AHF Podcast

Anterior Hip Foundation

The AHF Podcast features thoughtful conversations about orthopedic surgery, outcomes, and clinical decision-making, with a particular focus on hip surgery and related innovation.Produced by the Anterior Hip Foundation, the podcast brings together surgeons, researchers, and clinical leaders to examine how evidence, experience, and real-world practice intersect. Episodes explore what the data actually shows, where assumptions break down, and how clinicians navigate uncertainty in daily practice.This podcast is intended for orthopedic surgeons, trainees, and medically literate clinicians who value nuanced discussion, critical thinking, and honest examination of what improves patient care.

  1. vor 9 Std.

    Operation FUBAR: One-in-Six-Million Bone

    Send us Fan Mail What do you do when the greater trochanter shears off during a routine hip replacement — and the bone is too soft to hold a screw? Dr. Jeff Barry of UCSF walks through two intraoperative disasters in the same patient, and how he salvaged both. Jeff Barry, who directs the Hip and Knee Arthroplasty Fellowship at UCSF and co-directs the Arthroplasty for the Modern Surgeon course, joins Joe Schwab for an Operation FUBAR case review most surgeons will recognize with a wince: a frail 75-year-old retired nurse with a rapidly collapsing hip, leukemia, low platelets, and osteoporosis so severe her DEXA T-score came back at -5.1 — statistically about one in six million. On the first side, the trochanter shears off during a femoral exposure Barry has performed thousands of times. On the second side a year later — after a missed femoral neck fracture — a gently tapped multi-hole cup punches straight through the medial wall. Barry talks through the decision-making in both moments: when less is more, how locking-screw revision cups can function as an internal cage, and why the "trap side" of a case is often the one you weren't worried about. The conversation goes beyond technique into how surgeons process intraoperative complications — stepping back from the wound to game-plan, communicating with anesthesia before cementing in a pulmonary patient, protecting the next case on the schedule, and the value of a "confessional" text thread with trusted colleagues. For arthroplasty surgeons, fellows, and residents, this is an honest look at what severely osteoporotic bone can do to even a well-planned primary. ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 Introduction and guest background 01:31 Frail elderly patient with a rapidly collapsing hip 03:37 Planning a cemented hip in severe osteoporosis 06:21 Greater trochanter shears off during femoral exposure 08:00 How surgeons react when a case goes wrong 13:27 What a T-score of -5.1 means for hip surgery 14:42 Missed femoral neck fracture in the opposite hip 16:44 Acetabular cup punches through the medial wall 19:21 Salvaging a failed cup with locking screws 24:45 Managing pelvic discontinuity as the rescue surgeon 28:46 Knowing when to call for help in the OR 33:33 Teaching trainees through intraoperative complications 40:12 Debriefing and the surgeon confessional after complications Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #TotalHipArthroplasty #THA #AnteriorApproach #HipReplacement #Osteoporosis #RevisionHipSurgery #FemoralNeckFracture #PeriprostheticFracture #CementedStem #PelvicDiscontinuity #JeffBarry #OrthopedicSurgery

