100 épisodes

Evidence and experts to help you understand today’s public health news—and what it means for tomorrow.

Public Health On Call The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

    • Actualités
    • 4,6 • 570 notes

Evidence and experts to help you understand today’s public health news—and what it means for tomorrow.

    768 - The Food Industry and the #Antidiet Movement

    768 - The Food Industry and the #Antidiet Movement

    About this episode: What is the relationship between food industry giants like General Mills and a social media movement aimed at pushing back on diet culture and unrealistic body images? An investigation by health journalists at The Examination found that food companies and dieticians appear to be co-opting the hashtag “antidiet” to promote their products.
    Guest: Sasha Chavkin is a senior reporter with The Examination
    Host: Dr. Josh Sharfstein is vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, a faculty member in health policy, a pediatrician, and former secretary of Maryland’s Health Department.
    Show links and related content: As obesity rises, Big Food and dieticians push “anti-diet” advice—The Examination
    The food industry pays “influencer’ dieticians to shape your eating habits—The Washington Post
    Dietician Influencers On Social Media Are Being Paid By The Food Industry to Promote Products and Messages—Public Health On Call
    Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or visit our website.
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    • 11 min
    767 - A Much More Effective—But Complicated—CPR Could Save Many More Lives

    767 - A Much More Effective—But Complicated—CPR Could Save Many More Lives

    About the episode: Cardiopulmonary resuscitation, or CPR, has been the gold standard for buying time in a medical emergency. But it’s not very effective, especially for the majority of cardiac arrest cases. What is much more effective: employing advanced machinery like ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, that can keep people alive for hours or even days and weeks while physicians address the medical emergency and the body heals. But can emergency medicine shift to get more patients on ECMO faster?
    Guest: Dr. Demetris Yannopoulous is a professor of medicine at the University of Minnesota Medical School where he is the director of resuscitation medicine.
    Host: Stephanie Desmon, MA, is a former journalist, author, and the director of public relations and communications for the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs, the largest center at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
    Show links and related content: The Race to Reinvent CPR—The New York Times
    ECPR Could Prevent Many More Cardiac Deaths—Scientific American
    Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or visit our website.
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    • 19 min
    766 - The Legacy of Dr. Levi Watkins: Heart Surgeon and Activist

    766 - The Legacy of Dr. Levi Watkins: Heart Surgeon and Activist

    About this episode: June 8 would mark the 80th birthday of Dr. Levi Watkins, Jr., a cardiothoracic surgeon at Johns Hopkins known for being part of the first team to implant an automatic defibrillator in a human patient. But Dr. Watkins was so much more: a civil rights and political activist, a champion of Black and other people who are underrepresented in medicine, and a snappy dresser with a great sense of humor. Today, two people who knew and worked with Dr. Watkins share their memories as we celebrate his legacy.
    Guests: Dr. Lisa Cooper is a public health physician, a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor, and a faculty member at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and School of Medicine.
    Steven Ragsdale is a former senior administrator at Johns Hopkins Hospital and a faculty member in Health, Behavior and Society at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
    Host: Dr. Josh Sharfstein is vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, a faculty member in health policy, a pediatrician, and former secretary of Maryland’s Health Department.
    Show links and related content: Celebrating the Life and Legacy of Dr. Levi Watkins Jr.—YouTube
    Levi Watkins, 70, Dies; Pioneering Heart Surgeon Pushed Civil Rights—New York Times
    Levi Watkins Jr., pioneering Hopkins cardiac surgeon and civil rights activist, dies at 70—Johns Hopkins Hub
    Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or visit our website.
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    • 19 min
    765 - The Rise of Colorectal Cancers Among Younger People

