The Cost of Quality with Dr. Susan Glod

Dr. Susan GlodThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam & Cristy will be joined by Physician at Pennsylvania State Hershey Medical CenterDr. Susan Glod to talk about The Cost of Quality.

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, February 9th at 9am
• Sunday, February 10th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, February 11th at 6pm and 10pm

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Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository
 

National Healthcare in Israel with Dr. Ehud Davidson

Dr. Ehud DavidsonThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam & Cristy will be joined by Deputy Director General & Head of the Hospital Division at Clalit Health Services, Dr. Ehud Davidson to talk about National Healthcare in Israel.

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, December 8th at 9am
• Sunday, December 9th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, December 10th at 6pm and 10pm
 
 
Listen to the Show!
Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

Show Topics:

  • Research that Matters (min 0-11): pregnancy & asthma medication, reduce ADHD medication & exercise, acupuncture & reduce cancer side effects, cancer & green tea
  • Conversations with Dr. Ehud Davidson about National Healthcare in Israel (min 11-34)
  • House Calls (min 34-42): enalapril & diuretic blood pressure medications, high blood pressure & EKG,  flu season, transferring cat scans between hospitals

Resources:

The Importance of Genetics and Heart Disease

If you have had a parent who has suffered a heart attack before the age of 55, that means you are now at higher risk for heart disease. If you didn’t know that before, it’s important you take note of it now.

The American Journal of Cardiology did a study looking at 20,000 US male doctors over two decades to see how many of the men suffered a heart attack. The study showed that the men with the genetic risk factor had a slightly greater chance of having a heart attack.

Although there is nothing you can do to change genetics, there are other things you can control. Having a healthy lifestyle is extremely important, and even more so if you are already at risk for heart disease. The healthy habits researchers studied include: not smoking, exercising regularly, keeping a normal weight and drinking alcohol in moderation.

This may sound like common sense, but it’s always nice when we can tell you we have the research to prove that your lifestyle decisions really do affect your overall health.

Reducing Unnecessary Hospitalizations of Nursing Home Residents with Dr. Joseph Ouslander

Dr. Joseph OuslanderThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, Adam & Cristy will be talking with Professor and Senior Associate Dean for Geriatric Programs at the Florida Atlantic University, Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, Dr. Joseph Ouslander, about Reducing Unnecessary Hospitalizations of Nursing Home Residents.
 
 

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, February 4th at 9am
• Sunday, February 5th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, February 6th at 6pm and 10pm

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

You may also like:
Nursing Homes, Assisted Living and the Challenges of Caring for an Aging Population (YOUR HEALTH Radio July 2010)

Alcohol & the Anxious Mind with Dr. Thomas Kash

Thomas KashSpecial guest host, Dr. Bob Gwyther from the UNC Department of Family Medicine, will join Adam again this weekend to talk with Dr. Thomas Kash, Researcher and Assistant Professor in the Department of Pharmacology and the UNC Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies at the UNC School of Medicine, about Alcohol & the Anxious Mind.

 

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, October 29th at 9am
• Sunday, October 30th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, October 31st at 6pm and 10pm

 

Listen to the Show! 

 

 

Do YOU really need multi-vitamins?

It seems that many (if not most) of our patients are taking multi-vitamins, a multibillion dollar proposition.  The quest that we have is simple: Do most people need them? Do most people derive any benefit from a daily vitamin? Or, are multi-vitamins pretty expensive placebos- not harmful maybe but of questionable effectiveness?

A very nice new study begins to provide some answers.  Research in the American Journal of Epidemiology looked at the relationship between multi-vitamins and heart disease and cancer.

Are multi-vitamins protective against the two most common killers of people in developed countries?  The study looked at 180,000 people, 80,000 men and 100,000 women, over an 11 year period, an exceedingly large, rigorous and important study.  The results showed that in fact there was no positive association between using multi-vitamins and lowering your risk at heart attack or cancer.

The researchers didn’t find any particular medical harm in taking a multi-vitamin, but when you think about their cost, supplements can easily range from a few to hundreds of dollars, month after month, year after year.  That’s a significant enough amount of money, and at this point at least, we don’t have any proof that the multi-vitamins make a difference for preventing cancer or heart attacks.

This study is just another contribution to an emerging body of evidence that if you eat a balanced diet, and unless you have some type of deficiency or other real reason for taking them, multi-vitamins may not be helpful.

Caring for Patients Amid Crisis & Disaster with Dr. Richard Vinroot

Richard VinrootEmergency Medicine Physician, Dr. Richard Vinroot will join us on YOUR HEALTH® this weekend to talk about caring for patients amid crisis and disaster. Dr. Vinroot is a Doctors Without Borders volunteer who has treated patients after Hurricane Katrina, the Haiti earthquake, and the war in Kenya.

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

 

How Much Fast Food (CAN) (SHOULD) You Eat After a Heart Attack?

If you had a heart attack, would you cut back on eating fast food?  The answer seems obvious, but the results may shock you.  The American Journal of Cardiology conducted a study that followed nearly 2,500 heart attack patients, seeing how many of them were fast food eaters before and after their heart attacks.  Did they continue eating fast food?

At the beginning, 36% of patients (close to 750) said they frequently ate fast food, in this case ‘frequent’ meaning they ate it at least once a week.  Six months after suffering heart problems, only 20% (about 500) of the patients, were still eating fast food on a frequent basis.   So out of that group that had originally been eating a lot of fast food, most of them were still eating fast food even after their heart attack.

But one important thing to consider here, is although they did say they were eating fast food, it can be argued that maybe they were choosing healthier options that many fast food restaurants now offer.   The fast food industry has made efforts, in response to consumer preferences, to put some healthier options on the menu.  Now more then ever before, you can get healthier items at most fast food places.  Also, some chains now promote eco friendly, or nutritious, fast food choices.

While high sodium and high fat foods in restaurants should be avoided, we know people need to live in the world around them as they make sustainable changes.  Demand more of what you want.  Black or white answers of good or bad food choices are not the answer for most people when it comes to eating out.
Check out the list of top ten healthy fast food restaurants

Test yourself on making healthier choices in common fast food restaurants at WebMD, or for general tips, you can go to HELPGUIDE.ORG, or even one of our “favorite” fast food chains, Evos.

You may also like:

Surviving Heart Attacks: Advocating for YOUR HEALTH with Julia Allen (YOUR HEALTH Radio March 2015)

Post-Heart Attack Care: It’s More than Just Money with Dr. Eric Peterson (YOUR HEALTH Radio November 2011)

Living a Heart-Healthy Life with Dr. Suzanne Steinbaum (YOUR HEALTH Radio February 2014)

A Patient’s Guide to Anesthesiology and Surgery with Dr. David Zvara

David ZvaraThis weekend on YOUR HEALTH™ Dr. David Zvara will join us on A Patient’s Guide to Anesthesiology & Surgery.

Dr. David Zvara is the Chair of Anesthesiology at UNC. He serves on the American Board of Anesthesiology as a senior examiner, as well as on the Board of Directors for the Society of Cardiovascular Anesthesiology. He is also a recognized researcher and educator, and is the author of two textbooks.

 
Please tune in! We’re on the air:

  • Saturday at 9am
  • Sunday at 9am and 5pm
  • Monday at 6pm and 10pm

Listen to the Show!

Download the episode from the Carolina Digital Repository

Show Topics: