Lab Medicine Rounds

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 44:57:15
  • More information

Informações:

Synopsis

A curated podcast for physicians, laboratory professionals, and students; hosted by Dr. Justin Kreuter (the Bow Tie Bandit of Blood) and featuring trending topics from Mayo Clinic Laboratories subject-matter experts.

Episodes

  • The Littlest Things in Life - The Burning Sensations of Love: Let's Talk STDs (Part 2)

    14/02/2020 Duration: 12min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro 00:31 Introduction of Matt Binnicker, Ph.D.01:07 Can you talk about why it’s so important for people to discuss chlamydia and gonorrhea and why healthcare providers and the general public today need to have a good understanding of the causes of these STDs? 02:32 So we just spoke to Dr. Rizza about how over the last five years, STDs have risen each year consecutively. Is there any reason why we have an increased incidence over this timeline with these infections?03:31 How are these diagnosed in the laboratory? How do we actually figure out if you have this or not?04:22 Those diagnostic processes, do you think those are going to change at all in the future or evolve, or do you think what we have is good?06:28 So why is important then to have accurate and rapid laboratory test results for chlamydia and gonorrhea? 07:17 So with regards to the disease itself, if a patient becomes infected how are they managed?08:50 With drug resistant gonorrhea being in the news so often, the next re

  • Proficiency Testing Referral: What You Don't Know Can Hurt You (a Lot)

    07/02/2020 Duration: 29min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro 01:25 What is proficiency testing?04:10 Proficiency testing insures my lab is actually getting the accurate results? 05:26 What is proficiency testing referral and why is it important for laboratory medical directors, administrators, supervisors and staff to be aware of PT referral rules? 07:54 Why would laboratories refer proficiency testing to another external lab?12:05 What’s happening at working to reduce this risk for me? Taking Essential Steps for Testing (TEST) Act of 201215:23 These are “near-miss” events and definitely something to learn from, discussing how the holes lined up, what occurred, and now here’s your opportunity to patch that hole?17:04 What new trends in laboratory medicine have increased the risk of sanctions for proficiency testing referral?19:55 What are the most effective strategies to prevent proficiency testing referral?22:26 Are there good resources for this education? Or is every lab on their own to create content?23:17 In your experience, being on

  • 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV): What You Need to Know

    31/01/2020 Duration: 18min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:41 What do we know so far about the novel coronavirus? 02:35 How does this novel coronavirus stack up to influenza?04:35 Is there still value in getting your flu shot now (this year) if you haven’t gotten it yet?05:08 Where should people go to get the latest and best information related to the novel coronavirus?06:36 What should the health care provider be looking for related to the novel coronavirus?08:18 I’m glad you mentioned the incubation period, is that something we know with this novel coronavirus? 09:15 What do the laboratorians need to have in mind and what does this mean for the hospital clinical labs?10:50 So, people can test positive for the coronavirus without having this specific novel coronavirus strain? 12:02 So if somebody sent a sample down to a clinical lab, and I was truly positive for the novel coronavirus, I could have a negative result?12:45 Can you elaborate on when a physician should pick up the phone relative to the new novel coronavirus outbreak?14:4

  • New Year, New You, Same Genes!

    03/01/2020 Duration: 23min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:42 When is a genetic test useful?02:15 What situations would genetic testing not be helpful for?03:15 Since pharmacogenomic testing isn’t useful for every drug, how do we know when it is useful? 05:15 I’ve seen commercials for genetic testing. Can you talk about these?  05:55 So, you’re saying that a private citizen could get some genetic testing performed?  06:32 I imagine you have gotten a couple of phone calls from people asking what do to with their results? Do people sometimes call you about this?07:44 Can you talk about the differences between what you are going to do in your lab when you’re doing pharmacogenomic testing and what might be available to a patient as a direct-to-consumer?09:32 That makes me curious, does that mean that some of these direct-to-consumer tests are including alleles that are only for the white population? Or, are they including ones that are relevant to Latino, African-American, Asian communities too?11:00 Is there genetic testing that can talk

  • The Flu: Nothing to Sneeze About!

    06/12/2019 Duration: 30min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro01:00 How is influenza different from other respiratory infections, such as the common cold?02:02 Why is influenza such a big deal? Many people think about influenza for different reasons, but how can we hit this home for the everyday person?04:43 Can we unpack the idea of getting vaccinations, specifically getting vaccinations every year?06:36 Can you address some of the common misperceptions when it comes to getting the flu vaccine? 11:02 Who should see their doctor when they exhibit flu-like symptoms?12:36 How is the influenza test changing?14:45 The idea of point-of-care testing that bridges the patient/clinical practice and the laboratory supporting that practice caring for that patient. Can you discuss what some of the logistics and challenges are that come in to point-of-care testing?16:02 What does it mean in regards to treatment of influenza with having a more sensitive test that is rapidly available? 17:55 How are we spreading this knowledge to all of our physicians so

  • Advancements in Microbiology Diagnostics and the 16S Ribosomal RNA Gene

    15/11/2019 Duration: 17min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:30 Introduction of Robin Patel, M.D. the Division Chair of Clinical Microbiology at Mayo Clinic 00:42 What is the 16S Ribosomal RNA gene?1:28  How is it detected and sequenced in clinical microbiology?2:33 What does this mean for physicians and their patients now that this is something that can be done in the microbiology lab?4:23 How has the testing for this gene changed?5:58 Can you take us through an interesting case you have come across?9:47 What are the limitations when you’re talking about this kind of testing?11:15 Where is this headed? Are we headed towards next-gen sequencing for 16S?11:51 So, that will be helpful when you’re talking about using it directly on a patient sample vs. a pure colony that you’re using the testing on?12:29 What’s the turnaround time for this kind of test? 14:08 Where does this 16S Ribosomal RNA gene testing fit in the toolbox of who should be ordering this?15:21 What is it that you wish the medical community knew about the microbiology lab?1