    765 - The Rise of Colorectal Cancers Among Younger People

    About the episode: Colorectal cancers are rising among people under age 50. There are a number of theories as to why and also promising data around early detection. In today’s episode: A deep dive into the epidemiology of colorectal cancers including who is most at risk, a look at the screening tools currently available, and why blood tests may be even more valuable than costly and invasive colonoscopies.
    Guest: Dr. Otis Brawley is a globally-recognized expert in cancer prevention and control whose work focuses on developing cancer screening strategies and ensuring their effectiveness. He is a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor and faculty at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in epidemiology with a joint appointment in oncology at Johns Hopkins Medicine. He was the former Chief Medical Officer of the American Cancer Society.
    Host: Stephanie Desmon, MA, is a former journalist, author, and the director of public relations and communications for the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs, the largest center at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
    Show links and related content: Effect of Colonoscopy Screening on Risks of Colorectal Cancer and Related Death—The New England Journal of Medicine
    A Cell-free DNA Blood-Based Test for Colorectal Cancer Screening—The New England Journal of Medicine
    The Minnesota Colon Cancer Control Study
    Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or visit our website.
    Follow us: @‌PublicHealthPod on X
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    • 18 min
    764 - Am I Taking Too Many Medications? Polypharmacy, Interactions, and Drug Cascades

    764 - Am I Taking Too Many Medications? Polypharmacy, Interactions, and Drug Cascades

    About this episode: One in five U.S. adults is taking five or more prescription drugs at a time, often for years without reassessment of need, dosage, or possible interactions. Today, a look at polypharmacy and why it’s important for physicians to periodically check in with patients about all the prescription—and nonprescription—drugs they’re taking. The guests also discuss the importance of considering non-pharmaceutical treatments like physical or talk therapy, and empowering patients and their care partners to ask questions about what they’re being prescribed.
    Guests: Dr. Cynthia Boyd is a geriatrician and faculty at Johns Hopkins Medicine. She is also a senior associate with the Johns Hopkins Center on Aging and Health.
    Dr. Ariel Green is a geriatrician and faculty at Johns Hopkins Medicine. She is also a core faculty member of the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Center for Drug Safety and Effectiveness.
    Host: Stephanie Desmon, MA, is a former journalist, author, and the director of public relations and communications for the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs, the largest center at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
    Show links and related content: Taking Multiple Medications? You May Need to Scale Back.—The New York Times
    Taking more than 5 pills in a day? ‘Deprescribing’ can prevent harm—especially for older people—The Conversation
    Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or visit our website.
    Follow us: @‌PublicHealthPod on X
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    • 15 min
    763 - How To Avoid Getting Sick On A Cruise Ship

    763 - How To Avoid Getting Sick On A Cruise Ship

    Cruise ships are congregate settings where infectious diseases can quickly spread. But, there’s a lot that the industry and individuals can do to stay healthy and avoid, shall we say, explosive outbreaks. In today’s episode, learn about the most common culprits—including norovirus, food-borne illness, and COVID-19—and how people can think about safety from initial booking to final disembarkment and all the ports of call in between.
    Guest: Dr. Tara Palmore is an infectious disease physician at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases.
    Host: Dr. Josh Sharfstein is vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, a faculty member in health policy, a pediatrician, and former secretary of Maryland’s Health Department.
    Show links:
    The CDC’s Cruise Ship Travel Information
    Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? Contact us via email or on our website.
    Follow us: @‌PublicHealthPod on X
    @‌JohnsHopkinsSPH on Instagram
    @‌JohnsHopkinsSPH on Facebook
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    • 17 min

Avis

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570 notes

570 notes

BeaSpada ,

Great topical and timely resource!

I stumbled upon it and I have been hooked ever since. I look forward to hearing every single episode and I always come away with more knowledge, greater understanding, and more inspiration. Public Health On Call should be on the “reading list” of anyone who is remotely interested in public health and any person who cares about people, animals, and planetary health! Could not recommend it more! 👏🫶🏼

Ginagina Smith ,

Thank you

For all the great info AND the tip about the Zoom play: Enemy of the People

mistyb08 ,

Wonderful

I absolutely love this podcast. It’s so informative and focuses on today’s issues at hand.

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