The Dose

The Commonwealth Fund
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Mar 27, 2026 • 34min

The Missing Ingredient in Health Care AI? Community Voices

Seventy billion dollars is flowing into health care AI, but the people building it and the patients who need it most are rarely in the same room. On this episode, host Dr. Joel Bervell talks with pediatrician, researcher, and tech optimist Dr. Ivor Horn about what responsible AI innovation in health care requires. Drawing on her work building open-access datasets and equity frameworks for machine learning, Horn says that rigorous research, community partnership, and critical thinking are not obstacles to the work of building powerful tools — they are the work. "If you build for the most vulnerable patients," Horn says, "you will build a better product for everyone."
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Mar 20, 2026 • 28min

Lupita Nyong'o Is Done Accepting Fibroids as Normal

Uterine fibroids may affect up to 80 percent of women in their lifetime, but they remain under-researched, underfunded, and routinely dismissed. Lupita Nyong'o is working to change that. "I could not believe that women were partially or wholly losing their reproductive organs because of this noncancerous tumor situation." On this episode, Dr. Joel Bervell talks with Academy Award–winning actor and activist Lupita Nyong'o about her own diagnosis, and her decision to share an MRI of her body while launching the Make Fibroids Count campaign with the Foundation for Women's Health. "I realized without research we can't get any further," Nyong'o says. "We need to understand more in order to be able to equip the doctors who can then equip the patients." Show Notes: Lupita Nyong'o Make Fibroids Count (through the Foundation for Women's Health) The White Dress Project The Fibroid Foundation
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Nov 14, 2025 • 28min

Reimagining Birth, Restoring Trust (feat. Elaine Welteroth)

A new movement in the United States is taking shape in maternal care, one that seeks to restore trust, center women, and protect lives. On this episode of The Dose podcast, Dr. Joel Bervell talks with author and advocate Elaine Welteroth about her own struggle finding patient-centered care during pregnancy and how the organization she founded, birthFUND, is funding midwifery care, supporting new mothers, and reimagining what safe, empowering birth can look like in America.
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Nov 7, 2025 • 25min

A Doula Network That's Saving Lives (feat. Omare Jimmerson)

Across Oklahoma, a community-powered doula network is reshaping what equitable maternal care looks like. On this episode of The Dose, Dr. Joel Bervell talks with Omare Jimmerson of the Oklahoma Birth Equity Initiative about how culturally rooted doulas, smart policies, and practical supports—from rides to diapers—are helping hundreds of families thrive each year.
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Oct 31, 2025 • 27min

A New Approach to Youth Mental Health (feat. Dr. Kevin Simon)

AI therapy for children with anxiety, mental health training for staff at nonprofits that work with young people, and an "art pharmacy" that prescribes free museum tickets to kids — these are just some of the things Dr. Kevin Simon and his team are doing to help meet the mental health care needs of Boston's children. Simon, the city's first chief behavioral health officer, talks to host Dr. Joel Bervell on the new episode of The Dose, which centers on America's youth mental health crisis and the innovative things states and cities are doing for struggling children.
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Oct 24, 2025 • 31min

Fixing How We Pay for Care (feat. Dr. Mai Pham)

"The proportion of energy and resources that goes into getting paid instead of taking care of patients is out of whack." That's Dr. Mai Pham's assessment of how we pay for health care in the United States — where all too often the imperative is volume over value, and billing over better care. In the latest episode of The Dose podcast, host Dr. Joel Bervell talks with Dr. Pham about how we can do better and deliver on the promise of equitable, person-centered care.
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Oct 17, 2025 • 28min

Obesity Medicine in the Age of GLP-1s (feat. Dr. Fatima Cody Stanford)

Medical care for people with obesity is changing rapidly. Body mass index, or BMI, was once considered the gold standard for diagnosis but has proven to be less accurate than once thought. Meanwhile, the advent of GLP-1 drugs has provided patients with treatment options that were unimaginable just a decade ago. Dr. Fatima Cody Stanford, an obesity medicine physician, joins host Dr. Joel Bervell on a new episode of The Dose podcast to talk about the state of obesity care in the United States. Together, they explore why insurers are hesitant to cover medications like Ozempic, how BMI fails to catch real health risks, and what the future of obesity treatment looks like for patients and public health.
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Oct 10, 2025 • 37min

In an Era of Misinformation, Does Science Stand a Chance? (feat. Dr. Francis Collins)

Dr. Francis Collins, former director of the U.S. National Institutes of Health and leader of the Human Genome Project, discusses the state of science amidst rampant misinformation. He emphasizes the importance of trust in science for societal cooperation. Collins shares insights on the challenges in translating research into medical care and advocates for including genomic data in medical records. He highlights the transformative potential of genomics in cancer care and personalized medicine, while calling for better digital literacy to combat misinformation.
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Oct 7, 2025 • 5min

The Dose Returns on October 10th

Look forward to a new season of The Dose, featuring your host Dr. Joel Bervell, launching this Friday.
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May 23, 2025 • 28min

In Rural America, a Weak Signal Can Mean Worse Health

What happens when your zip code threatens your health? Broadband access is often framed as a tech issue, but in some rural communities it's a matter of health equity. Broadband internet is so limited in some areas that patients can't use remote monitoring devices, hospitals can't support telehealth, and electronic health records slow down care instead of streamlining it. On this week's episode of The Dose, journalist Sarah Jane Tribble joins host Joel Bervell to explain how internet dead zones are deepening chronic illness in rural communities. Drawing from her reporting for KFF Health News, Tribble shares the stories of people managing diabetes and kidney failure without reliable digital tools, and hospitals lacking the internet speeds needed to monitor high-risk patients.

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