Primary Care Perspectives

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
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Dec 11, 2024 • 32min

Iron-deficiency Anemia (Episode 182)

Iron plays a crucial role in many vital functions and in this episode, Char Witmer, MD, Clinical Director of Hematology at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, gets us excited about hepcidin, ferritin, reticulocyte counts, and more! We discuss why premature infants are particularly vulnerable to iron-deficiency anemia, how to provide supplementation, dietary sources of iron, laboratory measurements of iron, and more in this fascinating episode on anemia. 
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Nov 21, 2024 • 32min

Baby-led Weaning: A method to introduce solids and encourage self-feeding for infants (Episode 181)

Kary Rappaport, a senior feeding and swallowing specialist at Solid Starts, shares nearly two decades of expertise in infant feeding. She explains the concept of baby-led weaning, highlighting how it encourages self-feeding and helps infants explore solid foods. Kary contrasts choking with gagging, stresses the importance of introducing allergens early, and offers practical tips for parents on portion sizes and food textures. She emphasizes using a variety of nourishing foods, including meats on the bone, to enhance mealtime experiences.
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Nov 11, 2024 • 27min

Social Media for Healthcare Professionals

Healthcare professionals may use social media for a variety of purposes including developing a professional network, increasing personal awareness of news, listening to experts, and/or consulting colleagues. It can also be a tool to disseminate research, market practices, engage in health advocacy, and engage with professional organizations. Increasingly we are seeing health care professionals provide health information to the community and engage with patients on social media platforms. On this episode, Anjuli Gans, MD, a pediatrician at Karabots Pediatric Care Center in West Philadelphia, a CHOP Care Network primary care practice, who is known online for her site Resilient Rascals and its popular Instagram account of the same name with 141,000+ followers, discusses the rules of engagement, how to fight mis/dis-information, and why healthcare providers might want to create a social media account.
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Oct 21, 2024 • 22min

Epilepsy Surgery for Drug-Resistant Epilepsy (Episode 179)

Of the roughly 500,000 US children with epilepsy, 30% will continue to have seizures despite medication management. This seizure burden can have significant impacts on a child’s development, school performance, social life, sports participation, driving ability, mental health, and more. In this episode, we talk about surgical approaches to drug-resistant epilepsy and explore some of the newest advances in neurosurgery with Benjamin Kennedy, MD, an attending neurosurgeon and the Director of Epilepsy and Functional Neurosurgery in the Division of Neurosurgery at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
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Oct 9, 2024 • 25min

Financial Planning Tips for Physicians (Episode 178)

Financial planning is not often taught to physicians but is an important topic!  In this episode, Sam Lewis, CFP®, ChFC®, MQFP®, Founder of SJL Financial, LLC, guides us through how we should think about life insurance, disability insurance, loan repayment, contract negotiations, savings accounts, wills, retirement, and more! While financial planning is an individual decision, this episode provides a general framework to start thinking about financial wellness.
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Sep 23, 2024 • 24min

Tethered Cord in Pediatrics (Episode 177)

Gregory Heuer, MD, PhD, a Children's Hospital of Philadelphia neurosurgeon, explains tethered cord, including the embryologic development, diagnosis through imaging, clinical signs and symptoms, surgical approaches, and long-term prognosis. As a co-author of the CHOP Clinical Pathway on Tethered Cord Release, Dr. Heuer provides insight into what to expect after surgery, which is helpful to anyone involved in the care of patients with a tethered cord. 
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Sep 9, 2024 • 19min

School Lunch Nutrition Updates with USDA FNS (Episode 176)

In 2010, Congress passed the Hunger-Free Kids Act to help ensure that every American child has access to a balanced school lunch. This is important because many children rely on schools to meet a large portion of their daily nutritional needs. Parents and pediatricians should be aware that new rules will gradually place limits on added sugars and reduce sodium, among other changes. In this episode, we talk with Cindy Long, Deputy Under Secretary for Food and Nutrition Service, about school meal standards and how they impact children. #schoollunch #nutrition #pediatrics
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Aug 26, 2024 • 31min

Twins (Episode 175)

Twins account for 3% of live births in the US and are at risk of higher rates of fetal growth restriction, congenital anomalies, twin-twin transfusion syndrome, twin anemia polycythemia sequence, selective fetal growth restriction, and cord entanglement. In this episode, Michael Posencheg, MD, a Children's Hospital of Philadelphia neonatologist and father of twins talks to us about the care of #twins beyond the #NICU including developmental assessments, tandem feeding, safe sleep practices, and more.
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Aug 12, 2024 • 27min

Teen Communication: Learning language to build character, resilience, and relationships (Episode 174)

Talking with teenagers can feel challenging, but in this episode, Kenneth Ginsburg, MD, MSEd, an attending physician in the Division of Adolescent Medicine and the Co-Director of the Center for Parent and Teen Communication at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, shares lessons learned from his years of research and experience with adolescents. Dr. Ginsburg's approach to teen communication focuses on facilitating youth to develop their own solutions through a strengths-based approach. Listen to learn his communication framework and for more resources that will enhance how you communicate with teen patients.   
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Jul 22, 2024 • 16min

Rabies (Episode 173)

Contact with infected bats is the most common cause of human rabies deaths in the US, but dog rabies remains common worldwide. Learn about other wildlife that can carry rabies, post-exposure prophylaxis, high-risk hobbies and careers, and what rabies can teach us all. Andrew Steenhoff, MBBCh, DCH, attending physician in the Division of Infectious Diseases at CHOP and Medical Director of CHOP's Global Health Center joins us in Episode 173 for a fascinating review of rabies in the US and globally, so we can all aim to prevent this disease in children.   

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