Hear Me Now Podcast - podcast cover

Hear Me Now Podcast

Providence Institute for Human Caringhearmenowstories.org
Providence, one of the nation's largest healthcare systems, is dedicated to caring for the whole person. The twice monthly Hear Me Now Podcast helps fulfill the unmet needs of patients, their loved ones, caregivers, and communities by offering a place for in-depth conversations that matter. Contact us at HumanCaring@providence.org Winner of the PR News Nonprofit Podcast of the Year Award 2022
Last refreshed:
Follow this podcast in the Metacast mobile app to refresh it and see new episodes.
Download Metacast podcast app
Podcasts are better in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episodes

Advances in Alzheimer���s Research

An online transcript is available �� On today's program, host Se��n Collins welcomes Dr. Steven Salloway, Dr. Rudy Tanzi, and David Shenk to discuss recent advances in Alzheimer's research and the possibility of early intervention and prevention. They highlight the significance of targeting amyloid plaques in the brain, but also emphasize the need for treatments that can be administered earlier and more widely ��� the way statins are used to forestall or prevent atherosclerotic heart disease. Th...

Dec 28, 20231 hr 2 minEp. 82

Race, Healthcare, & Equity: Report Card

A transcript is available online �� Today, host Se��n Collins welcomes Dr. Nwando Anyaoku, Chief Health Equity and Clinical Innovation Officer for Providence. They ��discuss the importance of diversity and cultural understanding in healthcare.�� She shares a personal story about a patient from Liberia who felt understood and cared for because Dr. Anyaoku shared a similar background and experiences. Dr. Anyaoku emphasizes the need for healthcare providers to recognize and address disparities in c...

Dec 14, 202339 minEp. 81

Gratitude

This episode includes discussion of suicidal ideation and planning. If you are thinking of harming yourself, please call or text, in English or Spanish, the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988. �� Help is available. �� Deaf & hard of hearing Este episodio incluye una discusi��n sobre la ideaci��n y la planificaci��n suicida. Si est�� pensando en hacerse da��o, llame o env��e un mensaje de texto, en ingl��s o espa��ol, a la L��nea de Prevenci��n del Suicidio y Crisis al 988. �� Hay ayuda dis...

Nov 23, 202339 minEp. 80

A game changing moment in medicine

A class of drugs called glucagon-like peptide agonists (GLP-1 agonists) is proving to be beneficial for people with chronic kidney disease and atherosclerotic heart disease. These medications are being called game changers because they not only help with weight loss but also provide organ protection and reduce the risk of dying and disease progression.�� These medications have the potential to revolutionize the treatment of deadly conditions and improve population health. However, there are fina...

Nov 09, 202345 minEp. 79

Hospice for the unhoused

Providence Hospice, Los Angeles County has launched a program to provide hospice care for homeless people. The program aims to support those experiencing homelessness and facing a terminal illness by providing them with the option of a safe and secure environment to receive holistic care.�� Homeless people face unique challenges and vulnerabilities, including an increased incidence of mental health issues, frequent distrust of healthcare providers and environments, and often issues of substance ...

Oct 19, 202352 minEp. 78

Rural healthcare

A transcript is available online We explore the kind and quality of healthcare available in rural hospitals in an age of growing technological and resource-heavy medicine. Do we risk a two-tiered system where the best care possible is only available in large cities near major medical centers? And are there options available for people who might have to travel hundreds of miles for specialist care? ���� Guests include Alan Morgan , CEO of the National Rural Health Association ; Theresa Gleason an...

Oct 05, 202335 minEp. 77

Innovation in medicine

An online transcript is available Does it seem counter-intuitive to say that the future of person-centered healthcare is the use of more and more tools utilizing AI, artificial intelligence? Dr. Maulin Shah is Chief Medical Information Officer for Providence and VP of Informatics and Engineering. He talks with host Se��n Collins about AI and the ways innovative healthcare sytems will make use of it to free-up precious time for human caregivers: doing everything from taking notes during your visi...

Sep 14, 202334 minEp. 76

Can hospice be saved?

An online transcript is available �� At the end of last year, The New Yorker and ProPublica documented fraud and mistreatment in some for-profit hospices across the country. The expos�� shouted something that has been whispered for a long while in circles concerned with the care of the dying: hospice needs saving. Begun as a visionary mission run by charities, hospice care has morphed into a 22 billion dollar industry where margin trumps mission. On today's program, host Se��n Collins discusses ...

Aug 24, 202348 minEp. 75

Substance use & pregnancy

A transcript is available online �� Addiction and overdose rates have reached historic levels in the last several years. And while fentanyl and synthetic opioids are responsible for much of the surge, cocaine and other stimulants such as methamphetamine are playing an increasingly common role. Addiction problems are not rare (it's estimated that 10% of the population has substance use disorder) and they don't go away because someone is pregnant.�� Substance use during pregnancy -- whether of lic...

