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    whole person care

    Explore " whole person care" with insightful episodes like "Ep 140 A Radical Health Clinic Model for Whole Person Care with Dr. Susan Quigley", "Let's Finish Cancer: The Whole Person Approach to Cancer", "Healing through Sound: A Conversation with Laura Widney", "Ep 107 Expanding Your Self-Care" and "When bullets wound" from podcasts like ""Well Connected Twin Cities Podcast", "Talk With A Doc", "Growing with Sol", "The Contemplative Life" and "Hear Me Now Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (12)

    Ep 140 A Radical Health Clinic Model for Whole Person Care with Dr. Susan Quigley

    Ep 140 A Radical Health Clinic Model for Whole Person Care with Dr. Susan Quigley

    Discussion with Dr. Susan Quigley regarding her practice, SuNu Wellness Center, whose health clinic model encourages authentic referrals and collaborative whole person care.

    Topics of Discussion:
    -The mission behind SuNu Wellness Center, a collaborative health clinic
    -The range of services and practitioners available at SuNu
    -Tips and practices to begin practicing holistic care at home

    Dr. Susan Quigley (She/Her) is the owner and founder of SuNu Wellness Center. She received her bachelor’s degree in Biology/Human Physiology at Northern Michigan University. In 2009, Susan obtained her Doctorate of Chiropractic from Northwestern Health Sciences University in Bloomington, MN.

    Dr. Susan has expanded her knowledge through hands-on training and seminars with the International Chiropractic Pediatric Association and is also certified in Breech Balancing Technique through Northern Lights Wellness Professional Education, and the Webster Technique. She has also had additional training with Gail Tully of Spinning Babies ®. Additionally, Dr. Susan is trained in Quantum Integration Technique, a muscle testing practice that can help chiropractic adjustments by supporting the different organ systems of the body.

    She is driven to empower and educate her clients on the importance of self-care and using food as medicine to heal. She is passionate about achieving a balanced nervous system through Chiropractic care in combination with other modalities.

    SuNu Wellness Center has been her lifelong dream — to form a collaborative of skillful and genuine practitioners where healing is the primary intention. Dr. Susan is so proud of the space that SuNu has become — beautiful, sacred, and full of heart.

    When not at SuNu, she is studying the healing arts, working in her regenerative garden, or spending time in nature. She enjoys biking around the lakes, taking hikes in the woods, being on her yoga mat, and traveling with her family.

    Dr. Susan currently sees patients at SuNu's Minnetonka location.

    Schedule a visit now! Mention the podcast for $25 off your first visit to SuNu!

    Social Media:
    Sunu Wellness Website
    SuNu Wellness Instagram
    SuNu Wellness Facebook

    Dr. Susan Quigley's Instagram


    Well Connected Twin Cities is connecting you with local health and wellness professionals in your community. Discover what's possible by surfing the directory, taking a class, or attending the next event.

    http://wellconnectedtwincities.com/
    Follow us on instagram https://instagram.com/wellconnectedtwincities



    Let's Finish Cancer: The Whole Person Approach to Cancer

    Let's Finish Cancer: The Whole Person Approach to Cancer

    "A patient's not their illness. A patient is a patient, and they have an experience with an illness, and that's part of their journey, but that's not all of it." - Dr. David Jenkins
    As part of our continuing Let's Finish Cancer series, Mary Renouf and Dr. David Jenkins, Radiation Oncologist at Joe Arrington Cancer Research and Treatment Center in Lubbock, Texas, discuss the whole person approach to cancer and what that means for both the doctor and the cancer patient.

    For more resources, visit:
    Providence Cancer Institute
    Joe Arrington Cancer Research and Treatment Center
    David Jenkins, MD - LinkedIn Profile
    Mary Renouf - LinkedIn Profile

    Healing through Sound: A Conversation with Laura Widney

    Healing through Sound: A Conversation with Laura Widney

    Connect with Laura and Soaak: 

    Website: www.soaak.com

    Promo Code: GWS30

     

    Let's Connect!

    My Insta

    My Tik Tok

    Schedule your discovery call: https://calendly.com/yourcoachmari/30-minute-discovery-call

    Send in questions: contact+podcast@marisolmoran.com

    Buy Me a Cafecito

    Ep 107 Expanding Your Self-Care

    Ep 107 Expanding Your Self-Care

    Today we’re talking about the expansiveness of self-care because, as it turns out, there are no less than six types of Self-Care. What we need in one season of life may look very different from what we need in another. What our internal list of “shoulds” tells us we ought to be doing may or may not be what we really need in order to nourish our souls right now. And so join us as we talk about what it looks like to offer kindness to our whole selves and to grow into being able to pay attention to those needs, recognizing what feels most true for us in any particular moment.

    Additional Resources
    Book:
    Joyful by Ingrid Fetell Lee
    Word: Hygge (pronounced Hoo-ga) is a Danish word that represents a culture of coziness, joy, and wellbeing.

    #self-care #Hygge #wellbeing #WholePersonCare #Declutter #Parenting #Journey #Seasons

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    When bullets wound

    When bullets wound

    Bullet wounds go more than skin deep. LJ Punch, M.D., is a trauma surgeon and the founder of the BRIC ��� the Bullet-Related Injury Clinic in Saint Louis, Mo.. The BRIC is where shooting victims come for wound care and education, help with pain management, care for the emotional and social impact of being shot, and the acknowledgement that their bullet wound could likely have profound spiritual meaning for them, their families, and their communities.

    They also find a place of warm welcome.��

    "Trauma is a communal injury and must be healed in community," says Dr. Punch. "The medical world is missing out because it's abstracting this one tiny part of it." He says the treatment that's needed to heal a bullet wound is not happening in hospitals.

    We also talk with Pierre Underwood, who was shot early this year and is recovering from his bullet wound with the help of the staff of the BRIC.

    ��

    Health Tech Navigators: A Boon to Greater Community Access, Trust and Engagement

    Health Tech Navigators: A Boon to Greater Community Access, Trust and Engagement

    A patient portal is a great innovation, but busy clinic staff don’t have time to help every patient get set up on them and answer all their questions about it. In addition, patients often need ongoing support on how to communicate with their provider on the website, get updates, and access their health records.

    Enter the Health Tech Navigators — people serving in a role that is for the community, by the community.  These Navigators, hired directly from the community, work closely with patients to support not only enrollment, but to increase portal use and to bridge gaps in healthcare accessibility that have long existed with language, culture, trust, and tech literacy. Listen to how the Los Angeles Department of Health Services (LADHS) created and supports its Health Tech Navigator program to surface a growing practice of cultural humility and competency in patient engagement.

    Here’s where you can learn more about the people, places, and ideas in this episode: 

    • Anshu Abhat MD, MPH, Director of Patient Engagement in the Office of Patient Access at LADHS
    • Mayra Ramirez, MSW, ASW, Staff Analyst, Program Manager with the Patient Engagement Program at LADHS
    • LA Health Portal App
    • Technology Hub, a CCI program that helps organizations vet, pilot, evaluate, and spread innovative digital health solutions targeting Medicaid markets and historically underinvested communities.

    © 2022 Center for Care Innovations. All Rights Reserved.

    Starting Med School Later in Life

    Starting Med School Later in Life

    Some first-year medical students are significantly older than the norm. They've come to medicine as a second or sometimes third career. Do those other work experiences make a difference in how they practice medicine? Host Se��n Collins talks with four physicians who began their training later in life.��

    .

    JOIN US ONLINE ON JUNE 16th

    HUMANIZING HEALTHCARE EXPERT SERIES

    For information on the June 16th online event, Remote Palliative Care: A telehealth roadmap to reaching rural communities, visit this link. Registration is now open.

    .

    Kevin Murphy, M.D.

    Executive Director

    Palliative Practice Group

    Providence Institute for Human Caring��

    Tuckwila, Wash.

