Synopsis
Podcast by Harvard Catalyst
Episodes
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Fusing Modalities and Improving Outcomes
30/01/2019 Duration: 30minWhat are the latest technologies in medical imaging to guide surgeons? Nobuhiko Hata, PhD, of Brigham and Women's Hospital, discusses his innovate work using image fusion, navigation, and robotics in image-guided surgery. Transcript: https://bit.ly/3qGUggM
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Technology and Biology brought together in Biomechanics
09/01/2019 Duration: 29minWearable technology and robotics are two rehabilitation methods used to help those with limited mobility regain movement. Paolo Bonato, PhD, director of the Motion Analysis Laboratory at Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital, discusses the role of innovative technology in rehabilitation. Transcript: https://bit.ly/39t13Dg
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Producing Platelets for Improved Therapeutics
19/12/2018 Duration: 33minDonor-dependent, platelets are in short supply. To stop bleeding and repair tissues, they are essential for patients with cancer and those undergoing surgery. Jonathan Thon, PhD, co-founder of Platelet BioGenesis, discusses his organization's work to create platelets that can be used to treat these patients and deliver cancer-fighting drugs.
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Accelerating Translational Research
05/12/2018 Duration: 28minClinical research plays a critical role in developing healthcare innovations that can be made available quickly to serve the needs of patients. Lina Williamson, DVM, PhD, director of the Translational Accelerator at Brigham and Women's Hospital, discusses her entrepreneurial program’s role in supporting both the investigator and patient communities in these efforts.
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A New Model: Hospital Care in your Home
21/11/2018 Duration: 26minWhat if you could avoid the hospital and receive care in your own home? David Levine, MD, MPH, from Brigham and Women’s Hospital discusses this innovative new model, including the social and economic benefits.
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Cancer Risk and the Family Experience
06/11/2018 Duration: 33minToday, many individuals are at risk for cancer due to heredity factors. Megan Underhill, PhD, RN, AOCNS, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, discusses her work in genetic testing and the importance family, perceptions and knowledge play in supporting those at risk.
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Capital ‘T’ Truth
23/10/2018 Duration: 30minDr. Richardson (see October 10 episode) returns to discuss the theories and systems that currently shape how we understand public health, including how these perceptions can be problematic to our progress.
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Beyond Biomedical: Critical Theory and Social Science
09/10/2018 Duration: 30minGene Richardson, MD, PhD, of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health discusses how his background in anthropology, philosophy, Buddhism, and medicine led him to a deeper understanding of public health challenges – including inequality -- throughout the world.
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Targeting Panic and Overcoming Anxiety
26/09/2018 Duration: 29minPanic and anxiety disorders affect two to four percent of Americans. However, those afflicted often know little about these conditions and suffer from a lack of treatment options. In her work at Massachusetts General Hospital, Amanda Baker, PhD, is striving to develop an improved -- and personalized -- standard of care.
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Flipping the Switch: Communication in the Genome
11/09/2018 Duration: 29minJohn Quackenbush, PhD, of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, discusses his research on networks within the genome that impact the functionality of cells.
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Epidemiology of Stigma
28/08/2018 Duration: 20minDue to a deep societal stigma around HIV, many individuals in Southern India do not seek care. Brian Chan of Brigham and Women’s Hospital, explains how mixed methods approach to combating these obstacles.
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Advancing Imaging
07/08/2018 Duration: 27minThis week on ThinkResearch, Raj Gupta of MGH, explains how his team, along with his engineering background, is working to advance the future of clinical imaging to improve efficiency and accessibility.
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Quality Care for Transgender Communities
25/07/2018 Duration: 32minOren Ganor, MD of Boston Children’s Hospital discusses the important challenges and considerations in providing safe and ethical resources to transgender individuals.
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Green Means Go: Health Choice Intervention
10/07/2018 Duration: 31minDr. Anne Thorndike of Massachusetts General Hospital, explains how choice architecture and improved food labeling can change our eating choices.
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Working through the Noise of Big Brain Data
19/06/2018 Duration: 22minCaterina Stamoulis, PhD, of Boston Children’s Hospital, discusses the next generation of neuroscience experiments that use noisy, big data collected in unsupervised settings.
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Understanding Wellness with Patient-Centered Research
06/06/2018 Duration: 43minAlthough interventions to help individuals suffering from bipolar disorder, depression, and schizophrenia exist, they tend to focus solely on mitigating the illness. Roscoe Brady, PhD, of McLean Hospital, and his team are advancing promising research to determine the neurological basis for the symptoms of these illnesses. Their goal: to understand the neurological differences in brains afflicted with these conditions in comparison with healthy brains
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Phasing into the Future of Children’s Epilepsy
22/05/2018 Duration: 16minWhen the first line of epileptic drugs fail to control seizures in young children, doctors turn to resective surgery. Christos Papadelis, PhD, of Children’s Hospital, explains to us the noninvasive imaging he is developing to improve these surgical outcomes.
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In the Zone or Choking under Pressure
01/05/2018 Duration: 18minThis week on ThinkResearch, Dr. Roland Carlstedt of McLean Hospital shares the dynamics behind athletes’ peak moments, or their worst frailties. Hear how he hopes to improve the field of sport psychology for the betterment of treating players.
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Protein Engineering: Editing Functionality
17/04/2018 Duration: 16minMichael Super, PhD, of the Wyss Institute, shares his story of how the spread of infectious disease throughout South Africa and London inspired him to pursue human health and combat disease.
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The Science of Adding and Subtracting: Modeling Outcomes of Disease
03/04/2018 Duration: 28minNick Menzies, of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, was originally a dentist from New Zealand before he decided to pursue a broader career in public health. Tune in now to hear the importance and difficulty of mathematical modeling in treating infectious disease.