Clinician's Roundtable

ReachMD
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Dec 22, 2009 • 15min

Pro Football Players and Brain Injury: New Guidelines

Host: Bruce Japsen Guest: Julian Bailes, MD The National Football League has placed its strictest rules yet on managing concussions. What is the medical profession to make of such a policy and what are its broader implications for players' long-term health and for future medical research? Dr. Julian Bailes is a founding member of the Brain Injury Research Institute, which is affiliated with the Blanchette Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute at West Virginia University and possesses a brain and tissue bank that houses 20 brains for future research. He is also professor and chairman of the department of neurosurgery at West Virginia University School of Medicine. Dr. Bailes tells host Bruce Japsen about important research into the short and long-term impact of brain injuries.
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Dec 15, 2009 • 15min

Is Less More? Spending for Better Outcomes

Host: Bruce Japsen Guest: Michael Ong, MD In the healthcare debate, we've heard a lot about the equation between improving quality and cutting costs. But new research takes the opposite view that sometimes increased spending leads to better outcomes. Host Bruce Japsen, who also writes about healthcare for the Chicago Tribune, talks with Dr. Michael Ong, assistant professor of medicine in residence in the UCLA Division of General Internal Medicine & Health Services Research at the David Geffen School of Medicine, about his research.
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Dec 10, 2009 • 15min

PAs Around the World: Development & Growth of PAs in the UK

Host: Lisa Dandrea Lenell, PA-C, MPAS, MBA Guest: Phillip Begg, PhD The physician assistant program began in the United Kingdom in 2004 with five students. Today, four universities have a PA program, with more than 200 students expected to graduate by 2012. Dr. Phillip Begg, associate dean at the University of Wolverhampton in Wolverhampton, England, talks with host Lisa Dandrea Lenell about the successes and obstacles to the beginning of this PA program, and why the program is essential to the United Kingdom's national health service.
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Dec 8, 2009 • 15min

Paying More For Worse Outcomes: Behavioral Economics & Healthcare

Host: Bruce Japsen Guest: Bob Nease, PhD Why do Americans choose healthcare options that cost more but may not even do more or be in the best interest of their own health? Dr. Bob Nease, chief scientist at Express Scripts, tells host Bruce Japsen about what appears to be a troubling phenomena researchers are calling the behavioral economics of healthcare.
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Dec 3, 2009 • 15min

DENTEX Brings Smiles to Alaska

Host: Lisa Dandrea Lenell, PA-C, MPAS, MBA Guest: Ruth Ballweg, PA-C The rate of dental disease in Alaska is the highest in the United States. In order to combat the problem, Medex has started a dental therapy program in the area called DENTEX. Ruth Ballweg, director of the MEDEX Northwest program, discusses with host Lisa Dandrea Lenell how Medex became involved with dental care, the progress of the program and their plans to expand the DENTEX program into other states.
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Dec 1, 2009 • 15min

Locating the Medical Home Within Healthcare Reform

Host: Bruce Japsen Guest: Kenneth Thorpe, PhD The medical home is a concept that it moving from the theoretical and becoming a reality. How has this model of team-based care been piloted in the United States, and how might it change patient care, as well as physician payment? Dr. Kenneth Thorpe, the Woodruff Professor and Chair of Health Policy and Management at Emory University's Rollins School of Public Health and former healthcare adviser to President Clinton, joins host Bruce Japsen to discuss these issues, and how the medical home concept is being built into the healthcare reform proposals.
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Oct 15, 2009 • 15min

A Race Against Time: Treating Burn Patients Injured in Battle

Host: Lisa Dandrea Lenell, PA-C, MPAS, MBA Guest: Kevin Chung, MD Guest: Charles Thompson, PA-C, RN The U.S. Army Burn Center at Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam Houston Texas, is one of the five busiest burn units in the country. These patients are out of the ordinary. They are military men and women who have been burned over at least 20 percent of their body while serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. Dr. Kevin Chung an intensivist at the unit and PA Charles Thompson join host Lisa Dandrea Lenell to talk about the process of moving patients from the battlefield to the burn unit, how burn wounds are treated and the emotional toll that it takes on the medical professionals treating these patients.
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Oct 15, 2009 • 15min

A Multi-Disciplinary Team Approach at BAMC's Burn Unit

Host: Lisa Dandrea Lenell, PA-C, MPAS, MBA Guest: Kevin Chung, MD Guest: Charles Thompson, PA-C, RN It takes a team of specialists, social workers, PAs, nurses and therapists to care for the burn patients at the US Army Burn Unit in Brooke Army Medical Center, Fort Sam Houston, Texas. Every day more than 30 medical professionals make rounds checking on the critically injured at the unit. Dr. Kevin Chung, intensivist at the burn center, and PA Charles Thompson explain to host Lisa Dandrea Lenell the mutli-disciplinary team approach that is used to treat more than 500 patients a year.
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Oct 15, 2009 • 14min

How to Win a Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology

Host: Mary Leuchars, MD Guest: Barry Marshall, MBBS Nobel Prize winners are among the most honored individuals on Earth. Yet in the case of medicine or physiology, it's said that prize winners find more success cultivating quiet careers in basic science research composing solid litanies of publications than assuming roles of "celebrity experts." Dr. Barry J. Marshall, Australian physician and professor of clinical microbiology at the University of Western Australia, received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2005 for the discovery of H. pylori's role in gastric ulcer disease pathogenesis. He joins host Dr. Mary Leuchars to provide his own "How To" guide for a Nobel Prize-winning career track.
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Oct 15, 2009 • 14min

The Remarkable Discovery of Helicobacter pylori

Host: Mary Leuchars, MD Guest: Barry Marshall, MBBS After failed attempts to infect piglets with H.pylori in 1984, Dr. Barry Marshall decided to use himself as an animal model and drank from a petri dish cultured with the bacteria. His resultant development of gastritis, and the subsequent discovery of H.pylori's role in gastric ulcer disease pathogenesis, led to a Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2005. On this program, Dr. Marshal shares his personal story of discovery with host Dr. Mary Leuchars.

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