• #13 - Primary Care Is Cracking: Why the Front Door of Healthcare Is Failing
    May 18 2026
    Four Percent of Spending. One Hundred Percent of the Foundation Primary care is called the front door of the healthcare system. It's where prevention happens. It's where chronic disease is managed. It's where trust between patients and clinicians is built. And yet in the United States, that front door is cracking. Primary care accounts for just 4–5% of total healthcare spending in a system that spends nearly $4.5 trillion per year. Meanwhile, countries that invest double or triple that percentage achieve better outcomes, lower mortality, and lower costs. If primary care is the foundation of healthcare, why do we treat it like an afterthought? In this episode of Connected by Health, Dr. Krishna Vedala takes a deep dive into the primary care crisis; not just why it matters, but why it's structurally failing. You'll hear: Why more than 30% of U.S. adults lack a usual source of care Why over 7,900 federally designated primary care shortage areas exist Why primary care physicians earn significantly less than specialists — despite managing the most complex, longitudinal care Why burnout among primary care clinicians now exceeds 50% This isn't just about physician dissatisfaction. It's about access, equity, cost, and sustainability. When primary care weakens, patients wait weeks or months for appointments. They turn to emergency rooms as default care. Chronic conditions worsen. Costs rise downstream. As Krishna Vedala explains: "When primary care works, everything downstream works better." And when it doesn't? Everything downstream becomes more expensive and less humane. This episode doesn't stop at diagnosis, it outlines what real reform would actually require. You'll learn: Why the traditional fee-for-service model rewards volume, not prevention How value-based care models aim to stabilize revenue and prioritize outcomes Why administrative burden and fragmented payers create chaos for practices What real policy reform would look like — including primary care spending targets of 10–12%, Medicare payment stabilization, workforce investment, and long-term policy stability Krishna makes it clear: Primary care reform isn't a mystery. The evidence exists. The models exist. What's missing is alignment between policy and values. "If prevention really matters, we should fund it." Primary care isn't optional. It's infrastructure. And systems don't stand long when their foundations are ignored. If you are a policymaker, health system leader, clinician, or patient who believes healthcare should be more accessible, sustainable, and humane; this episode is for you. Share it with someone shaping policy. Send it to a healthcare leader. Start the conversation in your organization. Because without primary care reform: Costs will continue to rise Burnout will worsen Access will shrink Disparities will widen But if we rebuild the foundation? Communities become healthier. Care becomes more human. The system becomes sustainable. If this episode resonated with you, leave a review on Apple and share your biggest takeaway. Conversations like this are how reform begins. ──────────────────────────────────────── Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ──────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.
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    29 mins
  • Snapshots - Living with Ehlers Danlos Syndrome: Quick Insights
    May 15 2026

    In this Snapshot episode Dr. Bernadette Miller, an expert in Ehlers‑Danlos syndromes, explains what EDS is, highlights the risks of vascular EDS (VEDS) on REDs 4 VEDS Day, and outlines common signs like hypermobile joints, chronic pain, easy bruising, and dysautonomia. She offers practical tips for daily management (joint supports, appropriate footwear, braces), recommends the Ehlers‑Danlos Society provider registry, and teases a forthcoming full‑length episode for deeper discussion.

    This episode underscores the need for greater awareness, timely diagnosis, and compassionate care for people with EDS. Listeners are invited to learn more through the Ehlers‑Danlos Society, share the episode to raise awareness, and subscribe so they don't miss Dr. Miller's upcoming full interview covering diagnosis, treatment strategies, and patient stories.

    Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

    Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

    Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

    Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

    Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

    ────────────────────────────────────────

    🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

    ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

    🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

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    8 mins
  • #12 - Building a Better Future: Strengthening Mental Health
    May 11 2026

    This episode centers on mental health as essential infrastructure, featuring psychiatrist and director of OK SPARK Dr. Sara Coffey and host Krishna. Dr. Coffey opens with her background—motivated by early work in child welfare—and explains why she chose child psychiatry. The conversation highlights systemic barriers to timely, evidence-based mental health care: stigma, inadequate reimbursement/parity, limited clinicians who accept insurance, long waits, and the reality that ~80% of mental health care is managed in busy primary care settings where depth of assessment is constrained. Undertreatment (wrong medication/dose or non–evidence-based interventions) is common.

    Practical access strategies discussed include telepsychiatry (effective and critical for rural patients), the collaborative care model (integrating behavioral health into primary care with psychiatric consultation and measurement-based follow-up), and real-time consultation lines. Dr. Coffey describes OK SPARC (Statewide Psychiatry Access Resource and Knowledge), a program that provides live consults: clinicians first speak to a licensed mental health clinician, receive tailored referrals (providers who take the patient's insurance), and get concise, actionable guidance and follow-up notes to put in records. OK SPARC is funded primarily by a HRSA grant and donors; it faces a funding cliff and needs sustainable billing/funding pathways (CHIP, rural health transformation grants, state advocacy).

