Re-air: Why Teens Take Risks—And How We Can Help Keep Them Safe

Dr. Jess Shatkin
Born to be Wild Why Teens Take Risks, and How We Can Help Keep Them Safe

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, we’ll revisit the conversation Adam and guest co-host Dr. Jonathan Fricke had with Dr. Jess Shatkin—professor of child and adolescent psychology and pediatrics at New York University—about his book Born to be Wild: Why Teens Take Risks, and How We Can Help Keep Them Safe.

 
 

You can catch the episode on:

WCHL 97.9 FM

  • Saturday, June 30 at 9 a.m.
  • Sunday, July 1 at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
  • Monday, July 2 at 6 p.m.

KKAG Retro Radio 88.3 FM

  • Sunday, July 1 at 7 a.m.

 
 

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

Why Teens Take Risks—And How We Can Help Keep Them Safe

Dr. Jess Shatkin
Born to be Wild Why Teens Take Risks, and How We Can Help Keep Them Safe

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam and guest co-host Dr. Jonathan Fricke talk with Dr. Jess Shatkin—professor of child and adolescent psychology and pediatrics at New York University—about his new book Born to be Wild: Why Teens Take Risks, and How We Can Help Keep Them Safe.

 
 

You can catch the episode on:

WCHL 97.9 FM

  • Saturday, April 14 at 9 a.m.
  • Sunday, April 15 at 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
  • Monday, April 16 at 6 p.m.

KKAG Retro Radio 88.3 FM

  • Sunday, April 15 at 7 a.m.

 
 

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

Hospice Care: Comfort & Compassion with Libby Hart

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH® Adam & Cristy will be talking with Libby Hart, RN, Health Educator at UNC Hospice, about Hospice Care: Comfort & Compassion.

Please tune in! This show will air:
WCHL 97.9FM
• Saturday, January 11th at 9am
• Sunday, January 12th at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, January 13th at 6pm and 10pm
KKAG Retro Radio 88.7FM
• Sunday, January 12th at 7am

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

Additional Commentary:

This wonderful interview with Libby Hart, RN nurse educator, helps educate us about hospice care. I appreciated Dr. Hart’s explanation about hospice as an active team-based model of care that can help patients and families achieve comfort in the last months of their lives. The compassionate discussion of goals of care and helping families and patients negotiate even simple acts such as eating a meal is invaluable and their fears over taking pain medicines like morphine. The discussion of patient and family fears about the double effects of morphine as they fear it may shorten patients’ lives in addition to controlling pain is particularly salient given the increasing use of these medicines in daily life. Lastly, while many people may feel uncomfortable about volunteering to help people in the last months of their life but it may be as quick as running errands for the patients or their families.

I had hoped there might be more discussion about the larger field of palliative care which can occur anywhere throughout our lives and is not limited to the last stages of life, but it appears this was beyond the scope of the interview. I would encourage that we as a society begin to move beyond the black-and-white line of “6 months or less to live” or not, into a realm where comfort can go hand in hand with routine medical care.

Perhaps the most important part of this interview is the discussion of prognosis and how even physicians struggle with assessing and communicating limited prognosis to patients while maintaining hope. A wonderful article in the New York Times by Dr. Paul Kalanithi notes this prognostic divide. It is our attempts to understand how long we have left, and gain meaning in our lives that is perhaps the most challenging part of hospice. This interview raised many important points for us to consider as patients, family members, and potential volunteers.

Your Medical Mind with Dr. Jerry Groopman & Dr. Pam Hartzband

This weekend on YOUR HEALTH®, we’ll be talking with Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Chief of Experimental Medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Dr. Jerry Groopman and faculty member at the Harvard Medical School and the Division of Endocrinology at the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Dr. Pam Hartzband, about their book, Your Medical Mind: How to Decide What Is Right For You.

 
 

Please tune in! This show will air:
• Saturday, June 30th at 9am
• Sunday, July 1st at 9am and 5pm
• Monday, July 2nd at 6pm and 10pm

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

Toxic Free with Debra Lynn Dadd

Debra Lynn DaddOn YOUR HEALTH® this weekend we’ll be talking with author of Toxic Free: How to Protect Your Health and Home From the Chemicals that are Making You Sick, Debra Lynn Dadd, about her book.

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