    43 Min.
  2. 26. Juni

    Mapping How the World Really Does Hip Replacement

    Send us Fan Mail How does hip replacement practice really differ from one country to the next? Researcher Irrum Afzal joins the AHF Podcast to discuss the Global Arthroplasty Practice Survey (GAPS) — the first effort to map how surgeons worldwide actually perform total hip replacement. Despite roughly seventy years of modern hip replacement, there's still no global consensus on the fundamentals — surgical approach, fixation, bearing surface, or the perioperative pathway. National joint registries capture some of this, but their coverage and data quality vary widely, and many countries have no registry at all. The result is that we know surprisingly little about how the operation is actually performed around the world. Irrum Afzal, a researcher at Imperial College London and a digital health transformation specialist, is working to close that gap. Co-led with Professor Richard Field, GAPS asks surgeons of every volume and career stage to describe their real preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative practice. It takes under ten minutes, covers the full patient journey, and is built to feed a long-term dataset that machine learning can eventually turn into research priorities and a working global consensus. Along the way, Irrum explains how her study on the accuracy of National Joint Registry revision data shaped her thinking about data quality, why anterior approach adoption ranges from around 1% in the UK to 56% in the US, and what surgeon-reported practice data can add to what registries already collect. If you perform hip replacement, your answers help build the first real worldwide picture of the field — and the survey is open through 30 June. Take the Survey Here: https://tinyurl.com/GAPSHIPS Visit the Working Group: https://www.globalarthroplastypractice.com/ ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 Introduction and guest background 01:40 How a public health researcher moved into orthopaedics 02:48 Why hip revision registry data is often inaccurate 04:46 What the Global Arthroplasty Practice Survey measures 07:14 Why hip replacement practice still varies worldwide 08:42 Who runs GAPS and how to join the working group 10:08 Why surgeons should take the survey and what they gain 13:18 Using AI to turn survey responses into research priorities 14:01 How many responses GAPS needs and the June 30th deadline 16:50 What success looks like and sharing data with registries 19:05 Presenting GAPS results at the European Anterior Hip Meeting Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #HipReplacement #TotalHipArthroplasty #THA #AnteriorApproach #JointRegistry #NationalJointRegistry #OrthopaedicResearch #GAPS #IrrumAfzal #HipRevision #ArthroplastyData

    22 Min.
  3. 22. Mai

    From Idea to Market: Ep 10 - What Breaks at Scale

    Send us Fan Mail What real-world use reveals about a medical device that no clinical trial ever could — and why the most dangerous moment in med tech innovation often comes after success, not before. A conversation about the fatigue failures, reimbursement gaps, and feedback breakdowns that surface only at scale. For ten episodes, the From Idea to Market series has followed medical innovation through every threshold an idea must survive — the first clinical insight, the years of iteration, the funding rounds, the regulatory climb, the investor's decision room. Episode 10 asks what happens after all of that succeeds. When a product is working, when demand is building, when expectations have risen, what new vulnerabilities does that very success create? Joe Schwab is joined by four voices who have lived this stage from different positions. Jared Foran is an orthopaedic surgeon in Denver and co-founder and chief scientific officer of Forcast Orthopedics. Doug Fairbanks is the president, CEO, and board member at VISIE Inc. Charlie DeCook is the president of Total Joint Specialists, a 17-surgeon group in Atlanta. Robert Cohen is the vice president of innovation and technology for Stryker's orthopaedic group, with four decades of watching the commercial environment for med tech innovation shift around him. The episode works through three questions: what does real-world use reveal that no development program ever can, which structural and commercial weaknesses surface only at scale, and how do teams build the organizational discipline to act on what the market tells them. The conversation moves from product iteration after launch, to the second valley of death between regulatory clearance and reimbursement, to the feedback loops inside an organization that determine whether real-world signals reach the people who can act on them. For surgeon-founders, for engineers in med tech, and for anyone trying to understand why so many clinically promising ideas stall after they reach the market, this episode is about what scale actually demands. ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 What happens to medical devices after they reach the market 02:53 Surgeons and industry leaders who scaled med tech innovations 04:35 The fatigue failure principle applied to medical devices 06:05 What real-world use reveals that clinical trials never can 09:15 Why most med tech products require a major pivot post-launch 11:33 How to sustain commercial momentum after launch 14:32 The second valley of death between clearance and reimbursement 16:13 Inside the new FDA-CMS RAPID coverage pathway 17:36 How reimbursement uncertainty kills good clinical ideas 22:35 Building feedback loops before scale exposes the gaps 25:39 Why launch is the start of development, not the end 30:55 Preview: built to last or built to sell Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #anteriorhipfoundation   #AHFPodcast #MedTech #MedTechInnovation #FromIdeaToMarket #PostMarketSurveillance #MedicalDevices #Reimbursement #FDA #ValleyOfDeath #Stryker #OrthopedicSurgery

