-
Mashup Score: 7Scott Berkowitz: Value-Based Care and Population Health - 13 day(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Scott Berkowitz ’03, cardiologist and chief population health officer at Johns Hopkins Medicine, to discuss the necessity of moving from fee-for-service to value-based care delivery to improve outcomes for all. Harlan highlights the dangers of misinformation about Ivermectin. Howie reports on the potential conflicts of interest created by device manufacturers’ payments to cardiologists. Links: Johns Hopkins Medicine: Home Johns Hopkins Community Health Partnership “Association of a Care Coordination Model With Health Care Costs and Utilization” “Planning for the Future of Population Health: The Johns Hopkins Medicine Experience” “Califf’s long day on Capitol Hill” “The FDA Deleted Its Viral Ivermectin Tweets. Now There’s Even More Misinformation.” “Philly Nonprofit Awarded $48 Million to Apply AI in Search for New Uses for Approved Drugs Posted on March 12, 2024” “Effect of Early Treatment with Ivermectin among Patients with Covid-19” “Effect of Ivermecti
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 5Atheendar Venkataramani: Opportunity, Hope, and Health - 20 day(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Atheendar Venkataramani, a physician, health economist, and director of the Perelman School of Medicine’s Opportunity for Health Lab, to discuss the powerful role of economic opportunity in population health outcomes. Harlan reports on two studies where treatments’ unexpected benefits leapt ahead of understanding why they work. Howie reflects on the business model of the pharma industry and the market reaction to anti-obesity drugs. Links: Opportunity for Health | Home “College Affirmative Action Bans and Smoking and Alcohol Use among Underrepresented Minority Adolescents in the United States: A Difference-in-differences Study” “Police Killings and Their Spillover Effects on the Mental Health of Black Americans: A Population-based, Quasi-experimental Study” “Officer-Involved Killings of Unarmed Black People and Racial Disparities in Sleep Health“ Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System | Home “Building Black Wealth — The Role of Health Systems in Closi
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 10Kate McEvoy: How Medicaid Is Driving Healthcare Innovation - 27 day(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Kate McEvoy, executive director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors, to discuss the programs’ underappreciated advances in holistically addressing health, housing, and food security. Reflecting on the upcoming election, Harlan notes that facts matter, whether in medicine or politics. Howie reports on the dangers of glyoxylic acid in hair straightening products. Links: “Trump Leads Biden in Six of Seven Swing States, WSJ Poll Finds” “Takeover: Hitler’s Final Rise to Power” “The Forgotten History of Hitler’s Establishment Enablers” The Future of Health Policy in a Partisan United States “Netflix blockbuster ‘3 Body Problem’ divides opinion and sparks nationalist anger in China” “The Future of American Democracy Depends on Improving U.S. Health” Wikipedia | Glyoxylic acid Kidney Injury and Hair-Straightening Products Containing Glyoxylic Acid American Cancer Society | Formaldehyde and Cancer Risk Kaiser Family Foundation | 10 Things to Know Abo
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 3Margo Harrison: Women’s Health as a Path to Empowerment - 1 month(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Margo Harrison, an OB-GYN and femtech entrepreneur, to discuss how innovative solutions to women’s health problems offer deeper understanding and expanded choices. Harlan and Howie each offer a caveat emptor for lightly regulated, unproven supplements and treatments such as Prevagen and hydration spas. Links: “Prevagen Review: A Word of Caution” “Prevagen®: Analysis of Clinical Evidence and Its Designation as a ‘#1 Pharmacist Recommended Brand’” “NY Jury Rules Some Claims About Prevagen Are Misleading” “Effects of a Supplement Containing Apoaequorin on Verbal Learning in Older Adults in the Community” Mate Fertility: Home Dahlia Ventures Margo Harrison, MD: Assistant Adjoint Professor, OB-GYN-Basic Repro Science Margo Harrison: LinkedIn “Use of Cesarean Birth at Mizan Tepi University Teaching Hospital, Mizan Aman, Ethiopia” “Postpartum Contraceptive Use Among Denver-Based Adolescents and Young Adults: Association with Subsequent Repeat Delivery” “Warnings
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 6Robert Rohrbaugh: Bringing Antiracist Tools to Clinical Practice - 2 month(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Robert Rohrbaugh, professor of psychiatry and deputy dean for professionalism and leadership at the Yale School of Medicine, to discuss his work training doctors in antiracist practices and ensuring the wellbeing of clinicians during the pandemic. Harlan reports on the problematic history of medical journals promoting eugenics; Howie highlights a cyberattack that has paralyzed Change Healthcare, the country’s largest payments processing hub. Links: Antiracist Documentation Practices — Shaping Clinical Encounters and Decision Making American Psychological Association | Implicit Bias “YSM Ranks #1 in U.S. News Survey for Psychiatry” COVID-19 Traumatic Disaster Appraisal and Stress Symptoms Among Health Care Workers Application of Artificial Intelligence on Psychological Interventions and Diagnosis: An Overview Is AI the Future of Mental Healthcare? ChatGPT outperforms humans in emotional awareness evaluations “Ridding the Race of His Defective Blood” — Euge
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 3A Cheating Scandal, Abandoned Research, and Other News - 2 month(s) ago
