Cmaj Podcasts

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Podcasts by the Canadian Medical Association Journal. Follow CMAJ Podcasts on iTunes, SoundCloud, or your favourite podcatcher! Thanks for tuning in.

Episódios

  • How to diagnose and manage polyneuropathy

    27/03/2023 Duração: 25min

    Send us a textClinicians may find diagnosing polyneuropathy challenging due to the vague and insidious onset of symptoms. Identifying signs consistent with polyneuropathy and determining which investigations to conduct and when to be concerned can be daunting.Polyneuropathy involves simultaneous dysfunction of multiple peripheral nerves, with the most common form being distal symmetric polyneuropathy. Symptoms primarily occur distally, mainly at the bottom of the feet, and progress proximally. Sensory symptoms are more frequent than motor symptoms and signs. Patients with distal symmetric polyneuropathy may experience neuropathic pain, impairments in walking, and distal motor function, significantly impacting their quality of life.Dr. Ario Mirian, a fifth-year neurology resident at the University of Western Ontario's Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, is the lead author of a review article in CMAJ entitled "Diagnosis and management of patients with polyneuropathy". In this episode, Dr.

  • Redesigning streets to make them safe for bikes, e-scooters, and pedestrians

    13/03/2023 Duração: 34min

    Send us a textThe use of electric scooters (e-scooters) has witnessed a substantial surge globally.However, the presence of these motorized vehicles on sidewalks poses a significant risk to pedestrians. A recent practice paper published in CMAJ describes the case of a 68-year-old woman who suffered serious injuries while walking on a city sidewalk after being hit by an e-scooter traveling at approximately 30 km/h. While the authors of the paper recognize e-scooters as a popular, efficient and green form of transportation, they argue effective policies are needed to mitigate risks associated with their use. On this episode, Drs. Blair Bigham and Mojola Omole speak with Zach Williams, the director of policy and government partnerships and Jamie Perkins the director of communications for  Superpedestrian. Superpedestrian is an e-scooter company that spun off from the MIT Sensible City Lab. They discuss the necessary changes to urban infrastructure as well as the responsibilities of e-scooter providers to ensure

  • Understanding parents’ concerns about vaccinating their children against SARS-CoV-2

    27/02/2023 Duração: 32min

    Send us a textUptake of the SARS-CoV-2 vaccine for children aged 5–11 years has been lower than anticipated in Canada. Although research has explored parental intentions toward SARS-CoV-2 vaccination for children, the drivers of parents’ decisions to seek vaccination for their children - or not -  have not been studied in-depth. A research paper published in CMAJ,  entitled Parents’ perspectives on SARS-CoV-2 vaccinations for children: a qualitative analysis, sought to explore parents’ decision-making. It was a collaboration between physicians, social scientists and research scientists. On this episode, four of the paper’s authors discuss their findings with hosts, Drs. Omole and Bigham. They emphasize the importance of existing trusting relationships between parents and their primary care providers when it comes to making difficult healthcare decisions for children.Join us as we explore medical solutions that address the urgent need to change healthcare. Reach out to us about this or any episode you hear. Or

  • Virtual versus in-person consultation: getting the mix right

    13/02/2023 Duração: 34min

    Send us a textEarly in the COVID-19 pandemic, Ontario saw a 5600% increase in virtual visits to health care practitioners, while in-office visits decreased by 79% from the previous year. In 2018, only 4% of family physicians in Canada were offering video visits while, at the peak of the pandemic, about 80% of primary care visits were being delivered virtually in Ontario.Media reports at the time suggested patients were substituting emergency department (ED) visits when in-person consultations were unavailable, leading to additional strain on already stretched ED resources.A research paper published in CMAJ looked at whether this shift in care was in fact taking place. Dr. Hemant Shah is an internal medicine physician and hepatologist at Toronto General Hospital and co-author of the study entitled Association between virtual primary care and emergency department use during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic in Ontario, Canada.On today’s episode, Dr. Shah discusses the study’s surprising findings with host

  • Diagnosing, treating and living with migraine

    30/01/2023 Duração: 36min

    Send us a textMigraine is a common condition that affects around 12% of adults, with a higher prevalence in women (18%) than men (6%). Global burden of disease estimates in 2019 found migraine to be the leading cause of disability in women aged 15-49 years and the second leading cause of disability overall. On this episode, Drs. Mojole and Bigham interview three authors of two review articles on the topic published in CMAJ, which focus on diagnosis, acute treatment and prevention of migraine.  Dr. Velina Tzankova is a neurology resident at the University of Toronto; Dr. Werner Becker is a neurologist and the founding director of the Calgary Headache Assessment and Management Program, and currently professor emeritus in the Department of Clinical Neurosciences at the University of Calgary; and Dr. Tommy Chan is a neurologist and director of John H. Kreeft Headache Clinic at University Hospital in London, Ontario. As well, Drs. Bigham and Omole interview two women who have battled severe migraine since childhoo

