58 Episodo

  1. Prescription Opioid Reductions and Suicide: What Should Caring Physicians Do in the Face of Uncertainty?

    Publicado: 23/5/2023
  2. My patient’s in shackles: Can we take these off?

    Publicado: 18/4/2023
  3. From medical student mistreatment to burnout: How can we change the culture?

    Publicado: 22/3/2023
  4. Medical Student Mistreatment: A Wicked Problem

    Publicado: 21/2/2023
  5. Uncommon wisdom from a family physician and medical educator

    Publicado: 19/1/2023
  6. Challenging Questions to Help Physicians Reflect, Grow, and Find More Joy Practicing Medicine

    Publicado: 15/12/2022
  7. Organic Chemistry and the Questionable Ways We Select and Train Physicians

    Publicado: 16/11/2022
  8. Contextualizing Care in a Nutshell (and a New Study)

    Publicado: 24/10/2022
  9. Medical Gaslighting: Why Are We A--holes?

    Publicado: 19/9/2022
  10. Urine Drug Screening: How it can traumatize patients and undermine the physician-patient relationship without helping anyone

    Publicado: 11/8/2022
  11. Pursuing a Medical Career While Black: What it Takes and Why it Matters

    Publicado: 14/7/2022
  12. Rescuing medical professionalism: Could “cup-of-coffee conversations” do more good than committees and letters-to-the-file?

    Publicado: 26/5/2022
  13. Why Residents Unionize

    Publicado: 21/4/2022
  14. Opioids and the physician-patient relationship: What are we getting wrong?

    Publicado: 15/3/2022
  15. False Positives Traumatize Patients...If Clinicians Aren't Careful

    Publicado: 19/1/2022
  16. Healing Interactions: What are they made of?

    Publicado: 26/12/2021
  17. Kind People on Airplanes

    Publicado: 24/11/2021
  18. When an attending yells at a resident

    Publicado: 28/10/2021
  19. When your patient has a Swastika tattoo

    Publicado: 9/9/2021
  20. About me being racist: A conversation that follows an apology

    Publicado: 28/7/2021

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Doctors and other health care professionals are too often socialized and pressured to become “efficient task completers” rather than healers, which leads to unengaged and unimaginative medical practice, burnout, and diminished quality of care. It doesn’t have to be that way. With a range of thoughtful guests, co-hosts Saul Weiner MD and Stefan Kertesz MD MS, interrogate the culture and context in which clinicians are trained and practice for their implications for patient care and clinician well-being. The podcast builds on Dr. Weiner’s 2020 book, On Becoming a Healer: The Journey from Patient Care to Caring about Your Patients (Johns Hopkins University Press).

Visit the podcast's native language site