the historic pattern in which middle-aged white men were at highest risk for the painful condition. While the overall increase in kidney stones in children and adolescents has been known, a recent study published in the Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology provided greater clarity on the specific groups of patients at greatest risk by analyzing age, race and sex characteristics among children and adults in South Carolina over a 16-year period, from 1997 to 2012.

    Lead author Dr. Gregory Tasian, Assistant Professor of Urology at the University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and an attending pediatric urologist at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, joins Dr. Brian McDonough to discuss this startling trend, the factors that may be driving it, and appropriate preventive and treatment strategies for kidney stones.

    A Crisis in Slow Motion: Why the Rise of Sedentary Lifestyles Matters

    A Crisis in Slow Motion: Why the Rise of Sedentary Lifestyles Matters
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Sedentary behaviors are rapidly on the rise as technological advances streamline public capabilities to work and conduct regular tasks at the click of a button. Yet while some health impacts of increased sedentary lifestyles are now generally understood and accepted, the question of whether sporadic or even regular exercise habits can compensate for sedentary time is not well known. But an advancing arm of research is addressing this knowledge gap, and the initial findings are startling.

    Joining Primary Care Today to share new insights is Dr. Wendy King, Associate Professor of Epidemiology at the University of Pittsburg Graduate School of Public Health. Dr. King and colleagues authored a report published in Preventive Medicine focusing on sedentary behaviors and how they affect health outcomes in the presence and absence of exercise.

    Care Navigation with Patient Advocates: Benefits to General Practice

    Care Navigation with Patient Advocates: Benefits to General Practice
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Primary care practices are environments with deeply emotional caregiving relationships, but communicative barriers between clinicians and patients make some important conversations difficult to approach on both ends. The patient advocate is an emerging role to help bridge these communicative divides in general practice. How can these care navigators facilitate better health outcomes, and what do clinicians need to know to support this cause?

    Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes Pamela Wilson, leading expert in the caregiving industry and author of The Caregiving Trap: Solutions for Life’s Unexpected Changes, to discuss the benefits of patient advocacy in primary care.

    Controversies in Tobacco Harm Reduction: Is Smoking Cessation the Only Answer?

    Controversies in Tobacco Harm Reduction: Is Smoking Cessation the Only Answer?
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    On the subject of smoking, health risks differ from one form of smoking product to another. Yet these differences aren't always well understood by health professionals. Is there such a thing as a "safe" tobacco alternative, or is smoking cessation the only viable choice for risk reduction?Joining Dr. Brian McDonough to discuss the literature on tobacco harm reduction, as well as review the broadening spectrum of smoking formulations, from cigarettes to smokeless tobacco products to e-cigarette devices, is Dr. Brad Rodu, Endowed Chair in Tobacco Harm Reduction Research from the University of Louisville School of Medicine.

    Coping with Mass Violence and Terrorism: How Clinicians Can Intervene

    Coping with Mass Violence and Terrorism: How Clinicians Can Intervene
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Joining Dr. Brian McDonough to discuss clinical approaches to endemic fears and anxieties spread by acts of mass violence and terrorism, both abroad and within the U.S, is Dr. Arthur Caplan, Professor and founding Director of the Division of Medical Ethics in NYU Langone Medical Center’s Department of Population Health.

    Roles of the Pituitary Gland in Health and Disease: The Clinician's Workup Guide

    Roles of the Pituitary Gland in Health and Disease: The Clinician's Workup Guide
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes Dr. Marcy Lake, faculty member of the Kaiser Permanente Family Medicine Residency Program in Portland Oregon and author of a recent article in American Family Physician devoted to disorders of the pituitary gland. Their discussion tours diagnostic considerations toward the workup of pituitary diseases, and emerging treatment paradigms for clinicians at general, endocrinology, and surgical levels of care.

    Roles of the Pituitary Gland in Health and Disease: The Clinician's Workup Guide

    Roles of the Pituitary Gland in Health and Disease: The Clinician's Workup Guide
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes Dr. Marcy Lake, faculty member of the Kaiser Permanente Family Medicine Residency Program in Portland Oregon and author of a recent article in American Family Physician devoted to disorders of the pituitary gland. Their discussion tours diagnostic considerations toward the workup of pituitary diseases, and emerging treatment paradigms for clinicians at general, endocrinology, and surgical levels of care.

    Screening for HPV-Related Cancers: Medical and Surgical Priorities

    Screening for HPV-Related Cancers: Medical and Surgical Priorities
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes Dr. Gregory Weinstein, Professor and Vice Chair and the Director of the Division of Head and Neck Surgery. He is the Co-Director of The Center for Head and Neck Cancer in The Department of Otorhinolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. The two discuss a dramatic rise in HPV-related cancers over the past decade, and what clinicians need to be aware of in assessing their patients for these indidious diseases.

    Screening for HPV-Related Cancers: Medical and Surgical Priorities

    Screening for HPV-Related Cancers: Medical and Surgical Priorities
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes Dr. Gregory Weinstein, Professor and Vice Chair and the Director of the Division of Head and Neck Surgery. He is the Co-Director of The Center for Head and Neck Cancer in The Department of Otorhinolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. The two discuss a dramatic rise in HPV-related cancers over the past decade, and what clinicians need to be aware of in assessing their patients for these indidious diseases.