  • Clinical Decision Support: Making It Easy to Do the Right Thing

    01/11/2019 Duration: 27min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:58 What is clinical decision support? How does that fit in to patient blood management?02:37 Can you tell us how clinical decision support is similar to education and how it is a little different than straight forward education?04:53 How do you make clinical decision support successful? 07:11 Can you share how the collaboration between you and IT has gone? How have you navigated to make sure you can come out with the best and most meaningful clinical support?10:14 What are some of the pitfalls from implementing clinical decision support? 13:55 Will you share your thoughts on evaluating a clinical decision support program?16:33 It sounds like there is a lot of quantitative measurements, how about qualitative measurements?17:45 What has surprised you most about patient blood management? 19:39 What does the future look like regarding clinical decision support?21:33 As a bedside physician, what do you wish the laboratory understood about your practice?25:01 Can you share a persona

  • My Mouth Is Not Watering: The Perplexing World of Salivary Gland Pathology

    18/10/2019 Duration: 14min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:37 Introduction of Joaquin Garcia, Vice Chair of Laboratories in the Division of Anatomic Pathology and Medical Director of the Histology Laboratory at Mayo Clinic.00:57 Can you give us a little background as to how you came in to this world of anatomic pathology and also where did this interest of salivary gland tumors come from?02:09 What are the things that come to your attention when people are asking about salivary gland tumors?03:13 When you talk about getting a small biopsy, are we talking about getting a punch biopsy for skin or are we talking about a fine needle aspirate where your just getting cytology? 04:11 Can you get in to a little bit on where this challenge comes from, whether something is benign, malignant, kind of predicting that behavior?05:46 How do you train up pathologists to make these calls and recognize malignant from benign?07:04 Can you elaborate on some of the additional testing you’re talking about (immunohistochemical staining and liquid kind of s

  • Leading Innovation in the Lab

    04/10/2019 Duration: 27min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:34 Introduction of William Morice, II, M.D., Ph.D., the Chair of the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology at Mayo Clinic 00:48 When did you first become interested in leadership?2:15 What surprised you most once you took on a leadership role?5:32 What advice do you have for the learners (residents, fellows) who may be interested in leadership? What should they be focusing on during training and during their early career?8:01 What do you think would be your message to clinicians? What do you wish they knew about the laboratory that would really strengthen the relationship at their center?10:21 How do you approach setting a team up for success?14:41 Opposing Dynamic: People getting the work done for the business vs. people that are the innovators. Do you see yourself as trying to model how to have a respectful disagreement?16:59 At this point in your career, what’s the real challenge for you?20:28 Do you have a practice of reflection or what’s your practice for self-r

  • Tick Talk

    06/09/2019 Duration: 12min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:39 Introduction of Bobbi Pritt, M.D. 00:56 What are ticks?1:42 What diseases can be transmitted by ticks?2:03 Background on ticks2:46 What should we be suspicious of for the diseases ticks carry? (Location)4:03 When should I be really concerned about tick borne disease? (Timing)4:56 Laboratory Testing 6:15 Links to Resources (Algorithm & CDC website): https://www.mayocliniclabs.com/it-mmfiles/Acute_Tick-Borne_Disease_Testing_Algorithm.pdfhttps://www.cdc.gov/ticks/index.html6:44 When should I not test?8:30 How can we protect ourselves from these tick borne diseases?9:23 ABC’s of Tick Bite Prevention: https://news.mayocliniclabs.com/ticks 11:03 Key Takeaways 12:10 Outro

  • One Small Bite, Deadly for Mankind

    06/09/2019 Duration: 22min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:48 Introduction of Elitza Theel, Ph.D.  1:03 What is the deadliest creature in the world?2:30 How many types of mosquitoes are there?3:50 Why do mosquitoes bite us?4:54 What types of infections do they cause?6:33 What advice do you give students and learners regarding this topic? 7:37 How does somebody make the diagnosis?7:54 How can you use lab testing to keep on the right track?10:49 What are some of the frequent calls received as a Laboratory Director?13:26  Are these mosquito borne diseases treatable?13:53 Where do you figure out the species?14:59 What about treatment for mosquito borne viruses?15:17 What about vaccines for mosquito born viruses?16:27 What do you see as the future trends in the world of mosquito borne disease?18:13 What are your recommendations for protecting against mosquitoes? 19:33 Fun fact on how spreading infections may occur 21:31 OutroAdditional Resources:https://www.cdc.gov/ncezid/dvbd/index.html 

  • Top Five Things Every Medical Professional Should Know about Lab Medicine

    06/09/2019 Duration: 18min

    Time Stamps00:00 Podcast Intro00:32 Introduction of Ann Moyer, M.D., Ph.D.  00:49 How did you decide to go into Molecular Genetic Pathology?2:33 What do you do all day (as a pathologist)?4:25 Can you take one test and talk us through how you look at a case?7:32 What’s your favorite part about being a pathologist?8:28 What’s the worst aspect?9:18 Is it true that a lot of the tests that are run in your lab didn’t exist five years ago?10:20 What have you learned on the job that you weren’t exposed to in your training?11:36 How can clinicians build that bridge of collaboration with their pathologist?13:11  What would you tell medical students as to why they should consider pathology?14:39 What are the top five things that medical professionals should know about laboratory medicine?17:39 Outro

  • Coming Soon: Lab Medicine Rounds Podcast

    29/08/2019 Duration: 01min

    Trailer for Lab Medicine Rounds Podcast

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