
Primary Care Perspectives
Listen in as Katie Lockwood, MD, a primary care pediatrician at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, discusses hot topics in primary care with CHOP subject-matter-experts as they weigh in on issues affecting the daily practice of pediatricians.
This podcast is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not to be considered as medical advice for any particular patient. Clinicians must rely on their own informed clinical judgment in making recommendations to their patients. ©2017 by Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, all rights reserved.
Latest episodes

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.

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.

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.

Jul 8, 2024 • 22min
Epilepsy and Teens: Counseling advice on managing epilepsy as an adolescent (Episode 172)
According to the CDC, approximately 0.6% of children aged 0-17 have active epilepsy, so in a school of 1,000 students, this means 6 of them could have epilepsy. Adolescence is a time when patients have more autonomy in caring for their chronic disease and have changes in lifestyle factors, which could be risk factors for increased seizures. In this episode, Lawrence Fried, MD, a pediatric neurologist, and Zia Gajary, MD, a primary care pediatrician, help us understand how to counsel teen patients and their caregivers about managing epilepsy during adolescence, including topics such as driving, sports, contraception, drugs, college, and more! Their HRSA grant has enhanced teen epilepsy education at CHOP and they share their tips in this podcast episode.

Jun 17, 2024 • 24min
Advocacy Curriculum in Pediatric Residency Education (Episode 171)
The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) advocacy curriculum has a rich history of teaching pediatric residents how to incorporate being an advocate into their career as a pediatrician. Noreena Lewis, JD, the Co-Director of the Community Pediatrics and Advocacy Program (CPAP), explains the various ways pediatricians can engage in advocacy, some of the biggest hurdles for resident advocates, strategies for engaging with communities and creating sustainable projects as a trainee, and examples of CHOP resident advocacy projects. Noreena recommends the CHOP Office of Community Impact as a great starting point for anyone interested in starting their advocacy journey! You can also read her article in Pediatrics (Feb 2024) entitled "A Qualitative Study of Resident Advocacy Work." This episode is such an inspiring conversation about an important topic for all pediatricians and medical educators!

Jun 6, 2024 • 20min
Sickle Cell Gene Therapy (Episode 170)
New research has led to the approval of sickle cell gene therapy and CHOP has played a big role in both the research and implementation of this innovative treatment. In this episode, Dr. Abraham Haimed, an attending in the Division of Hematology at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, explains how a patient's own hematopoietic stem cells can be edited to block the expression or function of a certain gene and reactivate normal fetal hemoglobin to cure sickle cell disease. While this treatment happens outside the primary care world, it is important for general pediatricians to understand how this treatment works and what to look out for after a patient receives gene therapy.

May 20, 2024 • 24min
An Antiracist Approach in Primary Care
A recent publication in Pediatrics by George Dalembert, MD, MSHP and Aditi Vasan, MD, MSHP helps us learn more about how to use an antiracist approach to social care integration in primary care. In this episode, Drs. Dalembert and Vasan walk us through the recommendations made in their commentary with actionable steps for how we can all integrate social care interventions equitably into our practices. Learn about what the work that we are implementing at CHOP thanks to the Clinical Futures research and get inspiration for your own practice changes.

May 6, 2024 • 35min
Pre-exposure Prophylaxis (PrEP): HIV Prevention for Adolescents
As of 2020, 20% of new HIV diagnoses were among young people aged 13-24 years. Primary care pediatricians can play an important role in the prevention of HIV through standard, non-stigmatizing sexual health and HIV prevention care, which is why we are talking about PrEP with Sarah Wood, MD, MSHP, and Zoe Gould, LCSW. Learn about the role of PrEP, administration, barriers to care, and ways to start integrating HIV screening and PrEP initiation into your practice.

Apr 24, 2024 • 25min
Primary Care Perspectives: Episode 167-- Nutrition Advice for Premature Babies at Discharge from the NICU
The CHOP Neonatal Intensive Care Unit is working on enhancing communication of nutrition plans to primary care providers when infants are discharged. In this episode, Sarvin Ghavam, MD, an attending neonatologist and Kristina Spaide, MS, RD, CNSC, clinical nutrition manager, identify the unique nutritional needs of premature babies, common feeding concerns, and nutrition management pearls for the transition from NICU to home.

Apr 13, 2024 • 17min
Primary Care Perspectives: Episode 166-- Marfan Syndrome
How well do you know the stigmata of Marfan Syndrome, which are an important components of the pre-participation sports physical? Staci M. Kallish, DO, a clinical geneticist at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia reviews how the clinical diagnosis of Marfan Syndrome is made and tools that can be used in screening and diagnosis. Also, learn about the CHOP Cardiovascular Connective Tissue Disorders Clinic and how they can help in the evaluation and management of patients with connective tissue disorders.