PDF Notes for Episode on Meniscal Tears
At the end of this episode, learners will be able to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Degenerative Cervical Myelopathy
In this podcast, listeners will learn about Giant Cell Arteritis, specifically with regards to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Giant Cell Arteritis
After this episode, listeners should be able to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Esophageal Perforations
PDF Notes for Episode on Necrotizing Enterocolitis.
After listening to this episode, learners will be able to:
After listening to this episode, learners will be able to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Tracheoesophageal Fistulas and Esophageal Atresias
After listening to this episode, learners will be able to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Intestinal Atresia
After listening to this episode, learners will be able to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Clubfoot - Congenital Talipes Equinovarus (CTE)
After listening to this episode, learners will be able to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernias
In this Current Conversation podcast on bias in the Canadian healthcare system, Surgery 101 is joined by Psychiatry and Paediatrics Associate Professor Dr. Javeed Sukhera, who is the incoming Chair of Psychiatry at the Institute of Living (IOL), and Chief of Psychiatry at Hartford Hospital in Connecticut.
Hosted by Surgery 101 co-founder Dr. Jonathan White, this podcast episode covers the timely topic of bias, its influence in systems and learning, its visible and invisible impacts, and how to recognize our own bias and address it, something which isn’t talked about enough in medical school and residency education.
Keep an eye out for future Current Conversations podcast episodes, and let us know what you’d like to hear in a future episode.
GET IN TOUCH:
DR. JAVEED SUKHERA:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/javeedsukhera
Website: https://javeedsukhera.com/about
SURGERY 101
Website: http://surgery101.org/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/surgery101/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/surgery_101
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/surgery101
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/surgery.101
In this Current Conversation podcast on Wellness and Self-Care, Surgery 101 is joined by ER physician Dr. Grant Kennedy from the Rockyview General Hospital in Calgary, Canada. Hosted by Surgery 101 co-founder Dr. Jonathan White, this podcast episode covers the timely topic of physician burnout and how to combat it, which isn’t talked about enough in medical school and residency education.
To protect himself from burnout Dr. Kennedy uses his love of music and songwriting to shift his focus away from his job and its stresses and traumas, which allows him to create a better space to work in and to enables him to take care of others.
Keep an eye out for future Current Conversations podcast episodes, and let us know what you’d like to hear, and who you would like to hear from, in a future episode.
GET IN TOUCH:
GRANT KENNEDY MUSIC:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/kennedyGCK
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gkennedymusic/
Website: www.grantkennedy.ca
SURGERY 101
LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/surgery101
Twitter: https://twitter.com/surgery_101
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/surgery101
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/surgery.101
Website: www.surgery101.org
By the end of this episode learners will be able to:
PDF Notes for Episode on Diabetic Retinopathy
In this timely and very much needed video episode, Surgery 101 is joined by Dr. Lisa Richardson from the University of Toronto and discusses Anti-Indigenous racism in the Canadian Healthcare system. She offers her insights into how medical schools should incorporate Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion discourse and learning into their curriculum, and how truth is an important first step towards reconciliation in the future.
Dr. Richardson is Associate Dean, Inclusion & Diversity, at the Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, and the Indigenous Health Strategic Lead at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto, Canada.
We're living in the 21st century and there are a lot of issues are are important in the world today. Be it inclusive medicine, racism in the healthcare system, understanding LGBTQIA2S and other big conversations, Surgery 101 is poised to respond, as well as be a thought leader in having these difficult conversations. We made this video to talk through why we are making it a point to have these conversations.
After listening to this episode, learners will be able to: