

Raise the Line
Osmosis from Elsevier
Join host Lindsey Smith and other Elsevier team members for a global conversation about improving health and healthcare with prominent figures in education and healthcare innovation as well as senior leaders at organizations such as the CDC, National Institutes of Health, Johns Hopkins University, WHO, Harvard University, NYU Langone and many others.
Episodes
Mentioned books

May 20, 2020 • 18min
Anant Agarwal - CEO, edX
It's not just K-12 and college students moving to online education these days. edX and other learning platforms have seen huge increases in enrollment over the past two months as millions of adults seek to learn new skills in a battered economy. As edX CEO Anant Agarwal explains to host Shiv Gaglani, part of edX's role now is teaching people how to learn, and teachers how to teach, using a format that will remain a key source of education long after the COVID-19 crisis has ended. If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

May 18, 2020 • 16min
Arianna Huffington - Founder and CEO, Thrive Global
Arianna Huffington learned about burnout the hard way. Two years after starting the Huffington Post, she collapsed from overwork. She turned that moment of personal crisis into a movement to help people learn how to develop a healthier work-life balance and effectively manage stress. In this episode of Raise the Line, host Shiv Gaglani explores with Arianna how her company, Thrive Global, works with employers around the world to realize the benefits of employee wellness, the special effort she's made during the coronavirus crisis to support frontline workers through First Responders First, and some simple microsteps we can all take every day to avoid burnout.
If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

May 14, 2020 • 26min
Prisma Health Physicians Create Ventilator Device That Could Save Lives
After seeing Italy confront the grim reality of ventilator rationing, emergency medicine specialist Dr. Sarah Farris wanted to spare physicians and patients in the U.S. the same agonizing choices. Creating a splitting device that would allow one ventilator to serve two patients seemed like a good solution, and in a remarkable sequence of events, thousands of those devices were manufactured and ready for use just a few weeks after she first mentioned the idea. Sarah and her colleagues at Prisma Health, Dr. Marjorie Jenkins and Dr. Peter Tilkemeier, join host Rishi Desai to describe the powerful partnership of medicine, government and industry that made it possible. If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

May 13, 2020 • 20min
Adele Webb - Executive Dean, Strategic Education Inc.
Pediatric nurse, global force in fighting AIDS, professor of nursing, academic leader -- Adele Webb has played many roles in her career by following her passion. As she reveals to host Rishi Desai in this episode of Raise the Line, allowing yourself the opportunity to follow that passion, and having the courage to do so, can be the key to a meaningful career. If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

May 7, 2020 • 21min
Donna Meyer - CEO, Organization for Associate Degree Nursing
Half of all nurses in the U.S. are graduates of two-year programs when they first start practicing, and while a national push is on to encourage RN's to get bachelor's degrees, an associate's degree remains a critical path into the profession. Donna Meyer, who runs the only organization that advocates for these two-year programs, joins host Shiv Gaglani to explore the realities facing early-career nurses and discuss the impact of the COVID-19 crisis on the nursing workforce. If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

May 5, 2020 • 23min
Dr. Roger Seheult, Co-Founder of Medcram
Why are young patients with COVID 19 having strokes? Why are ventilators not as effective as expected? Why do some patients have the symptoms of altitude sickness? One explanation for these mysteries is the disease keeps adapting and changing. But the other is that our understanding of it is catching up to what might be the truth: COVID 19 is not primarily a lung disease but rather a disease of the cells that line the inside of blood vessels and lymphatic vessels. Pulmonologist Roger Seheult, one of the drivers behind the popular Medcram video series, talks about the evolving understanding of COVID 19 and his approach to explaining complex medical subjects to a general audience.
If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

May 1, 2020 • 12min
Jesse vanWestrienen, Co-Founder & Biology Lead, Biomeme, Inc.
Quick, accurate testing for COVID-19 is critically important as states begin to loosen up social distancing. Enter Biomeme, a Pennsylvania-based biotech firm, with a system that allows sophisticated DNA testing to be done in virtually any location using a smartphone and a piece of lab equipment small enough to fit in the palm of your hand. Non-professionals can be quickly trained to use it, and results come within an hour, instead of a day. Company co-founder Jesse vanWestrienen explains how it all works to Dr. Rishi Desai.
If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

Apr 29, 2020 • 20min
Jeff Maggioncalda - CEO, Coursera
Imagine this: college students back on campus, but older professors teaching from home. That's one of the scenarios Coursera CEO Jeff Maggioncalda says might play out this fall as higher education regroups in response to COVID-19. What he knows for certain is his online education company, which already had 46 million learners and 200 university partners, has seen explosive growth in the past few months. Listen in as he and host Shiv Gaglani explore what's new, and what's coming, in online education. If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

Apr 28, 2020 • 21min
Dr. Abdirahman Mahamud - WHO Incident Manager, Western Pacific Region
Dr. Abdirahman Mahamud of the World Health Organization was among the first to see reports out of China last December about a mysterious pneumonia-like illness that we all now know as COVID-19. He tells host Dr. Rishi Desai that preparedness, widespread testing, and aggressive action to deal with those infected explains why many countries in Asia have fared better than parts of Europe and the U.S. If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast

Apr 24, 2020 • 15min
Dr. Conrad Fischer - Infectious Disease Specialist, Brookdale Hospital Medical Center
"Your calling is sacred." That's the message Dr. Conrad Fischer has for people entering health professions, especially in the midst of the coronavirus crisis. He took a few moments out from treating COVID-19 patients, twenty of whom had died in his Brooklyn hospital the previous day, to describe the fear, frustration, dedication and humanity of his colleagues who are doing their best in unprecedented circumstances. It's a gripping eyewitness account from the eye of the storm. If you like this podcast, please share it on your social channels. You
can also subscribe to the series and check out all of our episodes at
www.osmosis.org/podcast