    They discuss pandemic effects—COVID as a magnifier of preexisting problems—and Dr. Coffey's book Unpacked, a trauma narrative about collective pandemic experience. She also describes Help for the Healer, a peer support ECHO for clinicians. Closing advice to prospective psychiatrists: it's a rewarding career, and clinicians must prioritize self-care to sustain work. Practical policy points implied: expand telehealth parity, fund collaborative care/consultation lines sustainably, and integrate behavioral screening in primary care.

    Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect

    Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us.

    Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together.

    Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience.

    Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society.

    ────────────────────────────────────────

    🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it.

    ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference.

    🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

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    26 mins
  • #11 - High Costs, Poor Returns: Why Healthcare Costs So Much
    May 4 2026
    Title: Trillion and Rising: Why Healthcare Keeps Getting More Expensive The United States now spends over $5 trillion a year on healthcare. That's nearly 1 in every 5 dollars in the entire U.S. economy. Yet despite this staggering number, millions of Americans still delay care, skip medications, or struggle to afford basic services. As Krishna asks in this episode: "Why does spending keep going up — but it doesn't feel like we're getting proportional value in return?" This isn't just an economic issue. It's personal. Healthcare costs don't rise in a vacuum. They rise because of structure, incentives, and policy choices. In this episode of Connected by Health, we break down what's really driving the cost crisis: Employer-sponsored family premiums now average nearly $27,000 per year Since 2000, family premiums have increased by almost 300% Administrative costs account for 25–30% of total U.S. healthcare spending Prevention and public health? Less than 5% As Krishna states plainly: "Healthcare costs keep rising because the system is doing what it was always designed to do." We explore the hidden drivers: Hospital consolidation and pricing power Specialty drugs launching at $300,000 per year Workforce shortages and burnout Fee-for-service models that reward volume, not value Administrative complexity that "doesn't really improve outcomes — it just raises costs." And here's the number that makes this personal: Nearly 60% of Americans report delaying or skipping care because of cost. Over 90 million people struggle to afford quality healthcare. That's not abstract. That's fear, stress, and impossible trade-offs. So what can actually change? This episode moves beyond frustration and into solutions: Invest in prevention and early diagnosis Simplify administrative waste Support and retain the healthcare workforce Align payment with value instead of volume As Krishna emphasizes: "If we want different outcomes, we need different incentives." We cannot keep spending 25–30% on administration while underfunding prevention. We cannot continue rewarding volume while expecting better value. And we cannot ignore the human toll behind rising premiums and delayed care. Healthcare is expensive. But more importantly: "Healthcare is personal." If you've ever opened a medical bill and felt confusion… If you've ever delayed care because of cost… If you're a clinician, policymaker, or employer trying to understand the system… This episode is for you. Share it with a colleague. Send it to a policymaker. Start the conversation. Because until we treat healthcare like the deeply personal issue it is, the cost will continue to rise. If you found this episode valuable, leave a review on Apple and share your biggest takeaway. Medicine needs your humanity. ─────────────────────────────────────── Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ─────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.
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    25 mins
  • #10 - Survive and Breathe: A Physician's Journey through Medicine and Cancer
    Apr 27 2026
    Host Krishna introduces Dr. Brian Whitson, an experienced pulmonologist with board certification across multiple fields (pulmonary, sleep medicine, palliative care, internal medicine, formerly critical care). Dr. Whitson has practiced predominantly in rural Oklahoma (Enid) for about 31 years and blends clinical care, education, and community service. Dr. Whitson recounts formative experiences: working as an orderly/aid in an osteopathic hospital in Tulsa after high school, early exposure to physical therapy from sports injuries, and mentorship/friend groups in high school that encouraged medical careers. He completed undergraduate studies at OSU, medical school at OU, internal medicine training at Baylor, and pulmonary/critical care training at LSU Shreveport. Dr Whitson explains the practical reasons for pursuing multiple boards: in rural practice one often must fill many clinical gaps; palliative care training improved symptom management (beyond pain control) for nausea, constipation, anxiety and dyspnea; sleep medicine credentialing became necessary to properly interpret studies and prescribe therapies; critical care experience reflected past practice needs (he intentionally let critical care board lapse to avoid ICU calls). Dr Whitson emphasizes that combined training enhanced his ability to treat complex patients holistically. He also discusses the demands and rewards of practicing in Enid: often alone covering broad needs, coordinating with regional hospitals and sleep labs (e.g., Norman Regional), and participating in community organizations such as a local nonprofit hospice (Hospice Circle of Love). He describes efforts to mentor and develop local healthcare workforce (e.g., sponsoring phlebotomy training for high-school grads, encouraging early clinical roles like MA or nurse aide). He also shares his own diagnosis, which was discovered incidentally after cardiac evaluation and gallbladder ultrasound revealed a mass and liver nodules. Initially thought to be neuroendocrine carcinoma (which influenced early treatment decisions), pathology later characterized it as pancreatic cancer with neuroendocrine features. He underwent extensive surgery including a Whipple procedure and right hemicolectomy with good post-op