    .

    Rebecca Armendariz, M.D.��

    Physiatrist��

    La Jolla, Calif.

    .

    Tara Kimbeson, M.D.

    Neurologist��

    Locum Tenens

    .

    Tom McNalley, M.D.

    Pediatric Palliative Care and Rehabilitation Physician

    UCSF

    Oakland and San Francisco, Calif.

    .

    ��

    Life During Wartime

    Life During Wartime

    .

    The indiscriminate targeting of civilians as the Russian military prosecutes its illegal war on Ukraine has caused an unprecedented humanitarian crisis: more than a quarter of Ukraine's forty million citizens are displaced.��

    In this episode, using a lens of whole person care, we talk with people reaching out to others in wartime,��making connections, and countering the darkness with (in the words of W.H. Auden) "ironic points of light."

    .

    .

    NGOs PROVIDING UKRAINIAN RELIEF

    .

    Catholic Relief Services

    Medical Teams International

    Assist-Ukraine

    UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees)

    M��decins Sans Frontieres (Doctors Without Borders)

    UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund)

    JDC (American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee)

    Episcopal Relief & Development

    BGR (Buddhist Global Relief)

    Voices of Children��

    Save the Children

    International Committee of the Red Cross

    CARE (Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere)

    ��

    .

    .

    GUESTS

    .

    Inna Pashniak

    Digital Marketing Manager

    Providence Digital Innovation Group

    San Francisco, Calif.

    .

    Oleksyi Kurka (internally displaced)

    Communications Manager

    British Embassy to Ukraine

    Kiev, Ukraine

    .

    Orest Holubec

    EVP/Chief Communication and Community Engagement Officer

    Providence

    Renton, Wash.

    .

    Caroline Brennan

    Emergency Communications Director

    Catholic Relief Services

    Chicago, Ill.

    .

    Anne Garrels

    Foreign Correspondent (retired)

    NPR News��

    Author

    Putin Country: A Journey Into the Real Russia (Macmillan, 2016)

    Connecticut

    .

    .

    The lullaby heard in this episode is titled "���� ������������" (Oh Moon)

    .

    Se��n reads an excerpt from W.H. Auden's poem, "September 1, 1939" published in Another Time (Random House, 1940)

    .

    Personalizing Care in a Transactional World

    Personalizing Care in a Transactional World

    .

    PERSONALIZING CARE IN A TRANSACTIONAL WORLD

    excerpts from the online conference held 1 November 2021

    and sponsored by the Providence Institute for Human Caring

    .

    You can watch the videos of each online session here.

    .

    CONFERENCE AGENDA

    .

    KEYNOTE: Three Keys to Personalizing Healthcare��

    Dr. Ira Byock, Institute for Human Caring

    .

    Why Serious Illness is a Serious Health-Equity Issue��

    Dr. Tammie Quest, Emory

    Dr. Glen Komatsu, TrinityCare Hospice

    Dr. Karen Boudreau, ��Providence

    Michael Drummond, Institute for Human Caring

    .

    Medicine Meets Ministry - Engaging Faith Communities to Fill Unmet Needs��

    Se��n Collins, Hear Me Now Podcast

    Rev. Cynthia Carter Perrilliat, Alameda County Care Alliance

    Jeannie Blaustein, ReImagine End of Life

    Johnny Cox, Alliance of Catholic Health Care

    .

    Let's Get Digital, Digital - Humanizing the EHR��

    Sara Veazy, Providence

    Dr. Matt Gonzales, Institute for Human Caring

    Gregory Makoul, PatientWisdom

    Mike Drummond, Institute for Human Caring

    .

    From Scratch - Discovering the Healing Powers of Food, Family and Community��

    Tembi Locke & Dr. Ira Byock

    .

    Whole Person Care in the ICU��

    Dr. Wes Ely, Vanderbilt

    Dr. Daniela Lamas, Brigham and Women's Hospital

    Liga Mezaraups, Providence

    .

