Bayesian Musings: Conversations in Care, Training, and Changing Perspectives

Vishnu Kurup, Sheel Patel

Same patient, different plans. Bayesian Musings asks why. ICU trainee Vishnu talks with clinicians across disciplines to unpack the habits, pressures, and training that drive our calls and consults, such that handovers get cleaner, decisions get safer, and shifts feel less draining. You’ll hear stories, simple frameworks, and language that moves conversations forward. Made for med students, junior docs, registrars, and anyone who is curious! *Opinions are the guests’/host’s own, not medical advice*

Episodes

  1. Mar 29

    7 - Emergency Medicine: Birds, Outback Locums & The Quiet Side of Chaos with Dr Luke

    GUEST: Dr. Luke (Emergency Medicine Trainee, Australia) HOST: Dr. Vishnu Kurup (ICU Trainee, Australia) ABOUT: In this episode, Vishnu catches up with his friend and colleague Luke as he prepares for his final Emergency Medicine exams. Luke is passionate about rural and remote medicine and education, bringing a thoughtful perspective that challenges the adrenaline junkie stereotype of the specialty. Luke candidly recounts his unconventional path, starting med school at 17 without fully understanding the long training pipeline ahead. He discusses the crucial moment in his early career when he stepped away from the traditional path to locum around Australia and drive through the outback, where a month-long stint in Alice Springs finally made medicine "click" for him. The conversation explores the balance between work and life, how Luke manages to "do nothing" and find silence, and a fascinating revelation about his autobiographical memory that sheds light on how he processes traumatic events at work. Luke is incredibly self-reflective and shares how he prioritizes his identity outside of medicine through simple joys like birdwatching and reading. This is a very open and ponderous conversation with plenty of insights into the unique challenges and profound moments of care in the ED. WHO IT’S FOR: Medical students, junior doctors, ICU and surgical trainees, and anyone curious about the reality behind the surgical mask. CREDITS: Written & Hosted by Vishnu // Production & IT by Sheel SUBSCRIBE: If this hits home, follow the show and share it with colleagues. Drop topic ideas or stories in the comments. DISCLAIMER: This show contains personal views only, educational discussions but not medical advice. Some language in this episode may be stronger than usual.

    1h 22m
  2. Mar 22

    6 - Cardiothoracic Surgery: Comedy, Career Swerves & Decisiveness with Dr Andrew

    GUEST: Dr Andrew (Cardiothoracic Surgery Trainee, Australia) HOST: Dr. Vishnu Kurup (ICU Trainee, Australia) ABOUT: Andrew brings a rare mix: cardiothoracic trainee, former ICU registrar, and comedian. This episode dives into what pulled him away from the "academic monitoring" of the ICU and into the decisive world of the operating theater. We explore the cultural shifts between specialties from the managerial, multi-organ coordination of Intensive Care to the technical finality of cardiac surgery. Andrew shares his candid journey of moving from Cairo to rural New Zealand, navigating the path into medicine, and the resilience required for repeated residency applications. The conversation gets into the gritty interface between ICU and surgery: turnover, the weight of family meetings, and what surgeons often misunderstand about their intensive care colleagues.  Beyond the scrubs, Andrew talks about using dark humor as a survival tool, the future of robotic thoracic surgery, the contentious TAVI debate, and the realities of building a life while chasing a demanding surgical path. Lightly explicit, deeply philosophical, and very funny. WHO IT’S FOR: Medical students, junior doctors, ICU and surgical trainees, and anyone curious about the reality behind the surgical mask. CREDITS: Written & Hosted by Vishnu // Production & IT by Sheel SUBSCRIBE: If this hits home, follow the show and share it with colleagues. Drop topic ideas or stories in the comments. DISCLAIMER: This show contains personal views only, educational discussions but not medical advice. Some language in this episode may be stronger than usual.

    1h 46m
  3. 10/27/2025

    4 - Palliative Medicine: Goals of Care, Humanity & Balance with Dr Ruby

    GUEST - Dr Ruby (Palliative Care & General Medicine Physician, Australia) HOST - Dr. Vishnu Kurup (ICU Trainee, Australia) ABOUT - Dr. Ruby joins us immediately following an intensive ICU rotation, bringing a unique dual perspective shaped by both the person centered practice of palliative care, and the rigorous framework of general medicine. The conversation centers on several key clinical and systemic topics. The importance of establishing goals of care early in the patient journey are discussed, including a specific clarification that the assignment of palliative status does not inherently mean a patient is actively dying. Further topics include effective communication, focusing on the use of language that humanizes clinical handover documentation. Ruby provides insight into her professional trajectory, from starting clinical training in a rural setting to developing interests in oncology, navigating exam stress during the COVID era, and her choice of dual specialist training to remain established in the Geelong region. She also critically examines the operational interface between the Emergency Department, General Medicine, and Intensive Care, unpacking issues such as inherent bias, complex discharge planning, and managing high stakes decision making at critical hours. WHO IT’S FOR - Medical students, junior doctors, registrars, and anyone who’s curious! CREDITS -Written & Hosted by Vishnu // Production & IT by Sheel SUBSCRIBE -If this hits home, follow the show and share it with colleagues. Drop topic ideas or stories in the comments. DISCLAIMER -This show contains personal views only, educational discussions but not medical advice.

    1h 9m

About

Same patient, different plans. Bayesian Musings asks why. ICU trainee Vishnu talks with clinicians across disciplines to unpack the habits, pressures, and training that drive our calls and consults, such that handovers get cleaner, decisions get safer, and shifts feel less draining. You’ll hear stories, simple frameworks, and language that moves conversations forward. Made for med students, junior docs, registrars, and anyone who is curious! *Opinions are the guests’/host’s own, not medical advice*