38 min

Season 2 - Episode 5: A Family of Healthcare Innovators GuideWire

    • Ciencias de la vida

In this episode of GuideWire, Devin Hubbard with FastTraCS talks to Jim and Audrey Larson, a father-daughter duo from a family of healthcare innovators—one is a physician and the other is a medical device engineer.
Jim and Audrey discuss their journeys into medical careers and focus on everything from emergency medicine to design, research, and development of devices. You don’t have to have the ultimate solution in mind, but what is the problem? Find somebody you can work with.
 
Today’s Topics Include:

FastTraCS: Jim joined Clinical Advisory Group to provide input, innovate, solve problems
Bedside Calculations: Engineering background in medicine offers ability to do math
No One Knows It All: Communication between engineers, non-engineering physicians
Innovation: Clinical shift causes challenge to carve out time to create awareness
Alarm Fatigue: Mitigate beeps, taps, and similar sounds that go off all the time
Academia vs. Industry: Match manufacturers, clinicians to use expertise for unmet needs

 
Links and Resources:
Devin Hubbard
Jim Larson
Audrey Larson on LinkedIn
Cinnamon Larson on LinkedIn
Tim Brown of IDEO
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
FastTraCS
FastTraCS Clinical Advisory Group
GuideWire Podcast on Twitter
GuideWire Podcast
 
Quotes/Tweets:
“My engineering education was way harder than medical school.” - Jim Larson
“Having an engineering background in medicine, the ability to do math at the bedside is something that you take for granted.” - Jim Larson
“There can be this dynamic where engineers can have a tendency to be sort of know it alls or cynics.” - Audrey Larson
“Getting to a solution that works is more important when it’s time-critical for patients.” - Jim Larson

In this episode of GuideWire, Devin Hubbard with FastTraCS talks to Jim and Audrey Larson, a father-daughter duo from a family of healthcare innovators—one is a physician and the other is a medical device engineer.
Jim and Audrey discuss their journeys into medical careers and focus on everything from emergency medicine to design, research, and development of devices. You don’t have to have the ultimate solution in mind, but what is the problem? Find somebody you can work with.
 
Today’s Topics Include:

FastTraCS: Jim joined Clinical Advisory Group to provide input, innovate, solve problems
Bedside Calculations: Engineering background in medicine offers ability to do math
No One Knows It All: Communication between engineers, non-engineering physicians
Innovation: Clinical shift causes challenge to carve out time to create awareness
Alarm Fatigue: Mitigate beeps, taps, and similar sounds that go off all the time
Academia vs. Industry: Match manufacturers, clinicians to use expertise for unmet needs

 
Links and Resources:
Devin Hubbard
Jim Larson
Audrey Larson on LinkedIn
Cinnamon Larson on LinkedIn
Tim Brown of IDEO
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
FastTraCS
FastTraCS Clinical Advisory Group
GuideWire Podcast on Twitter
GuideWire Podcast
 
Quotes/Tweets:
“My engineering education was way harder than medical school.” - Jim Larson
“Having an engineering background in medicine, the ability to do math at the bedside is something that you take for granted.” - Jim Larson
“There can be this dynamic where engineers can have a tendency to be sort of know it alls or cynics.” - Audrey Larson
“Getting to a solution that works is more important when it’s time-critical for patients.” - Jim Larson

38 min