    32 Min.
  4. 19. Mai

    FITM Extended Interview: Alexander Sah

    Send us Fan Mail Alex Sah on what it actually takes for a practicing surgeon to develop new orthopaedic tools — from first idea to OR adoption. An honest conversation about mentors, mistakes, AI, and knowing when to walk away from a collaboration. Most surgeons spot problems in the OR daily and quietly adapt to the limits of existing tools. Alex Sah, a high-volume hip and knee surgeon in Silicon Valley and Chief Medical Officer at Think Surgical, has chosen instead to engage directly with industry — first as an evaluator, then as an advisor, and eventually as a design partner. In this conversation with Joe Schwab, he walks through how that progression actually works in practice, and why he thinks every surgeon with a good idea owes it to themselves to start the process now rather than later. The discussion gets practical fast. Alex breaks down how to vet an idea with a mentor and a patent search, why timing and portfolio fit can make or break a great concept, how to set milestones that let you walk away gracefully from a stalled collaboration, and why the technologies that succeed are usually the ones that speak for themselves the first time a surgeon uses them. He also shares a small habit with big implications — keeping his OR team blinded when testing new products to neutralize the placebo effect that quietly distorts informal evaluations. The conversation closes on AI's inevitable arrival in orthopaedics, the surgeon's role in shaping it before it gets shaped for us, and the AHF Shark Tank as a live laboratory for the From Idea to Market journey. If you've been sitting on an idea, or wondering whether to take that next call from a device rep with a prototype, this episode is a realistic map of the road ahead. ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 Introduction and Silicon Valley innovation roots 01:02 Why surgeons should solve problems instead of adapting 03:25 Surgeon roles in product development 04:24 First steps for surgeons with no industry connections 05:41 Turning a clinical idea into a development concept 06:46 Setting milestones and knowing when to walk away 08:01 Lessons from working with Think Surgical 10:50 Evaluating new surgical technology objectively 12:14 Essential advice for first-time surgeon innovators 15:47 Why surgeons must help shape AI in orthopaedics 17:40 Inside the AHF Shark Tank for surgical innovation Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #AlexanderSah #SurgeonInnovator #MedicalDeviceDevelopment #ThinkSurgical #Ospitek #OrthopaedicInnovation #JointReplacement #HipAndKneeSurgery #AIinSurgery #FromIdeaToMarket #MedTech #SurgicalRobotics

    23 Min.
  5. 15. Mai

    From Idea to Market: Ep 9 - Inside the Decision Room

    Send us Fan Mail What med tech investors and strategic acquirers actually evaluate when a founder walks into the room — and what separates the pitches that earn capital from those that don't. A conversation drawn from people who've sat on both sides of the table. For nine episodes, the From Idea to Market series has followed innovation from the founder's perspective — the problem noticed in a clinic, the iteration through years of prototypes, the regulatory climb, the manufacturing scale-up. Episode nine flips the lens. For the first time, the conversation moves into the room where decisions about that founder get made: by investors, by strategic acquirers, by the people whose capital and reputation come along with a yes. Joe Schwab is joined by voices who've lived this evaluation from every side. Charles Lawrie is a co-founder and chief medical officer at FIOS Health and the current president of the Anterior Hip Foundation. Charlie DeCook is the president of Total Joint Specialists and has watched dozens of Shark Tank pitches at AHF annual meetings. Alex Sah is past AHF president, chief medical officer at Think! Surgical, and chief innovation officer at Ospitek. Robert Cohen, vice president of innovation and technology for Stryker's orthopaedic group, has spent four decades evaluating med tech ideas from inside startups and from inside one of the largest companies in the field. The episode unpacks three questions: what truly drives the decisions made behind closed doors, how clinical value and financial logic and strategic interest actually intersect in real time, and which kinds of narrative survive due diligence — and which collapse the moment scrutiny begins. For surgeon-founders preparing to pitch, for clinicians thinking about their first innovation, and for anyone curious about how med tech capital actually gets allocated, this episode lays out what the decision room is really testing. ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 Why this episode flips perspective from founder to investor 02:42 Surgeons and industry leaders inside the med tech decision room 04:46 What investors actually look for in a med tech pitch 08:23 How to structure a 15-minute med tech pitch 13:30 Where clinical value, profit, and strategy intersect 15:30 Why a great med tech idea can fail to scale 18:36 Why founders should pitch with a CEO at their side 22:02 How honest narrative wins under due diligence scrutiny 26:40 Stick to your competency: advice from a Stryker VP 29:12 What the decision room is really testing 31:43 Preview: when scaling success threatens to break the company Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #MedTech #MedTechInnovation #FromIdeaToMarket #MedicalDevices #MedTechInvesting #OrthopedicSurgery #StartupPitch #VentureCapital #Stryker #SharkTank