  • Diagnosing, assessing and treating long COVID

    16/01/2023 Duração: 33min

    Send us a textDiagnosing long COVID, or post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), is challenging for clinicians. With up to 200 possible symptoms, heterogeneous presentations and no definitive diagnostic test, the diagnosis is a clinical one.In this episode, Dr. Kieran Quinn, a general internist and palliative care physician at Mount Sinai and Bridgepoint Hospitals in Toronto, emphasizes the importance of judicious diagnostic testing in patients with suspected long COVID. Dr. Quinn, who is co-author on three “Five Things to Know…” articles published in CMAJ that cover diagnosing, assessing and treating long COVID, suggests that limited routine blood work and, occasionally, an echocardiogram or pulmonary function test may be sufficient to make the diagnosis without the need for extensive testing and consultations.The episode also features the personal experience of Suzie Goulding, the founder of COVID Long Haulers Canada, a support group for people struggling with long COVID, who shares her journey w

  • Looking back, looking forward with CMAJ editors

    02/01/2023 Duração: 29min

    Send us a textOn this special episode, Drs. Blair Bigham and Mojola Omole interview CMAJ editor-in-chief, Dr. Kirsten Patrick, and executive editor, Dr. James Maskalyk. They talk about the journal's accomplishments over the past year and some of the challenges related to its increased focus on social determinants of health and equity.In the year ahead, Drs. Patrick and Maskalyk say the journal will focus on exploring topics related to access to care, and particularly encourage the submission of articles that discuss bold solutions that can bring about wide-reaching systemic change.Join us as we explore medical solutions that address the urgent need to change healthcare. Reach out to us about this or any episode you hear. Or tell us about something you'd like to hear on the leading Canadian medical podcast.You can find Blair and Mojola on X @BlairBigham and @DrmojolaomoleX (in English): @CMAJ X (en français): @JAMC FacebookInstagram: @CMAJ.ca The CMAJ Podcast is produced by PodCraft Productions

  • Canada’s primary care crisis: addressing the causes and finding solutions

    19/12/2022 Duração: 37min

    Send us a textA popular theory to explain the crisis in primary care in Canada is that newly graduating physicians simply do not see as many patients as previous generations. But recently published research has thoroughly debunked that myth. David Rudoler is the lead author of research published in CMAJ entitled Changes over time in patient visits and continuity of care among graduating cohorts of family physicians in 4 Canadian provinces that looked at the number of patient contacts for physicians at all career stages. He and his co-authors found no generational differences in family physician practice.On this episode, David Rudoler, who is an assistant professor in the faculty of health sciences at Ontario Tech University, tells Drs. Bigham and Omole that, while his research disproves the ‘lazy millennial physician’ trope, it does show that the number of patient contacts has declined for all primary care physicians over the years.Dr. Tara Kiran,  Fidani Chair in Improvement and Innovation at the University

  • Managing epistaxis and identifying who may have a bleeding disorder

    05/12/2022 Duração: 40min

    Send us a textAn “old wives’ tale” has persisted in the treatment of anterior epistaxis. A practice article in CMAJ entitled, "Five things to know about anterior epistaxis" discusses what many are doing wrong and the proper way to treat anterior epistaxis. On this episode, co-author and rhinologist Dr. Leigh Sowerby elaborates on the causes and the full suite of options for treating this common cause for emergency department visits.Next, Drs. Bigham and Omole speak with Dr. Michelle Sholzberg, a hematologist and medical director of the coagulation laboratory at St. Michael's Hospital about how to determine if a patient may have a  bleeding disorder and needs investigation. Dr. Sholzberg discusses the usefulness of the INR and PTT and then goes on to call out structural sexism in hematology, and in the diagnosis of bleeding disorders, in particular. "Five things to know about anterior epistaxis"CMAJJoin us as we explore medical solutions that address the urgent need to change healthcar

  • Recognizing and addressing human monkeypox in Canada

    21/11/2022 Duração: 28min

    Send us a textA practice article in CMAJ presents 8 images of monkeypox mucocutaneous lesions presenting in Canadian patients from May to July 2022.  The images show a spectrum of common lesions seen in patients with human monkeypox during the 2022 outbreak in non-endemic countries. On this episode, Dr. Sharon Sukhdeo and Dr. Darrell Tan, two co-authors of the article discuss their intention that the image atlas be a necessary corrective to the proliferation of images from endemic countries seen early in the outbreak that primarily featured Black patients, often children. Host Dr. Mojola Omole speaks with these guests about the current epidemiology of human monkeypox in Canada, lessons learned from the 2022 outbreak, the importance of accurately describing who is at risk, and how generating awareness of monkeypox transmission in communities at risk may have slowed its spread.Dr. Sukhdeo is an infectious disease fellow at the University of Toronto, and Dr. Darrell Tan is an infectious disease physician at St.

  • Exploring the promise of AI in medicine

    07/11/2022 Duração: 30min

    Send us a textArtificial intelligence, such as computer-aided detection and computer-aided diagnosis or differentiation uses complex algorithms to identify and characterize polyps in situ during screening for colorectal cancer.  Emergent evidence suggests that the performance of AI models is superior to current standards of practice.On this episode, Drs Bigham and Omole speak with Dr. Michael Byrne, co-author of a practice paper in CMAJ entitled Artificial intelligence in colorectal cancer screening. He argues that while artificial intelligence will not replace physicians, physicians who use AI will eventually replace physicians who don’t.Next they speak with Zayna Khayat, a future strategist and Vice President of Growth & Client Success at digital health solutions firm, Teladoc Health. She's also adjunct faculty at the Rotman School of Business. Zayna says that AI’s biggest impact on medicine will come from reducing costs and increasing the number of patients that can be guided through the system.Jo

  • Special Episode: Tackling anti-Black racism in medicine

    31/10/2022 Duração: 58min

    Send us a textEfforts to combat anti-Black racism in Canadian healthcare are underway but much remains to be done to dismantle the ideas, systems and implicit biases that underpin this specific form of discrimination.On this special one-hour episode, Drs Omole and Bigham explore the history of anti-Black racism in Canada’s medical schools, in particular at Queen’s University, where a ban on Black students was only formally lifted in 2018.They also explore solutions, including the development of a curriculum at Queen’s aimed at addressing anti-Black racism. Drs. Omole and Bigham speak with Dr. Sabreena Lawal, a co-author of a paper in CMAJ entitled: Anti-Black racism and medical education: a curricular framework for acknowledging and learning from past mistakes.They then explore the broad set of challenges still facing medicine in Canada and the efforts still needed to address anti-Black racism, with two Black physician leaders, Dr. Onye Nnorom and Dr. Kannin Osei-Tutu.Dr. Osei-Tutu is an acute-care hospitalis

  • Ensuring equitable access to cancer care for Black populations

    24/10/2022 Duração: 39min

    Send us a textBlack and immigrant populations are disproportionately underrepresented in regular screening for cancer. Race-based data from Canada are minimally-available, but research from the United States and Europe has shown that the lifetime risk of developing prostate cancer is much higher among Black people compared to white people and Black people who do get the disease tend to have more aggressive tumors and to present at a later stage.On this episode, Drs Omole and Bigham speak with Kikachukwu Otiono, lead author of an analysis in CMAJ titled, Prostate cancer screening in Black men in Canada: a case for risk-stratified care.  Ms. Otiono is a final-year medical student at McMaster University in Hamilton. She argues that Black patients should be understood to be at a potentially higher risk for developing prostate cancer and physicians should screen them earlier than guidelines currently recommend, based on evidence from other jurisdictions.They also speak with Dr. Doreen Ezeife, the author of another

  • Optimizing care for patients experiencing sickle cell crises.

    10/10/2022 Duração: 41min

    Send us a textSeveral hospitals are known for providing particularly excellent care to people experiencing a sickle cell crisis.  For example, the ER at UHN meets a key recommendation from the 2017 Ontario Clinical Handbook that patients receive analgesia within  30 minutes of triage. The handbook also recommends that centres support patients’ individual coping strategies through ready access to food, phone chargers and blankets.Many ERs are not meeting this standard. A general lack of awareness about sickle cell disease among physicians, misplaced suspicion about drug-seeking and other biases lead to lengthy delays in patients receiving treatment.On today’s episode, Drs Bigham and Omole speak with Dr. Jennifer Bryan, a founding member of the UHN Emergency Department Sickle Cell Working Group, an emergency physician at UHN and the co-chair of the 2022 Sickle Cell Summit being organized by the Sickle Cell Awareness Group in Ontario.They also speak with Lance Archer, a patient and sickle cell disease advocate a

  • How to be better at diagnosing rare conditions.

    26/09/2022 Duração: 33min

    Send us a textHereditary angioedema (HAE) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of painful swelling without urticaria that leads to substantial morbidity and even mortality if left untreated.On this episode, Dr. Victoria Cook, an immunologist working in Victoria, BC, describes the case of a woman who had 6 emergency department presentations, 1 hospital admission and saw 5 different specialists over 11 months before finally being diagnosed with HAE.Drs. Bigham and Omole, then speak with Dr. Ed Etchells about how physicians can work to strip away biases and cognitive obstacles that can prevent timely diagnoses of rare and challenging conditions. Dr. Etchells works in the division of General Internal Medicine at Women's College Hospital in the University of Toronto.Article discussedTranscriptCMAJ Join us as we explore medical solutions that address the urgent need to change healthcare. Reach out to us about this or any episode you hear. Or tell us about something you&apos