Howie and Harlan discuss health and healthcare headlines, including a cheating scandal that has led to the invalidation of hundreds of scores from Nepal on the U.S. Medical Licensing Examination, the problem of research that never sees the light of day, new anti-obesity medications, and Florida’s unorthodox approach to measles. Links: Standardized Testing “Cheated out of the American Dream” “MCAT scores and medical school success: Do they correlate?” ”Reducing Medical School Admissions Disparities in an Era of Legal Restrictions: Adjusting for Applicant Socioeconomic Disadvantage” “Medical School Admissions — A Movable Barrier to Ending Health Care Disparities?” “Yale Reinstates Standardized Test Score Requirement For Admissions” “New SAT Data Highlights the Deep Inequality at the Heart of American Education” Research at Universities Good Science Project: Stuart Buck “Why Are We Screwing Over Researchers Who Make Innovative Discoveries?” Intellectual Property: Ownership and Protection
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 11Lucila Ohno-Machado: AI and the Art of Medicine - 2 month(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Lucila Ohno-Machado, the Yale School of Medicine’s deputy dean for biomedical informatics. She explains how expanding use of data science, informatics, AI, and technology could enable doctors to spend more time with patients. Harlan celebrates mentorship while marking the death of Irwin Birnbaum, a mentor to many in his time as COO of the Yale Medical School and long after retiring. Howie discusses the mixed evidence from a study on vaping as a tool for helping cigarette smokers quit. Links: “Lucila Ohno-Machado, MD, PhD, MBA, Will Lead Biomedical Informatics and Data Science” “Lucila Ohno-Machado: Yale Medicine Profile” “Halıcıoğlu Data Science Center” “2024 AI in Medicine Symposium at Yale School of Medicine” “Doctors Vs. ChatGPT: Which Is More Empathetic?” “Irwin M. Birnbaum Obituary” “What is a mentor?” “A Randomized Trial of E-Cigarettes versus Nicotine-Replacement Therapy” “Episode 78, Health and Veritas: Elizabeth Arleo: Advice for Working Mothers
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 11Farzad Mostashari: Aligning Incentives to Fix Primary Care - 3 month(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Farzad Mostashari, co-founder and CEO of Aledade, an “accountable care organization” that seeks to align patient-provider incentives so doctors can make a profit by prioritizing preventive care. Harlan discusses a study suggesting that physical exercise may be protective from severe COVID. Howie highlights the introduction of Apple’s VR headset and the importance of further study to understand the technology’s capacity to “rewire” our brains. Links: “Aledade: Home Page” “Farzad Mostashari: Man On A Digital Mission” “Health Reform and Physician-Led Accountable Care:The Paradox of Primary Care Physician Leadership” “Staggering Rise in Catheter Bills Suggests Medicare Scam” “Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs): General Information” “Novid: Definition” “Prepandemic Physical Activity and Risk of COVID-19 Diagnosis and Hospitalization in Older Adults” “VR risks for kids and teens” “2024 Outlook: Despite hurdles, stakeholders bullish on VR in behavioral health
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 4Christopher O’Connor: Hospital Leadership in Trying Times - 3 month(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Christopher O’Connor, CEO of Yale New Haven Health, to discuss his career path and his experience leading hospitals through Hurricane Katrina and COVID-19. Harlan reports on promising AI tools for taking clinical notes; Howie looks at the financial headwinds facing the companies offering Medicare Advantage plans. Links: AI Notetaking “OpenAI-backed healthcare AI startup raises $70 million Series B” “Burnout Related to Electronic Health Record Use in Primary Care” “Ambient Artificial Intelligence Scribes to Alleviate the Burden of Clinical Documentation” “Medical AI scribe startup Nabla rolling out tool to the Permanente Medical Group docs in Northern California” “Ambience Healthcare reels in $70M for generative AI tools to battle clinician burnout” Hospital Leadership “After 20 Years and $16,000, A Hospital Debt Is Canceled” Harlan Krumholz: “Out‐of‐Pocket Annual Health Expenditures and Financial Toxicity From Healthcare Costs in Patients With Heart Failu
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
-
Mashup Score: 3Manisha Juthani: Solving Infectious Disease Mysteries - 3 month(s) ago
Howie and Harlan are joined by Manisha Juthani, a Yale infectious disease specialist and commissioner of the Connecticut Department of Public Health. They discuss her research, including a study casting doubt on the use of cranberries to prevent urinary tract infection, and her priorities for Connecticut. Harlan reports on a wave of study retractions from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Howie reflects on the progress made toward eradicating Guinea worm and malaria. Links: Retractions from the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute “Dana-Farber Cancer Institute Researchers Accused of Manipulating Data” “Top Cancer Center Seeks to Retract or Correct Dozens of Studies” Pubpeer: The Online Journal Club “‘A lot of it is sloppiness’: the biologist who finds flaws in scientific papers” Manisha Juthani “An Outbreak of Domestically Acquired Typhoid Fever in Queens, NY” Manisha Juthani: “Effect of Cranberry Capsules on Bacteriuria Plus Pyuria Among Older Women in Nursing Homes—A Randomized Clinical Tria
Source: insights.som.yale.eduCategories: General Medicine News, General HCPsTweet
.@ScottABerkowitz (@YaleSOM @YaleMed ‘03), Chief Population Health Officer, @HopkinsMedicine, joins podcast. @hmkyale talks Ivermectin & why so many remain so misinformed. I talk @jsross119 et al paper on cardiologist payments from manufacturers. https://t.co/Nl7LxxK7ZQ