    33 Min.
  6. 12. Mai

    FITM Extended Interview: Charles Lawrie (FIOS Health)

    Send us Fan Mail Charles Lawrie, MD — president of the Anterior Hip Foundation and a high-volume anterior approach hip and robotic knee surgeon in Miami — walks us through how a frustration in his own clinic became FIOS Health, an AI-powered patient communication platform now used in orthopaedic practices across the United States. This is an extended From Idea to Market conversation about the often lonely process of turning a clinical observation into a commercialized med-tech product, and what surgeons should know before they try. Most surgeons see the same pattern every week: a flood of routine post-op questions about swelling, walking, showering, and driving that consumes clinic staff and amplifies patient anxiety. Lawrie's argument is that the bottleneck isn't surgical expertise — it's access to timely, trusted information, and that scaling that information is a fundamentally different problem than scaling clinical capacity. We get into why he chose an AI-first product layered on familiar SMS and WhatsApp instead of yet another app, how he found a complementary co-founder in engineer and serial entrepreneur Andrew McDaid, what he had to unlearn to translate clinical expertise into product-market fit, and where FIOS Health is heading next — from answering patient questions to acting as an intelligence layer for the entire clinic. If you're a surgeon thinking about innovation, this is a candid look at what it actually involves: starting with a problem you live every day, resisting the urge to build alone, defining a minimum viable product, and sitting with the daily self-doubt that comes with taking an idea to market. https://fioshealth.com/ ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 Introducing Charles Lawrie and FIOS Health 01:14 Why patients struggle with information access after surgery 03:26 Solving staff scarcity and patient anxiety at the same time 05:43 Why AI plus SMS beats yet another patient app 08:53 Turning a clinical observation into a startup 13:07 The mahogany desk vision for patient care 18:21 Finding product market fit in a busy clinic 22:41 How FIOS becomes a surgeon's digital twin 26:50 Advice for surgeons who want to build a company 29:43 The intelligence layer for the entire clinic Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #FIOSHealth #CharlesLawrie #FromIdeaToMarket #MedTechStartup #OrthopaedicInnovation #AIinHealthcare #PatientEngagement #HipArthroplasty #SurgeonEntrepreneur #DigitalHealth #ClinicalWorkflow

    32 Min.
  7. 8. Mai

    From Idea to Market: Ep 8 - Built to Run

    Send us Fan Mail What does it actually take to move a medical device from a working prototype to a product that can be built reliably at volume? In this episode of From Idea to Market, surgeons, founders, and attorneys describe the discipline that separates an approved device from a scalable company. Most medical device teams underestimate what happens after a prototype works. Manufacturing at scale is a different problem from manufacturing at all, and the assumption that the hard work is done once the device is validated tends to be the most expensive miscalculation in med tech. This episode unpacks the transition from a hand-tuned engineering project to a controlled, reproducible production system, and why the process itself, not the device, becomes the real product. Jared Foran of Forcast Orthopedics, Leo Whiteside, Marie-Isabelle Batthyány of XRSynergies, Charles Lawrie of FIOS Health, Charlie DeCook of Total Joint Specialists, attorney Emily Ast, and Simon Mifsud of Garland Surgical share what they have learned from inside this transition. The conversation covers ISO 13485, design for manufacturability, supplier qualification, the economics of hardware versus software, supply chain design as part of the device itself, the kinds of problems that only surface at volume, and the contract clauses that quietly determine whether a successful product remains a fair deal once it scales globally. If you build, fund, regulate, or use medical devices, this episode is for you. It is the part of innovation that gets the least attention and decides the most outcomes — the daily, unglamorous work of building systems reliable enough that the product performs the same way every time, no matter who is in the room. ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 Why scaling production breaks medical devices 02:57 Meet the founders, surgeons, and attorneys 05:30 What design freeze means in medical devices 06:46 Why the process becomes the product, not the device 09:32 Bringing manufacturing partners in before design freeze 12:18 The three-times rule of medical device development 15:59 Quality, cost, and scalability at production scale 18:02 Why hardware med tech is harder than software 20:18 Designing surgical kits for real-world supply chains 25:22 Problems that only emerge at production volume 28:11 Why founders should titrate the speed of scale 30:45 IP clauses and royalty timing for global products 34:58 What scale really proves about a medical device company Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #FromIdeaToMarket #MedTech #MedicalDeviceDevelopment #ISO13485 #DesignForManufacturability #DFM #QualityManagementSystem #MedTechScaling #OrthopedicInnovation #SurgicalInnovation #MedicalDeviceManufacturing #MedTechFounders

