How Healthcare Can Go Green

Iqbal MianThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, Adam and guest co-host Dr. Jamila Battle will be talking with Iqbal Mian of Practice Greenhealth—an organization that began as a partnership between the EPA, the American Hospital Association, the American Nurses Association and Health Care Without Harm as a way to address sustainability in hospitals—about ways the healthcare industry can go green.

You can catch the episode on:

97.9 FM The Hill
• Saturday, November 9 at 9 a.m.
• Sunday, November 10 at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
• Monday, November 11 at 6 p.m.

KKAG Retro Radio 88.3 FM
• Sunday, November 10at 7 a.m.

Listen to the show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

Raising Sepsis Awareness

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam and guest co-host Dr. Laura Higginbotham talk with Dr. Carl Flatley—endodontist and founder of the Sepsis Alliance—about what happens when your body fights you rather than an infection.

Please tune in! The show will air:

WCHL 97.9 FM

  • Saturday, January 20, at 9 a.m.
  • Sunday, January 21, at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
  • Monday, January 22, at 6 p.m.

KKAG Retro Radio 88.3 FM

  • Sunday, January 21, at 7 a.m.

Listen to the show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

Re-air: Environment, Health and Peace

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam and Cristy will be talking with Dr. Amer Sweity, post-doctoral researcher at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev; Jack Platt, retired CPA; and Matan Afik, undergraduate student at the ARAVA Institute about environment, health and peace.

Dr. Amer Sweity

Dr. Amer Sweity

Please tune in! The show will air:

WCHL 97.9 FM
• Saturday, November 26, at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
• Sunday, November 27, at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
• Monday, November 28, at 6 p.m.

KKAG Retro Radio 88.3 FM
• Sunday, November 27, at 7 a.m.

Listen to the show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository
 

Environment, Health And Peace with Dr. Amer Sweity, Jack Platt and Matan Afik

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam and Cristy will be talking with Dr. Amer Sweity, Jack Platt and Matan Afik, Post-doctoral researcher at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Retired CPA and undergraduate student at the ARAVA Institute about Environment Health and Peace.

Please tune in!

The show will air:

WCHL 97.9FM
• Saturday, January 16th at 9 a.m.
• Sunday, January 17th at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
• Monday, January 18th at 6 p.m. and 10 p.m.

WBNE 103.7 FM
• Saturday, January 16th at 3 p.m.

KKAG Retro Radio 88.7 FM
• Sunday, January 17th at 7 a.m.

Listen to the show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

  • Conversations with Dr. Amer Sweity, Jack Platt and Matan Afik (min 0-30:58)
  • House Calls (min 30:59-29:43) Patient and doctor expectations for ‘DNR’; Family doctors making house calls; Do I need a CT scan to check for pleurisy?

Conversations
Arava Institute
Amer Sweity’s Academia.edu page
Article on Amer Sweity and his research
Israel Ride
Scroll down on this page for an interview with Jack Platt about his bike ride

House Calls
Do Not Resuscitate (DNR)
Family doctors making housecalls
How pleurisy is diagnosed

To Resuscitate or NOT to Resuscitate? …That is the question.

Do Not Resuscitate (or DNR) orders have become fairly common. A lot of people when they arrive at the hospital have DNR orders, even healthy people.  Some of these DNR orders reflect very ill, older patients, and in other cases, they reflect younger patients with fears that they could end up in an irreversible coma after a motor accident.  These latter DNR orders do not really apply to almost everyone who comes in to the hospital for routine illnesses, as they can in most cases completely recover, even if they need short term respiratory or cardiovascular support.

Lots of ethical questions exist, one of which is do physicians treat people who come in the hospital with a DNR order differently from those who do not have a DNR order.  Could you get different or less care? A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, looks at people who have DNR orders when they go into the hospital and need surgery compared with people who were similarly matched in their health status to see what happens to those without DNR orders, within 30 days of their surgery.

The researchers found that almost three times, 23% of those people with DNR orders, died within a month after surgery, compared with 8% of those who didn’t have these orders. Those with DNR orders are probably sicker and feel more content with the idea of death, and maybe they are even thinking more about that in the wake of their surgery.   This alone would not be too surprising, but it is also possible that doctors treat these patients a little differently.

The take-home point here is that we need to really take another look at DNR orders and get serious about asking people if that’s really what they want when they come into the hospital and have reversible medical conditions.  If something happened to them within the thirty days that maybe isn’t an end-of-life issue, would they or you really want the DNR order?  We just don’t know if doctors are treating these patients with DNR orders differently.

It’s a complicated conversation to have with patients and an issue that we would really like to delve deeper, so look for this topic to show up in one of our upcoming shows!

The Last Survivor with Michael Kleiman

Michael KleimanFilmmaker Michael Kleiman will join us on YOUR HEALTH® this weekend to talk about his documentary, The Last Survivor, which follows the lives of survivors of four different genocides and mass atrocities: The Holocaust, Rwanda, Darfur, and Congo.

 

Please tune in! We’re on the air:
– Saturday at 9am
– Sunday at 9am & 5pm
– Monday at 6pm & 10pm

Listen to the Show!

Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

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