  • Urgent need to improve organ donation experience for donor families

    12/09/2022 Duração: 38min

    Send us a textMany families of organ donors describe feeling alone and abandoned at the moment when their loved one is taken to the operating room for donation. Heather Talbot says she and her family were left on their own as her son was wheeled into the OR. The experience left her thinking, “Well, they got what they wanted and they’ve moved on.”A qualitative study in CMAJ examined the experiences of donor families. They found that many families felt unsupported at critical transition periods. Authors of The experiences of family members of deceased organ donors and suggestions to improve the donation process conducted 271 in-depth interviews with family members of organ donors.On this episode, Drs Bigham and Omole speak with the study’s lead author Dr. Aimee Sarti. Dr. Sarti is an ICU physician in Ottawa. But first, they speak with Heather Talbot. Ms. Talbot’s son Jonathan became an organ donor after his death in 2009.Join us as we explore medical solutions that address the urgent need to change healthcare.

  • Clearing Misconceptions about Functional Neurological Disorders

    29/08/2022 Duração: 35min

    Send us a textFunctional Neurological Disorders (FND) make up a significant portion of referrals to neurology, maybe as high as 30%. However, misconceptions regarding these disorders remain across medicine, and patients are frequently dismissed as “faking it.”FND are neuropsychiatric conditions in which patients experience neurologic symptoms due to a “functional” disruption of brain networks rather than a “structural” disorder of the nervous system. On this episode, Drs Bigham and Omole speak with Peter Gill, a patient with FND. Mr. Gill describes his seven-year journey to diagnosis and his recent success with various approaches to therapy.Next, Drs Bigham and Omole speak with Dr. Matthew Burke, a cognitive neurologist at Sunnybrook Hospital in Toronto and an expert in FND. They discuss the current understanding of the disorder, diagnostic criteria and therapeutic options.Links:Neurosymptoms.orgFunctional neurologic disorder associated with SARS-CoV-2 vaccinationCMAJJoin us as we explore medical solutions th

  • Hot Flash: Experiencing menopause in medicine

    15/08/2022 Duração: 32min

    Send us a textWhen contemplating issues of diversity and inclusion, medicine needs to consider menopause. A commentary in CMAJ argues that discussion about and, where needed, accommodation of menopause is a necessary step toward providing women physicians with a supportive and comfortable work environment.On this episode, Drs. Bigham and Omole speak with the lead author of the commentary “Hot Flash: Experiencing menopause in medicine.” Dr. Marie Christakis is an OB-GYN at St Michael’s hospital in Toronto. She has completed a fellowship in Menopause and Mature Women’s Health at Mount Sinai Hospital.They discuss why there has been little discussion on the effect, and potential burden, of menopause on mature- or potentially peak-career women physicians. And they explore what needs to be done to better support physicians through menopause.Drs. Bigham and Omole also speak with Dr. Kim Wynd, an anesthesiologist who practices in Peterborough Ontario, about her experiences during menopause. Dr. Wynd began having symp

  • Encore Presentation: Recognizing and Treating POTS

    01/08/2022 Duração: 26min

    Send us a textThis is an encore presentation of our most popular episode of the past year. Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS) is a disorder that can profoundly affect patients' quality of life. Its main characteristic is tachycardia on standing without a drop in blood pressure. Patients complain of lightheadedness and palpitations when upright, which sometimes leads to syncope. This can cause substantial functional disability, which may be economically devastating.Despite these serious consequences for patients, diagnosis can be delayed up to 6 years.In this episode, Dr. Satish Raj, author of the recent CMAJ narrative review article Diagnosis and management of Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome talks to our hosts about difficulties in making the diagnosis of POTS, its complex range of comorbidities, how patients are typically affected by the syndrome and treatment options.Join us as we explore medical solutions that address the urgent need to change healthcare. Reach out to us about

  • Special Episode - Depression in pregnancy and the postpartum period: should we screen everyone?

    25/07/2022 Duração: 25min

    Send us a textThe short answer to this question, according to a new guideline published in CMAJ, is “No.”In this special episode, CMAJ editor in chief, Dr. Kirsten Patrick, talks to Dr. Eddy Lang, lead author of the guideline entitled Recommendation on instrument-based screening for depression during pregnancy and the postpartum period produced by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care. They discuss why there’s not enough evidence to support a recommendation to screen routinely, why that doesn’t mean that depression in pregnancy and the postpartum period is not important to diagnose, and in what circumstances use of a screening instrument might be helpful.Blair and Jola will be back next episode.Join us as we explore medical solutions that address the urgent need to change healthcare. Reach out to us about this or any episode you hear. Or tell us about something you'd like to hear on the leading Canadian medical podcast.You can find Blair and Mojola on X @BlairBigham and @DrmojolaomoleX (in En

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