Hippie Docs 2.0: Re-Humanizing Medicine

Hippie Docs 2.0

Hippie Docs 2.0: Re-Humanizing Medicine is hosted by psychiatrist Dr. Paul Linde, inspired by the generation of doctors working during the Civil Rights era and the ripple effect on today's physicians who are dedicated to social justice and emphasizing the doctor-patient relationship in the face of increasing corporatization of medicine.

  1. 06/01/2022

    A Deep Dive into Primary Care Medicine: A Conversation with Dr. John Mendelson, an Addiction Researcher and Physician, Startup Co-founder, and Primary Care Doctor for 30 Years.

    Medicine is more of a team sport than we might like to admit, and yet the romance of one-on-one care glorified in TV shows like Marcus Welby, M.D. continue to be mythologized. Airing from 1969-1976, the show starred Robert Young as the title character, a family practitioner with a kind bedside manner, who was on a first-name basis with many of his patients (and who also made house calls).  There have been tectonic shifts in medicine both in terms of treatments and the delivery of care since the 1970’s and our balkanized healthcare system was struggling before Covid. In the last 30-40 years, the escalating costs and dizzying systemic gyrations—from HMOs structures to the ACA overhaul—have left many patients confused, underserved and overcharged. Despite heroic efforts from practitioners there will most certainly be lasting structural and care delivery effects from the pandemic, so it is a good time to take a look at this pivotal role in our healthcare system. Primary Care Medicine is supposed to serve as the patient's entry point into the health care system and as the continuing focal point for all needed health care services. A primary care physician is a specialist in family medicine, general internal medicine or general pediatrics who provides patient care and takes continuing responsibility for providing the patient's comprehensive care. Healthcare delivery and structure is ever morphing in our for profit system, and we are once again seeing a big shift. Join Paul for a lively conversation with Dr. John Mendelson, an addiction researcher and physician, startup co-founder and primary care physician for more than 30 years. John recently gave up his primary care practice, but has tremendous insight into the past, present and future of Primary Care Medicine.

    30 min
  2. 04/02/2022

    The Psychology of a Pandemic: How Covid has Transformed both the Clinical Psychology Practice and Patients of Dr. Jeb Berkeley

    Jeb Berkeley, PhD is a clinical psychologist in San Francisco whose practice focuses on the treatment of the symptoms of anxiety and depression expressed in the realms of love, family, partnership, loss, addiction, work, health, uncertainty and pleasure. With 40 years of experience, Dr. Berkeley shares mental health insights into the challenges and opportunities the global pandemic has created during the last two years. With therapists sharing the trauma with patients, and unable to provide a physically ‘safe’ environment for therapy, most counseling went online. He says he recently heard a comedian say “doing therapy on zoom is like sex with a condom; it’s safe but you lose something.” And yet, as a person who self describes as someone ‘who runs hopeful,’ he found a number of positives in his practice during this difficult era. The unique global experience of uncertainty, created immeasurable stress and suffering for so many, but despite a trend of Covid divorces, Jeb says he witnessed some surprising unexpected areas of growth for patients and therapists. Join Paul for a revealing conversation about how this crisis has upended, transformed and changed the course of therapy, while stimulating both profound suffering and remarkable resilience in so many. The covid chronicles are far from over, but it is enlightening to investigate the odyssey of our times, and the implications for health and wellbeing, all with a warm sense of optimism and humor.

    31 min
  3. 11/01/2021

    Global Mental Health Care & the Empower Initiative: A Conversation with Dr. Vikram Patel, Psychiatrist and Endowed Professor at Harvard Medical School

    When it comes to treating depression, it's the rest of the world that is delivering health care innovations to the United States. The global burden of unrecognized and untreated depression in terms of suffering and lost productivity is staggering. This is not just true in economically developing countries, but in the United States as well. A lack of broad access to affordable, effective, quality-based mental health care is a universal problem. In recent years, innovative research has driven the development of treatment strategies for depression, with the bulk of this work occurring in under-resourced areas of the world such as India and Africa. Much of this research, and its application has come from the scholarly work of Dr. Vikram Patel, a UK-trained Psychiatrist and Endowed Professor of Global Health at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Patel's work has focused on the burden of mental health problems across the life course, their association with social disadvantage, and the use of community resources for their prevention and treatment.   Dr. Patel speaks with Paul about these challenges and possible solutions provided by the Harvard-sponsored ‘Empower Initiative’ program, which is a model for improving depression care at the community level. This multi-dimensional, holistic, and humanistic approach is now being brought to Texas in the form of the "Lone Star Depression Challenge". Using strategies honed in rural communities worldwide, the project seeks to make depression care more widely available via the use of front-line health workers using evidence-based digital treatment tools. In our third episode of Season 2, focusing on health equity, Paul and Vikram delve into these topics, describing a potential roadmap to reducing the global burden of depression into the 21st Century.

    32 min
  4. 10/01/2021

    Health Equity for Communities of Color: A Conversation with Dr. Scott Cook, a Physician and International Lecturer on Health Disparities

    ‘If America catches a cold, black folks get pneumonia’ is a common phrase in the African-American community, and we have seen the suffering during Covid fall disproportionately on communities of color. Thirty years ago, Dr. Scott Cook wrote his thesis on “The Public Health Implications of Institutional Racism and how it Affects the Health of African American Males”. He was given some pushback on the topic at the time. Homicide, gun violence, and alcohol/drug dependence just then being understood as public health crises. Today, climate and environmental dangers, housing issues, nutrition, trauma, and poverty can be added to the growing list of forces that are associated with poor health outcomes. Dr. Cook, a physician, international lecturer on racism and health disparities, as well as an addiction specialist, has spent much of his medical career identifying, studying, and attempting to remedy these social determinants of health. If racism = prejudice + power, we have a long road ahead of us in our work as a society to achieve health equity, diversity, inclusion as well as recruitment and retention in medicine among people of color. Join Paul for his conversation with Dr. Cook as they explore these facets of the American medical system, and how we continue to attempt and fail at making medicine— both an art and science— more equitable and just. What are the best ways to improve experience and outcomes? This frank and personal discussion, with a prominent and vocal agent of change, yields many insights and prescriptions for how we can and must do better.

    35 min
5
out of 5
9 Ratings

About

Hippie Docs 2.0: Re-Humanizing Medicine is hosted by psychiatrist Dr. Paul Linde, inspired by the generation of doctors working during the Civil Rights era and the ripple effect on today's physicians who are dedicated to social justice and emphasizing the doctor-patient relationship in the face of increasing corporatization of medicine.