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The Dose

The Dose

The Commonwealth Fund

The Dose is the Commonwealth Fund’s podcast that presents fresh ideas, new perspectives, and compelling conversations about where health care is headed. Join host Joel Bervell this season for conversations with leading and emerging experts in health care and health policy. Get the Dose in your inbox: https://thedose.show/signup
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Top 10 The Dose Episodes

Goodpods has curated a list of the 10 best The Dose episodes, ranked by the number of listens and likes each episode have garnered from our listeners. If you are listening to The Dose for the first time, there's no better place to start than with one of these standout episodes. If you are a fan of the show, vote for your favorite The Dose episode by adding your comments to the episode page.

Climate change can have a devastating impact on our health. When people are injured or exposed to disease related to floods or fires, it’s up to health systems to pick up the pieces.

But health care itself is one of the world’s most carbon-intensive industries, responsible for 4.5 percent of all greenhouse gas emissions. What can health systems do to address climate change?

In the United Kingdom, the National Health Service (NHS) has set some ambitious goals to reduce its carbon footprint. On the latest episode of The Dose, Nick Watts, the NHS’s chief sustainability officer, talks about how the health service is meeting these goals, and whether its efforts could be replicated in countries like the United States. A low-carbon health care system, he says, is actually just a good health care system.

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Social programs like Medicaid are supposed to help people, but often they reproduce racial inequities — and sometimes actually create them. That’s because even well-intentioned policymakers can’t always see the disproportionate impact their decisions have on people of color.

But what if there were a tool to help legislators and government officials identify when and how they should be thinking about racism? Well, Jamila Michener has developed one. And on the latest episode of The Dose podcast, she explains how it can be applied to Medicaid’s transportation benefit specifically and to health policy more broadly.

Michener, an associate professor in Cornell University’s Department of Government, speaks about how her research on, and personal experiences with, Medicaid has highlighted the importance of hearing from people impacted by policy choices.

“You can't really address the ways that racism manifests... unless you have people who experience it directly at the table, not only having voice, but also having some power,” she says.

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In the face of overwhelming demand for behavioral health services, the unmet needs of one group stands out: Black and brown teenagers. One reason they’re not getting the care they need is the shortage of child and adolescent mental health providers in the U.S. — particularly providers of color. Making matters worse are the racial stereotypes that play out in how Black and brown teens are perceived by school officials, health care providers, and some others in their communities. On the latest episode of The Dose, Kevin Simon, M.D., a psychiatrist at Boston Children’s Hospital and Commonwealth Fund Fellow in Minority Health Policy at Harvard University, talks about how to address the problem. In the long term, we need to diversify the mental health provider workforce, he says. But for now, providers currently practicing can work with families, teachers, and others to strengthen the system. They can demonstrate cultural humility and express genuine curiosity in the lived experiences of Black and brown youth.
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The Omicron variant is sweeping across the United States and the rest of the world, breaking previous records of COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations. While it may cause milder illness, its transmissibility and ability to evade vaccines make this surge particularly challenging to navigate.

On the latest episode of The Dose podcast, host Shanoor Seervai asks Alison Galvani, founding director of the Yale Center for Infectious Disease Modeling and Analysis, to bring listeners up to speed on this phase of the pandemic. Galvani and her colleagues have found that increasing the number of boosters administered each day could save thousands of lives.

Vaccination is relatively inexpensive, particularly compared with the costs associated with hospitalizations and productivity losses, even from mild cases, she says.

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When a federal judge lifted the national mask mandate on airplanes, trains, and other public transportation, some Americans broke out the champagne. Others wrung their hands, dreading the removal of a relatively simple public health tool at a time when COVID-19 cases are rising across the U.S.

On the latest The Dose podcast, Celine Gounder, M.D., Senior Fellow and Editor-at-Large for Public Health at the Kaiser Family Foundation and Kaiser Health News, talks about why people without privilege — like those who are poor or uninsured and many people of color — will be hit the hardest if we rush to return to normal.

“Having safety nets becomes really important,” she says. Measures like improved indoor air quality, paid sick and family medical leave, and better access to health insurance would help control the health, social, and economic impacts of the pandemic.

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The Dose - The Case for Investing in Primary Care
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03/11/22 • 24 min

Although primary care is the lifeline of a health care system, the United States spends less on it, and more on specialty care, than other high-income countries. This sends a message to our primary care workforce: we don’t value what you do. The result? Burnout, high turnover, physician shortages—all of which were dire crises before the pandemic but are even worse now.

On the latest episode of The Dose, host Shanoor Seervai asks Asaf Bitton, M.D., executive director of the health innovation center Ariadne Labs, what it will take to rebuild the nation’s broken primary care system.

“What we've learned over these last 15 or 20 years is that primary care is a team sport,” says Bitton. A modern practice cares for a well-defined population using “technology in a different way... to start building a much more integrated primary care of the future.”

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The Dose - What’s The Dose?
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09/26/18 • 2 min

Health care is complicated – and in the moments when we need it most, we realize we don’t understand how it works. Shouldn’t we?

Join Shanoor Seervai, the host of The Commonwealth Fund’s new podcast The Dose, as she interviews different health policy experts to discuss their latest research, personal stories about the health system, and innovations that could make life easier for people when they need care.

For more of The Dose subscribe to our newsletter on our website, https://www.thedose.show

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The Dose - What Are All These Medical Bills For?
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10/19/18 • 19 min

This week we’re talking about the Netherlands, where by law, everyone must have health insurance, so everyone gets access to the same care. With us for this episode is Marthe Haverkamp, a medical doctor, and former health policy advisor to the Dutch government. Marthe was astonished when she found herself facing medical bills running into thousands of dollars shortly after she came to the U.S. with her family.

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Different countries have different ways of meeting the health needs of their residents. What do Americans see when we look at health care in other industrialized countries?

What can the differences between our health system and some of those abroad teach us about improving health care coverage, access, and affordability here in the U.S.?

This week, Shanoor Seervai talks to Eric Schneider, senior vice president for policy and research at the Commonwealth Fund, about the challenges facing the U.S. as it seeks to become one of the world's best health systems.

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Bias in medicine –based on race and sex – is a well-documented problem. It’s a problem because the health care system has historically marginalized the medical concerns of people of color and women, which has led to worse health outcomes.

On the latest episode of The Dose, host Shanoor Seervai discusses ways to tackle bias in health care with Ann-Gel Palermo, who works on diversity and inclusion at New York’s Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and Joia Crear-Perry, who founded the National Birth Equity Birth Collaborative to address racial disparities in health care.

They explain that bias is not just a concern at the individual provider level; it’s actually baked into the system, starting in medical school. While fundamental change will be an uphill battle, they say, the fight is critical to ensuring that all patients are treated fairly when they seek care.

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FAQ

How many episodes does The Dose have?

The Dose currently has 126 episodes available.

What topics does The Dose cover?

The podcast is about Non-Profit, Health & Fitness, Policy, Podcasts, Health, Business, Government and Healthcare.

What is the most popular episode on The Dose?

The episode title 'The Pandemic Won’t End Until We Strengthen Our Safety Net' is the most popular.

What is the average episode length on The Dose?

The average episode length on The Dose is 23 minutes.

How often are episodes of The Dose released?

Episodes of The Dose are typically released every 14 days.

When was the first episode of The Dose?

The first episode of The Dose was released on Sep 26, 2018.

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