『Public Health On Call』のカバーアート

Public Health On Call

著者: Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
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  • Evidence and experts to help you understand today’s public health news—and what it means for tomorrow.
    Copyright of this audio content is owned by The Johns Hopkins University.
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  • Special Series: Racial Bias and Pulse Oximeters Part 1–A Problem Hiding in Plain Sight
    2024/07/08
    About this episode: Pulse oximeters—devices used to read blood oxygen levels in hospitals and at home—are far less reliable for people with darker skin tones... Falsely normal readings create the potential for clinical staff to miss life-threatening conditions. In this three-episode special series, we explore a longstanding issue that only caught the nation’s attention in recent years. In episode 1: How COVID-19 shined a light on an issue that was known, but largely ignored. . Host: Annalies Winny is a co-producer of the Pulse Ox series for the , an associate editor for , and a contributor for the . Show links and related content: .—JMIR Public Health Surveillance –Amy Moran-Thomas –CNN —The New England Journal of Medicine —Sleep (1987) Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? or . Follow us: Here's our
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    32 分
  • Special Series: Racial Bias and Pulse Oximeters Part 2—What Went Wrong?
    2024/07/08
    About this episode: Pulse oximeters—devices used to read blood oxygen levels in hospitals and at home—are far less reliable for people with darker skin tones. Falsely normal readings have the potential for clinical staff to miss life-threatening conditions. In this three-episode special series, we explore a longstanding issue that only caught the nation’s attention in recent years. In episode 2: What went wrong, including inaction from manufacturers and regulators, market forces, and racism in medicine that goes beyond this one device. Host: Nicole Jurmo is co-producer of the Public Health in the Field series on pulse oximeters, the associate director for public relations and communications for the , and a current MPH student. She recently completed a practicum with the Public Health On Call podcast. Show links and related content: —The New England Journal of Medicine —Orange County Business Journal —American Journal of Public Health —FDA Executive Summary (pdf) —FDA Safety Communication —Sleep (1987) —The Washington Post (pdf) —European Respiratory Journal (abstract) —The Daily Show Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? or . Follow us: Here's our
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    32 分
  • Special Series: Racial Bias and Pulse Oximeters Part 3—Fixing Pulse Oximeters
    2024/07/08
    About this episode: Pulse oximeters—devices used to read blood oxygen levels in hospitals and at home—are far less reliable for people with darker skin tones. Falsely normal readings create the potential for clinical staff to miss life-threatening conditions. In this three-episode special series, we explore a longstanding issue that only caught the nation’s attention in recent years. In episode 3: How engineers are working to improve the design of pulse oximeters, and how advocates from across the medical industry including patients and students are leading efforts to keep the pressure on to improve equity in pulse oximetry…and beyond. Host: Annalies Winny is a co-producer of the Pulse Ox series for the , an associate editor for , and a contributor for the . Show links and related content: —Reuters –NPR —NPR —BMJ —Roots Community Health Center press release (PDF) —Joel Bervell (YouTube) Contact us: Have a question about something you heard? Want to suggest a topic or guest? or . Follow us: Here's our
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    24 分

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Evidence and experts to help you understand today’s public health news—and what it means for tomorrow.
Copyright of this audio content is owned by The Johns Hopkins University.

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