100 episodes

Evidence and experts to help you understand today’s public health news—and what it means for tomorrow.

Public Health On Call Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

    • News
    • 4.6 • 566 Ratings

Evidence and experts to help you understand today’s public health news—and what it means for tomorrow.

    BONUS - An Update on Bird Flu in the U.S.

    BONUS - An Update on Bird Flu in the U.S.

    Virologist Dr. Andy Pekosz and public health veterinary expert Dr. Meghan Davis return to the podcast to talk with Stephanie Desmon about what we’ve learned so far from viral sequencing of H5N1, its presence in milk, what we know about infections in humans, the status of the overall response to a major pathogen of concern on the heels of COVID-19, and more. Read Dr. Davis’s recent New York Times essay on protecting the dairy workforce here: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/01/opinion/bird-flu-dairy-workers.html

    • 18 min
    755 - Electronic Cigarettes Part 1: Do E-cigs Help People Quit Smoking?

    755 - Electronic Cigarettes Part 1: Do E-cigs Help People Quit Smoking?

    More than a decade after electronic cigarettes became broadly available in the United States, their merits are still being debated. Do these products help people quit smoking? How serious are the health risks associated with these products? In a two-part series, we hear from two researchers in tobacco control about their views. In part one, Dr. Nancy Rigotti, Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School talks with Dr. Josh Sharfstein about the use of e-cigarettes for smoking cessation.
    Read her editorial in the New England Journal of Medicine: https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJMe2314977

    • 16 min
    754 - A Public Health Emergency: Syphilis Surges in the Great Plains Region

    754 - A Public Health Emergency: Syphilis Surges in the Great Plains Region

    An alarming and dangerous syphilis surge across the Great Plains Region, an area spanning North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Iowa, has prompted tribal officials to urge HHS Secretary to declare a public health emergency. Dr. Meghan Curry O’Connell, chief public health officer at the Great Plains Tribal Leaders Health Board and a member of the Cherokee Nation, talks with Lindsay Smith Rogers about the outbreak and why public health officials are struggling to respond.
    Learn more: https://www.greatplainstribalhealth.org/news/tribal-leaders-urge-hhs-secretary-to-declare-syphilis-emergency-189.html
    https://www.vox.com/24006120/south-dakota-syphilis-congenital-indigenous-tribal-native-american-meghan-oconnell-health-board

    • 17 min
    753 - The Health Care Crisis At the U.S.-Mexico Border Part 2: Border Walls and Traumatic Brain and Spinal Injuries

    753 - The Health Care Crisis At the U.S.-Mexico Border Part 2: Border Walls and Traumatic Brain and Spinal Injuries

    In part two of a two-part series about the crisis of health care for immigrants and refugees at the U.S.-Mexico border, Dr. Alexander Tenorio, a neurosurgical resident at the University of California, San Diego, talks with Dr. Josh Sharfstein about the influx of traumatic brain and spinal injuries his team has seen from people attempting to climb the border wall. They discuss the scope of the problem and the policies behind it, and why it often takes hours for victims to get critical care. They also talk about Dr. Tenorio’s personal connection to the situation as a first-generation American born to Mexican immigrants.

    • 19 min
    752 - The Health Care Crisis At the U.S.-Mexico Border Part 1: Children and Families

    752 - The Health Care Crisis At the U.S.-Mexico Border Part 1: Children and Families

    In part one of a two-part series about the crisis of health care for immigrants and refugees at the U.S.-Mexico border, Dr. Janine Young, a pediatrician at the University of California, San Diego, talks with Stephanie Desmon about the tenuous situation for children and families. More and more people are showing up at the border in poor health—dehydrated, malnourished, some severely injured and many traumatized—without any adequate care to meet them. They talk about the immigration policies that have led to a system ill-equipped to properly triage and treat the children and families seeking refuge in the U.S., and the misconceptions around people who are fleeing for their lives.

    • 13 min
    751 - The New Federal Regulations Aimed Making Methadone More Accessible—And Less Stigmatizing

    751 - The New Federal Regulations Aimed Making Methadone More Accessible—And Less Stigmatizing

    Methadone is a highly effective treatment for substance use disorder but strict regulations like daily clinic visits have led to its nickname, “liquid handcuffs.” Dr. Yngvild Olsen, director of the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services administration, talks with Lindsay Smith Rogers about new federal regulations that expand access to this life saving medication.  They talk about how the COVID era showed that changes can make methadone much easier to prescribe and access, and how these updates are part of a critical cultural shift towards making substance use treatment more reasonable, equitable, and compassionate.
    Resources for this episode:
    https://www.samhsa.gov/medications-substance-use-disorders/statutes-regulations-guidelines/methadone-guidance
    https://findtreatment.gov/

    • 17 min

Customer Reviews

4.6 out of 5
566 Ratings

566 Ratings

Ginagina Smith ,

Thank you

For all the great info AND the tip about the Zoom play: Enemy of the People

mistyb08 ,

Wonderful

I absolutely love this podcast. It’s so informative and focuses on today’s issues at hand.

La.sweety ,

Great podcast

Thanks for sharing it with us.

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