Aug 10, 202344 minEp. 74

Living with anxiety

A transcript of this episode is available online ����� A list of mental health resources is available on our website "Everyone has anxiety and you can't really survive childhood without some anxiety," says psychiatrist Dr. Maureen Nash. "It is, at least theoretically, what prevents us from doing catastrophically negative things like walking off a cliff, or hugging the stove when it's red hot." The fight-or-flight response has its place. We're hard-wired to preserve our overall well-being at the ...

Jul 27, 202359 minEp. 73

Food as medicine

A transcript is available online America is obsessed with food. And it's killing us. It's estimated that half of all Americans will be obese within a decade. Overweight and obesity are directly tied to heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, joint disorders, erectile dysfunction, high blood pressure, stroke, and contribute to dementia and some cancers.�� On today's program we focus on how the object of our obsession could ��� just maybe ��� become the means to our better health. What does it mean to thi...

Jul 13, 202356 minEp. 72

The JUST Birth Network

A transcript is available online An alarming fact about childbirth in America is that after years of decline, the maternal mortality rate has risen for the past 10 years. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that between 800 and 900 women die in the U.S. each year from complications of childbirth. Black women are up to four times more likely to die during or as a result of childbirth than non-Hispanic white women. In Seattle, an innovative program combines world-class obstetric...

Jun 22, 202346 minEp. 71

A woman's heart

An online transcript is available For years, heart disease was thought of as "a man's disease." But the truth is quite different and quite sobering: one-in-three women in America dies of heart disease. Symptoms go unnoticed, warning signs are often ignored, and delays in seeking care make heart disease the #1 killer of women in the U.S. �� On today's program, we talk with Dr. Lori Tam, a cardiologist at the Providence Heart Clinic in Portland, Ore., about the ways heart disease in women differs ...

Jun 08, 202356 minEp. 70

Clearing the fog

An online transcript is available Early in May 2023, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, Director-General of the World Health Organization, announced an end to the COVID-19 Global Health Emergency. But Dr. Ghebreyesus was quick to add that thousands of people were still fighting for their lives in ICUs and many millions more were living with post-COVID health conditions. On today's program we explore life post-COVID with Dr. James Jackson, author of " Clearing the fog: From surviving to thriving with Lo...

May 25, 202347 minEp. 69

Nurses unmasked

An online transcript is available. The book from which these reflections are drawn is available to download or read online . . On today's program, we are listening to nurses as they reflect on their experiences on the frontlines during the COVID-19 pandemic. These are stories of uncertainty and fear, of anger and resilience, dedication, recovery, and camaraderie. But most of all these are stories about caregiving. �� The readings that make up this episode are drawn from the book, Providence Nurs...

May 11, 202343 minEp. 68

Sickle cell disease

A transcript is available online Sickle cell disease is an inherited disorder of the blood protein hemoglobin. It has multiple ways to impact the health of someone with the disease ��� with a hallmark symptom being excruciating chronic pain. The vast majority of people with sickle cell trait and sickle cell disease are Black. Until relatively recently, there has been only one drug to treat the disease. On this week's program, host Se��n Collins talks with Dr. Titilope Fasipe, co-director of the ...

Apr 27, 202358 minEp. 67

The challenge of staying home

A transcript is available online �� We all know how the classic 1939 film "The Wizard of Oz" ends: Dorothy taps her heals together and reminds herself that 'there's no place like home.' And that's true for many people in need of long-term care. On today's program, two conversations about some of the challenges faced by two different groups of people wanting to stay in their homes and receive needed services there: people with a disability and the elderly. Both groups often find that living in th...

Apr 13, 202351 minEp. 66

Caring for caregivers

A transcript is available online . The COVID pandemic showed us how critical the problem of professional fatigue is in healthcare. It has led to early retirement, reduced staffing, and increased costs throughout healthcare systems. But the syndrome that's commonly called "burnout" existed long before the pandemic and it will ��� undoubtedly ��� exist after it.�� �� Our guests today believe that healthcare burnout is a systems problem that is manifest in individuals: a symptom of a disease that i...

Mar 23, 202351 minEp. 65

Fixing how hospitals work

A transcript is available online One of the unforeseen consequences of the COVID pandemic has been increasing popular awareness of a nursing shortage that was already well in place. COVID just made it worse. Nurse turnover has cost healthcare organizations enormously ��� both in terms of dollars, but also in lost expertise and institutional memory.�� On today's program, host Se��n Collins talks with two senior nurse leaders about a vision for how hospitals might be structured moving forward and ...

Mar 09, 202346 minEp. 64

Sesame in Ukraine

Building on their longstanding efforts to meet the educational needs of refugee children, for the first time ever, in Ukraine, the people at Sesame Workshop are producing specialized content for children living in an active war zone.�� In this excerpt from this week's podcast, our host Se��n Collins speaks with Shanna Kohn, Director of International Education at Sesame. You can hear more about Sesame's work in Ukraine ��� along with three other conversation about the impact of the war on the men...

Feb 24, 20233 minEp. 64

Ukraine and civilian war trauma

CW: war fighting, sexual violence, genocide An online transcript is available . The latest iteration of Russia's war on Ukraine has entered its second year prompting us to examine the issue of war trauma ��� especially the toll war takes on civilians. Russia's indiscriminate targeting of civilian housing, schools, hospitals, and infrastructure has not only made civilians witnesses of war, but victims of it. War-rape, which was only recognized as a crime against humanity following the war in the ...

Feb 23, 20231 hrEp. 63

Doctors and disabilities

An online transcript is available More than 60 million Americans live with a disability and that number will grow as the baby boomers continue to age. But new research throws into question whether those people are receiving the best care possible.�� More than four out of five physicians say someone with a significant disability has a worse quality of life than someone without a disability. A minority of physicians ��� only 42% ��� feels strongly confident that they can provide equal quality of c...

Feb 09, 202337 minEp. 62

Meditation & the brain

An online transcript is available �� . There's growing evidence that the routine practice of meditation improves quality of life (including relief from anxiety, increased focus, and the mitigation of negative emotions) and that these benefits can be seen after as few as five sessions of meditation. But we didn't really need scientific journals to tell us that: Practitioners of mindfulness meditation have been enjoying the benefits of this natural brain hack for millennia. �� On today's program, ...

Jan 26, 202339 minEp. 61

Preview: Meditation & the brain

An online transcript is available �� On the next episode of the HEAR ME NOW Podcast, we'll explore Mindfulness Meditation with three great people who have connections to the practice. �� Dr. Michael Posner is a brain researcher who has demonstrated changes in brain tissue of people who meditate AND shown changes in how they deal with stress and anxiety. Patricia Jones has been helping at-risk youth in Los Angeles to meditate for 25 years. And Dr. Glen Komatsu, a hospice and palliative medicine p...

Jan 19, 20234 minEp. 61

Deaf health equity

. A video of the episode that includes captioning & ASL interpretation is available online . A transcript is also available .�� . If you take only one fact away from this podcast today, it should be this: more than 30 years after the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act, healthcare providers in the United States remain ill-equipped to meet the needs of deaf, deaf-blind, and hard of hearing people who come to them for care. On today's program, host Se��n Collins talks with Drs. Poor...

Jan 12, 202343 minEp. 60

Well-being & music

An online transcript is available�� Complete episode notes can be found here Playlists: �� Apple Music �� ���� Spotify �� ���� .pdf Trouble listening? Right-click to download an MP3 �� "Self-care" became a common discussion topic at the start of the pandemic to the extent that it's now not unheard of for relative strangers to share their life-hacks with each other. So, as we come to the end of 2022, with all of the stress and craziness that come from turning the page of a calendar, we offer you ...

Dec 22, 20222 hr 4 minEp. 59

Surgery: Saying so long to the Old Boys' Club

A transcript is available online �� Women outnumber men in American medical schools, but in the operating room it's still an Old Boys' Club. Surgery remains a bastion of male privilege, prerogative, and power in American healthcare. But that is changing. On today's program, Se��n talks with three surgeons who understand firsthand the challenges faced by the women who routinely suffer insults and aggressions in an antiquated system.�� . Julie Ann Sosa , M.D., MA, FACS, FSSO�� Chair, Department of...

Dec 08, 202249 minEp. 58

Neurodiversity

A transcript is available online . Today we���re tapping the storytelling skills of veteran science and tech reporter, Steve Silberman . In 2015, Silberman���s book NeuroTribes: The legacy of autism and the future of neurodiversity was published and soon took a place on The New York Times bestseller list. And in Britain, it was awarded the Samuel Johnson prize for best nonfiction writing in English. The work was groundbreaking:��exploring both the legacy of autism, but also the future of neurodi...

Nov 24, 202257 minEp. 57

The kids aren't all right - Young people and mental health

Before the pandemic, one-in-five children in America faced a challenge with their mental, emotional, or behavioral health. Since the pandemic, symptoms of depression and anxiety among young people have doubled, worldwide. We all have a role in protecting the mental health of kids. And we can start by making it something that it���s OK to talk about.�� On today���s program, two youth advocates for mental health ��� Billie Henderson and Kaiya Bates ��� discuss what they���ve experienced and how th...

Nov 10, 20221 hrEp. 56

From Scratch with Tembi Locke

In 2019, Tembi Locke's book From Scratch: A Memoir of Love, Sicily, and Finding Home found a place in Reese Witherspoon's Hello Sunshine Book Club and on the New York Times bestseller list. It has now been adapted as an eight-part series on Netflix starring Zoe Salda��a and Eugenio Mastrandrea. Tembi Locke talks with Se��n about the adaptation that she helmed with her sister Attica Locke, about the experience of watching Zoe Salda��a portray a character based on Tembi's life, and about the thick...

Oct 27, 202256 minEp. 55
Hosted on Transistor
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android