    Everything You Thought You Knew About Physician Shortages: AAMC's Dr. Atul Grover

    Everything You Thought You Knew About Physician Shortages: AAMC's Dr. Atul Grover
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes Dr. Atul Grover, MD, PhD, Chief Public Policy Officer for the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) to discuss the looming physician shortage in the US and what needs to be done now to positively impact that shortage ten years down the road.

    Updates From the Pollen Vortex: Strategies to Combat the Worst Allergy Season Ever

    Updates From the Pollen Vortex: Strategies to Combat the Worst Allergy Season Ever
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    As an unforgivingly cold, frigid winter in America has led to the explosive release of tree pollens over a short period this spring, seasonal allergies have returned with a vengeance. Says, Dr Mitchell Gaynor, clinical assistant professor of medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City, this could make for one of the worst allergy seasons of all time. How can primary care providers ready themselves on the frontlines of this mass allergy assault? Dr. Brian McDonough and Dr. Gaynor discuss strategies to keep clinicians on top of this emerging threat, including new understandings of eco-genetic mechanisms of allergic disease.

    Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Type IV Allergies: Making the Connection in Practice

    Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Type IV Allergies: Making the Connection in Practice
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Irritable Bowel Syndrome affects an estimated one out of ten people in the US, yet the causes for this disease are multivariate and often unknown from case to case, creating a reputation in practice as a "waste basket diagnosis." Dr. Michael Stierstorfer, Clinical Associate Professor of Dermatology at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and founder of East Penn Dermatology, has been a pioneer in helping clinicians better understand one potential cause of IBS. His own experience as IBS patient led to the remarkable discovery of an allergic contact enteritits underscoring his disease, which has led to new diagnostic and treatment algorithms for IBS patients nationwide. Dr. Stierstorfer joins Dr. Brian McDonough to discuss this unexpected path toward discovery and subsequent career specialization.

    Management of Acute Stroke: Perspectives from a Neurointerventional Radiologist

    Management of Acute Stroke: Perspectives from a Neurointerventional Radiologist
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Dr. McDonough welcomes Dr. Donald Frei, neuroradiologist and Director of Neurointerventional Surgery at Radiology Imaging Associates in Denver, CO. Dr. Frei is working towards establishing state-of-the-art diagnosis and management strategies in treating patients with acute stroke. His procedural specialties include acute catheter directed stroke intervention, angioplasty/stent revascularization of cerebrovascular stenosis and minimally invasive treatment of cerebral aneurysms and arteriovenous malformations.

    The Impact of Stress on Heart Attack Risk and Recovery in Women

    The Impact of Stress on Heart Attack Risk and Recovery in Women
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    Stress has long been associated with cardiovascular risk, but few studies have connected stress with worsened recovery rates after heart attacks. Moreover, the recently published discovery that women with mental stress may suffer worse outcomes recovering from heart attacks than men under similar conditions raises more questions than answers. What are the possible mechanisms by which this gender disparity in outcomes may occur, and how can clinicians help mitigate this risk? Dr. Brian McDonough welcomes Dr. Nieca Goldberg, cardiologist and director of the Joan H. Tisch Center for Women's Health at NYU Langone Medical Center.

    The Politics of Measles: Ethical Considerations in the National Vaccination Debate

    The Politics of Measles: Ethical Considerations in the National Vaccination Debate
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    The controversy over vaccinations and whether or not to regulate their administration has reached a boiling point in the United States with the recent measles outbreak originating in Disneyland, and prominent politicians like Senator Rand Paul and Governor Chris Christie have weighed in to support the anti-vaccine community's appeal for individual choice. What are the ethical, sociological, and political ramifications of these developments in the national vaccination debate, and how should the medical community respond? Joining Dr. Brian McDonough to discuss the vaccination controversy is Dr. Arthur Caplan, Professor and founding Director of the Division of Medical Ethics in NYU Langone Medical Center’s Department of Population Health.

    The Politics of Measles: Ethical Considerations in the National Vaccination Debate

    The Politics of Measles: Ethical Considerations in the National Vaccination Debate
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    The controversy over vaccinations and whether or not to regulate their administration has reached a boiling point in the United States with the recent measles outbreak originating in Disneyland, and prominent politicians like Senator Rand Paul and Governor Chris Christie have weighed in to support the anti-vaccine community's appeal for individual choice. What are the ethical, sociological, and political ramifications of these developments in the national vaccination debate, and how should the medical community respond? Joining Dr. Brian McDonough to discuss the vaccination controversy is Dr. Arthur Caplan, Professor and founding Director of the Division of Medical Ethics in NYU Langone Medical Center’s Department of Population Health.

    Televised Medical Talk Shows: Health Claims, Evidence, and Accountability

    Televised Medical Talk Shows: Health Claims, Evidence, and Accountability
    Host: Brian P. McDonough, MD, FAAFP

    A recent study in the British Medical Journal examined health recommendations from popular TV medical talk show hosts, discovering that approximately half of those recommendation have either no evidence or are contradicted by the best available evidence. Furthermore, potential conflicts of interest are rarely addressed. What ethical, legal, and clinical impacts do such health claims and recommendations have on patients and the medical community at large? Joining Dr. Brian McDonough is Dr. Joe Perrone, Chief Science Officer for The Center for Accountability in Science, an organization dedicated to uncovering the science behind news stories.

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