    39 Min.
  8. 1. Mai

    FITM Extended Interview: Emily Ast

    Send us Fan Mail There is no such thing as an off-the-record innovation discussion. Even a casual conversation over drinks can create a factual record of idea sharing that impacts patent ownership, joint development leverage, and your negotiating position for years. Emily Ast, a contract attorney whose practice is 75 percent orthopedics, explains exactly what surgeon innovators need to know before they say a word to anyone — including friends and family. Ast breaks down the two main contract types innovators encounter: general consulting agreements and intellectual property development agreements. She identifies the single clause she sees surgeons consistently underestimate — the product or project scope definition — and shows how a description that is even slightly too broad can transfer far more IP than intended while limiting what the innovator can do with other companies. She walks through how work orders and statements of work can keep scope appropriately narrow, why royalty streams need to account for different regulatory timelines across global markets, and how to structure IP compensation so it qualifies for capital gains treatment rather than ordinary income. The conversation also covers what a healthy, well-balanced IP partnership actually looks like, why companies may be shifting away from long royalty streams toward milestone payments and flat-rate structures, and the single most common mistake Ast sees innovators make: getting excited and signing a two-year agreement covering all of hip and knee arthroplasty when they were only asked to do one product lab. For any surgeon sitting on an idea, this is the legal foundation you need before your first meeting. https://www.astcontracts.com/ ⏱️ Chapters: 00:00 Meet Emily Ast — contract attorney for surgeon innovators 01:06 Role of a contract attorney in early-stage innovation 01:55 The biggest mindset shift: no off-the-record discussions 02:45 Why you need an NDA before talking to anyone 04:40 Risks of sharing ideas without protection 07:15 The most underestimated clause: product scope definition 09:23 General consulting agreements and hidden IP transfer 11:00 How work orders keep scope appropriately narrow 13:58 Key negotiation points for your first consulting agreement 15:25 IP development agreements: royalties, equity, and structure 17:36 Tax benefits of properly structured IP compensation 18:45 What happens when your IP appears in a product variation 21:40 Regional royalty timing across global markets 24:03 What a healthy IP partnership looks like 27:17 The most common mistake innovators make with industry 28:16 Foundational preparation before meeting with a company 29:52 One piece of advice: protect your napkin idea 31:42 How the surgeon-industry relationship is evolving 34:16 What "from idea to market" means: get your team in place Listen to the AHF Podcast on your preferred platform: Buzzsprout: https://ahfpodcast.buzzsprout.com Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ahf-podcast/id1749521487 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5CrGJyvRiQFTCU3FFFVvHc LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/ahf-podcast YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@anteriorhipfoundation Homepage: https://anteriorhipfoundation.com This podcast is intended for educational and informational purposes only. The content discussed does not constitute medical advice and should not be used as a substitute for professional judgment. Clinicians should rely on their own training, experience, and clinical decision-making when applying information from this discussion. #AnteriorHipFoundation #AHFPodcast #SurgeonInnovator #IntellectualProperty #MedicalDeviceContracts #PhysicianEntrepreneur #NDA #RoyaltyAgreement #OrthopedicInnovation #EmilyAst #IPProtection #ConsultingAgreement #MedTechLaw #FromIdeaToMarket

    35 Min.

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The AHF Podcast features thoughtful conversations about orthopedic surgery, outcomes, and clinical decision-making, with a particular focus on hip surgery and related innovation.Produced by the Anterior Hip Foundation, the podcast brings together surgeons, researchers, and clinical leaders to examine how evidence, experience, and real-world practice intersect. Episodes explore what the data actually shows, where assumptions break down, and how clinicians navigate uncertainty in daily practice.This podcast is intended for orthopedic surgeons, trainees, and medically literate clinicians who value nuanced discussion, critical thinking, and honest examination of what improves patient care.

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