    Age-Friendly Works at Providence and Beyond��

    Amy Berman, John ��A. Hartford Foundation

    Yazmin Hehdi, Patient Representative

    Dr. Carrie Rubenstein, Swedish Family Medicine

    Mike Drummond, Institute for Human Caring

    .

    Closing Remarks

    Drs. Ira Byock and Matt Gonzales, Institute for Human Caring

    ��

    ��

    Whole Person Healthcare - With Dr. Morgan Wills

    Whole Person Healthcare - With Dr. Morgan Wills

    Modern health care in the West has provided healing and hope for many, but it also has had its challenges. Often the uninsured, the immigrant, and the refuge have difficulty in western medicine, as it can be confusing and costly.  We had a wonderful conversation with Dr. Morgan Wills who is a Regent grad and the President and CEO of Siloam Health.  Siloam Health is a faith based non-profit that seeks to care for the whole person: physical, spiritual, emotional and mental health.  Dr. Wills is passionate about whole person care and serving cross-culturally by taking on a posture of cultural humility.  We hope you enjoy this conversation! 

    Thanks for listening!

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    To learn more about our summer programs visit:

    https://www.regent-college.edu/summer

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    The Health Pulse: From basketball to mental health data, Dr. Dawnté Early drives a community-centric approach

    The Health Pulse: From basketball to mental health data, Dr. Dawnté Early drives a community-centric approach

    Dr. Dawnté Early (she/her) is the Chief of Research and Evaluation for the Mental Health Services Oversight and Accountability Commission in California. Dr. Early joined Greg for a chat about whole person care, and she shared that her love of sports (she played college basketball and coached her children’s teams) instilled a desire to give back to her community. In her current role, Dr. Early supports the Commission’s mission is to transform the mental health system so that everyone who needs care in California receives high-quality and culturally competent care. A big part of her job is bringing together mental health data at the individual level with data from different agencies, such as criminal justice, education, quarterly wage, and death and birth data, to identify social determinants of health and uncover disparities. The commission also plays a key role in engaging with other agencies and systems to help support early intervention and care. Greg asks about the challenge of overcoming stigma in mental health, and Dr. Early shares that having conversations that normalize and contextualize mental health needs is critical, as is using humanizing language around mental health. The Commission plays role in ensuring these conversations are taking place and that the community is engaged throughout the process—in determining what questions to ask the data and by giving input on how data-driven insights can impact effective policy. Lastly, Dr. Early shares her vision for the Commission’s role in connecting data to policy to community to outcomes in order to drive more early intervention and prevention in mental health for the betterment of individuals, families and communities. 

    All presentations represent the opinions of the presenter and do not represent the position or the opinion of SAS.

    Dr Jantz & Whole Person Care for Mental Health - E22

    Dr Jantz & Whole Person Care for Mental Health - E22

    International expert, Dr Jantz, is a best selling author of 40 books, innovator in the treatment of mental health, a go-to media authority on mental and behavioral health afflictions appearing on CBS, ABC, NBC, FOX, CNN and more.  Also the founder of The Center A Place Of Hope, in Edmonds, Washington, voted a top-ten facility for depression treatment in the United states,  Dr. Jantz pioneered Whole Person Care in the1980's and is a world-renowned expert on depression, anxiety, eating disorders, technology addiction and abuse.

    With our current environment, everyone of us are better served to gain a general understanding of mental health and some of the approaches to whole person care.

    Anxiety, depression, and lack of sleep are three epidemics resulting from the pandemic.  Months of chronic stress have our bodies tired and we simply need self care, support, and to learn the basics for positive mental health.  There are things we can do, resources for help, and a journey to recovery.

    This episode covers the reason for so much stress this year, signs for the need to reach out, tips to help with self care, positive steps, and decisions to make on the journey to recovery.

    Dr. Jantz's newest Book: Healing Depression for Life
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    Note: Episode was recorded under the former podcast name of "3Ps in a Pod"

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