Just Medicine

Just Medicine Podcast

Just Medicine is a podcast on equity in healthcare, hosted by medical students in British Columbia. Each episode, we bring on a guest to chat about a range of social justice topics and how they relate to medicine and health care. The aim of the podcast is to equip medical trainees with the knowledge and skills to provide inclusive care to a growingly diverse population. The podcast is released every second Thursday of the month, starting on January 12, 2023. This podcast is not affiliated with UBC Faculty of Medicine and is not meant to provide medical advice.

  1. 9H AGO

    37. The trailblazing Black trainees righting medicine's historical wrongs

    In this episode, host Sandra speaks to Dr. Gbolahan (GB) Olarewaju, a public health resident physician, academic activist, and past and inaugural chair of the Black Medical Students’ Association of Canada. They discuss how decades of discriminatory policies and practices have thrown up obstacles to the medical profession for Black folks – and how the efforts of Black learners and trainees and their allies are righting these wrongs. Tune in as we delve into the history of medical violence against Black communities, and the role we all play in dismantling structural barriers to health and the health professions.  Resources: Learn more about the history of medical violence against Black communities in Harriet A. Washington’s 2008 book, Medical Apartheid: The Dark History of Medical Experimentation on Black Americans from Colonial Times to the Present. Familiarize yourself with the concept of race correction with this primer from the Canada-US Coalition to End "Race Correction" in Health Care and in Vyas, D. A., Eisenstein, L. G., and Jones, D. S. (2020). Hidden in plain sight — Reconsidering the use of race correction in clinical algorithms. NEJM, 383. 874-882. Review some papers about the health impacts of a demographically diverse health care workforce: Marrast, L. M., Zallman, L., Woolhandler, S. et al. (2014). Minority physicians’ role in the care of underserved patients. JAMA Internal Medicine, 174(2). 289-291. Greenwood, B. N., Hardeman, R. R., Huang, L., and Sojourner, A. (2020). Physician-patient racial concordance and disparities in birthing mortality. PNAS, 117(35), 21194-21200. Snyder, J. E., Upton, R. D., Hassett, T. C. et al. (2023). Black representation in the primary care physician workforce and its association with population life expectancy and mortality rates in the US. JAMA Network Open, 6(4). E236687. Watch Dr. GB’s keynote, “Progress and Protection: Intersectional Vigilance and Justice in Research and Advocacy”, given at 2024’s The Summit Conference. Read ‘The End of Diversity’ (2019) by Rinaldo Walcott, a critique of the language often used around equity and diversity, and a meditation on what true transformative change and structural justice could look like. Check out this list of Canadian anti-racism resources. Have a listen to relevant past episodes, eg. ⁠⁠on the structural determinants of health⁠⁠, and realizing the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s health-related calls to action. Credits: Additional music by ScovinieBeatz, used under the ⁠⁠Pixabay content license⁠⁠. Survey: To help us make the best possible podcast, please consider filling out ⁠⁠this short, anonymous survey⁠⁠ after listening.

    39 min
  2. JAN 8

    36. Because it helps! Making the most of the social history

    The success of a treatment plan can depend heavily on social factors – for example, income, housing status, or whether or not someone has drug coverage. The social history is where we, as medical learners, trainees and practitioners, are meant to gather that information so that we can apply it in our care. For this episode, host Sandra spoke to Dr. Ritika Goel, a family doctor and activist based in Toronto, about how to make the most of that part of our conversation with patients. What's important to ask about? And what can we do with the answers? Resources: - Download the ⁠IFITHELPS tool⁠ for taking and actioning a social history. - Explore 211, a database of information for government and community-based, non-clinical health and social services across Canada, at ⁠211.ca⁠. - Familiarize yourself with the ⁠Canada Disability Benefit⁠, a new program to supplement the incomes of working-age folks living with disabilities. Applicants must be approved for the Disability Tax Credit, which requires certification by a medical practitioner. - Learn more about social accountability in this article series in Canadian Family Physician: Buchman S, Woollard, R., Meili R, Goel R. Practising social accountability: From theory to action. Can Fam Physician. 2016 Jan;62(1):15-8. PMID: 26796826; PMCID: PMC4721832 .⁠https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4721832/⁠ - Have a listen to relevant past episodes, eg. ⁠on the structural determinants of health⁠, ⁠providing trauma-informed care⁠, and ⁠taking a good substance use history⁠. Credits: Additional music by ⁠kontraa⁠, used under the ⁠Pixabay content license⁠. Survey: To help us make the best possible podcast, please consider filling out ⁠this short, anonymous survey⁠ after listening.

    34 min
  3. 02/14/2025

    32. Realizing the Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s health-related Calls to Action

    In this episode, our host Sandra chats with Derek K. Thompson – Čaabať Bookwilla | Suhiltun, a member of the diitiidʔaaʔtx̣ – Ditidaht First Nation and Director of Indigenous Engagement at the University of British Columbia’s Faculty of Medicine. They discuss the role of non-Indigenous medical learners and trainees in realizing the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s 94 Calls to Action, and especially those that relate to health.  Through stories, history, and insights from his personal and professional experiences, Derek offers listeners practical strategies for honouring the Calls to Action in their work within the health care system. He discusses using trauma-informed approaches to care, creating space for knowledge systems about wellness and healing that go beyond the biomedical, and making an emotional commitment to kindness and understanding. Tune in as we explore the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s Calls to Action, and the unique part that you, as medical learners and trainees, play in advancing them.  Resources: Read the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada’s 94 Calls to Action. Check out the report, First Nations Population Health and Wellness Agenda: First Interim Update, 2024, mentioned in this episode. Derek will be leading the online event, “To Bear Witness: A Meaningful Conversation with my Mom on Belonging and Perseverance”, on 23 April 2025: Learn more or register now. Credits: Additional music by Denis Pavlov, used under the Pixabay content license.

    44 min

About

Just Medicine is a podcast on equity in healthcare, hosted by medical students in British Columbia. Each episode, we bring on a guest to chat about a range of social justice topics and how they relate to medicine and health care. The aim of the podcast is to equip medical trainees with the knowledge and skills to provide inclusive care to a growingly diverse population. The podcast is released every second Thursday of the month, starting on January 12, 2023. This podcast is not affiliated with UBC Faculty of Medicine and is not meant to provide medical advice.

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