The News Navigators

Jeremy Deacon and Jonathan Starling

Jeremy Deacon is a 40-year veteran of the media industry who has followed and reported on politics and current affairs in Bermuda for 20 years. Jonathan Starling is a former independent candidate who has followed the political scene in Bermuda for decades. Together they offer unrivalled insight into the news as well as an ability to distill and discuss – occasionally disagreeing on – what makes the headlines. Michael Fahy, an attorney and former Government Minister, presented earlier episodes of The News Navigators.

  1. Bringing Boston to Bermuda: Cancer Care Closer to Home

    Jun 25

    Bringing Boston to Bermuda: Cancer Care Closer to Home

    In this episode, Dr David Patrick Ryan, President of Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute, Dr Chris Fosker, clinicaloncologist and CEO and medical director of Bermuda Cancer and Health Centre, and Darren Glasford, a prostate cancer survivor, discuss how the partnership between Mass General Brigham and BCHC is strengthening cancer care for Bermuda. The conversation centres on a question many Bermudian families understand: what happens when a patient needs world-class specialist treatment but also wants to remain close to home, family and the doctors who know them. Mr Glasford’s story brings that issue to life. After first learning about PSA testing more than a decade ago, he beganregular screening despite having no symptoms. His PSA levels were monitored for years before further tests eventually led to treatment involving both Bermuda Cancer and Health Centre and Mass General Brigham. He is now clear and uses his experience to urge men not to wait until something feels wrong before getting checked. Dr Fosker explains that the BCHC-Mass General Brigham partnership gives Bermudian patients reassurance, continuityand access to highly specialised expertise. Radiation cases are discussed with Mass General Brigham specialists several times a week, with records, treatment plans and clinical decisions reviewed jointly. The goal, he says, is to provide as much care as possible in Bermuda while ensuring patients can access Boston-basedspecialist treatment when needed. Dr Ryan describes Mass General Brigham Cancer Institute as a global centre for advanced cancer care, research andtraining, but stresses that the aim is not to pull patients away from home unnecessarily. Instead, the partnership helps “bring Boston to Bermuda”, supporting local doctors with expert input, new techniquesand evolving standards of care. Together, the interview highlights the importance of early detection, trust between patient and doctor, and ahealthcare partnership designed to give Bermudians the best possible chance of effective treatment close to home. Mass General Brigham sponsored this podcast.

    34 min
  2. Heart health: what athletes, families and weekend warriors need to know

    May 13

    Heart health: what athletes, families and weekend warriors need to know

    Dr Sawalla Guseh, a sports cardiologist at Mass General Brigham and director of fellowship training within theCardiovascular Performance Program at Massachusetts General Hospital Heart Centre, joins The News Navigators for a timely conversation about heart health, exercise, and the risks facing athletes and active people of all ages. Dr. Guseh explains that his work focuses on caring for athletes with heart disease, or those at risk of developing it, fromelite competitors to recreational runners, triathletes, and “tactical athletes” such as police, fire and military personnel. The interview explores why younger athletes can sometimes suffer sudden cardiac arrest, often linked to genetic orstructural heart conditions, while older “masters” athletes are more likely to face coronary artery disease, what he memorably describes as problems with the heart’s “plumbing”. For Bermuda, where sport and outdoor activity are central to community life, his advice is practical and relevant: know your family history, take symptoms seriously, and understand your numbers, including blood pressure, LDL cholesterol and blood sugar. He also discusses pre-participation screening, the role of EKGs, the dangers of exercising too soon after viral illness, and why athletes should not fear specialist assessment, since sports cardiology is increasingly focused on distinguishing disease from healthy athletic adaptation. The conversation also widens into everyday prevention: the importance of movement, sleep, stress management, balanced training, and caution around stimulants and supplements. Through Dr. Guseh’s expertise, the episode showcases the depth of Mass General Brigham’s cardiovascular care and itsability to combine world-class clinical knowledge with highly personalised guidance for athletes, families, and anyone trying to live a longer, healthier life. Mass General Brigham sponsored this podcast.

    38 min
  3. Podcast special: should Bermuda impose a social media ban for under-16s?

    Mar 12

    Podcast special: should Bermuda impose a social media ban for under-16s?

    Should children under the age of 16 be banned from social media, or is a delay with stronger safeguards the better answer? In this special roundtable episode of The News Navigators, the conversation explores the growing debate around a possible social media ban for young people, inspired by moves in places like Australia and wider discussions in the UK and US. The discussion looks at the real harms linked to youth social media use, including addiction, anxiety, low self-esteem, cyberbullying, exposure to harmful content, online grooming, sleep disruption, and the pressure of algorithm-driven validation. A key theme is that social media platforms are designed to keep young users engaged, often exploiting developing brains that are more vulnerable to impulse, comparison, and peer approval. Rather than supporting a simple ban, the main view in this episode is that the issue is more complex. The focus shouldbe on whether children are emotionally and developmentally ready for social media, and on building a stronger system of protection around them. That includes parent education, digital literacy, resilience training for young people, school and community support,government action, and greater accountability for tech companies and platforms. The episode also explores the tension between child safety, freedom, parental responsibility, platform responsibility, and government regulation. While age restrictions may help, the panel argues that bans alone are unlikely to work because young people often findways around them. The stronger solution may be a combination of education, open communication, digital wellness, and platform reform. This is a thoughtful discussion on one of the biggest parenting and policy questions of our time: how to protect childrenonline without pushing the problem further underground. Tell us what you think: email thenewsnavs@gmail.com

    46 min

About

Jeremy Deacon is a 40-year veteran of the media industry who has followed and reported on politics and current affairs in Bermuda for 20 years. Jonathan Starling is a former independent candidate who has followed the political scene in Bermuda for decades. Together they offer unrivalled insight into the news as well as an ability to distill and discuss – occasionally disagreeing on – what makes the headlines. Michael Fahy, an attorney and former Government Minister, presented earlier episodes of The News Navigators.

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