recovery, followed by six months of chemotherapy. Notes that CA 19-9 tumor marker was never clearly helpful in his case. He describes his long-term follow-up as somewhat individualized—periodic imaging and tumor-marker checks guided by his oncologist—and credits faith and perceived miracle for his survival. He details how he introduces palliative care: reframing it as a model that emphasizes comfort, symptom control, and quality of life rather than "giving up." He tailors conversations by comparing curative vs. comfort models, clarifying goals, and arranging hospice or home-focused support when patients wish to avoid hospitalization. He also gives examples (COPD patients with recurrent admissions) where low-dose opioids eased air hunger and anxiety, improving function and quality of life. He reflects on the challenge of suggesting palliative transitions to long-term patients and on having candid discussions with family members (including his own father) about hospital preferences and goals of care. Dr Whitson distinguishes two post-COVID populations: (1) patients with severe, post-inflammatory pulmonary fibrosis and clear radiographic/functional damage (some requiring lung transplant), and (2) a larger group with persistent dyspnea and debilitating fatigue despite normal imaging and pulmonary function testing—often consistent with post-viral or autonomic dysfunction. He recommends gradual, extremely low-intensity exercise rehabilitation (incremental walking plans) and symptomatic management, acknowledging limitations: many patients have low energy and motivation, and there is no single proven pharmacologic cure yet. He is skeptical that a universal panacea will emerge; long COVID may overlap with chronic fatigue-type syndromes and require a multifaceted approach. He advises trainees: get early, hands-on experience (medical assistant, nurse aide, phlebotomy) to build communication skills and practical clinical ability. "Showing up" and doing frontline work accelerates learning and helps confirm career direction. He highlights the value of phlebotomy as a tangible skill that can open doors and strengthen clinical judgment. Dr. Whitson expresses gratitude for survival and continued ability to serve patients. Krishna thanks him for his ongoing availability to local clinicians and the community, and for sharing his cancer survival story and clinical insights. The episode closes with an invitation to return Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with ...
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    39 mins
  • #09 - Better Together: The Power of Interprofessional Collaboration
    Apr 20 2026
    Deep dive into interprofessional education (IPE) and interprofessional collaborative practice (IPC): what they are, how they differ from other team concepts, why they matter for patient, population, and community health, and practical steps for educators and health systems to improve teamwork. Guest - Dr. Tina Patel‑Gonaldo — expert in interprofessional education and collaborative practice; background in physical therapy and now leadership roles linking IPC with quality and health equity. Definitions, history, and core competencies IPC/IPE timeline: Although teamwork across professions has existed for decades internationally, the U.S. formally organized IPC/IPE around 2011 via the Interprofessional Education Collaborative (IPEC).IPEC's four core competencies: Values and ethicsRoles and responsibilitiesInterprofessional communicationTeams and teamwork About 31 subcompetencies/behaviors expand these domains and guide curricula and practice expectations. Distinguishing team terms (clear, memorable analogies) Multidisciplinary: Professions work in parallel on the same patient (separate evaluations/interventions; potential duplication). Analogy: Multiple people bring the same item (buns) to a potluck — little coordination.Interdisciplinary: Professionals share information and sometimes coordinate (huddles, discharge rounds) but not fully integrated planning. Analogy: People bring complementary dishes (meat, veggie) but don't coordinate quantities.Interprofessional: High coordination, co‑design with patient voice, shared mental models, equity considered across care plan. Analogy: True coordinated potluck — right quantities, varied options, side dishes, drinks, and shared goals. Why IPC matters Improves individual patient care (safer, more patient‑centered).Extends to population and community health through cross‑sector collaboration (nonprofits, education, government, agriculture, business).Supports prevention, reduces duplication, improves outcomes and equity. Common barriers (detailed) Organizational fragmentation and hierarchy Siloed departments (nursing units, rehab, respiratory, radiology, environmental services) rarely have intentional structures to collaborate consistently.Insurance and referral systems create unidirectional flows (providers refer downstream; bidirectional formal referrals are rare). Limited training in teamwork science Health education emphasizes profession‑specific clinical skills; teamwork, communication frameworks, and role literacy are often labeled "soft skills" and under‑taught. Inconsistent or superficial use of communication tools SBAR, closed‑loop communication, and other error‑prevention tools are known but not systematically embedded or consistently practiced. Resource and scheduling constraints Difficulty coordinating multiple professions for education or huddles; one‑off IPE events are common but insufficient. Cultural and professional assumptions Lack of shared understanding about scopes, roles, and mutual contributions leads to missed opportunities for collaboration. Lack of leadership structures to support IPC Frontline professionals are expected to collaborate, but managers and C‑suite must create the systems and backup plans enabling sustained practice. Education strategies to improve IPC Move beyond single annual IPE events to longitudinal, active experiences: Semester‑long electives, monthly interprofessional sessions, two‑year longitudinal curricula.Simulations that focus not only on high‑acuity emergencies (codes) but everyday collaborative workflows. Emphasize active learning: learners should learn about, from, and with one another — practice team tasks, communication protocols, and co‑design care plans.Teach role literacy explicitly: ensure each profession learns what others do, their training, scope, and when/how to involve them.Incorporate teamwork science into evaluations and assessments (not just clinical competencies). System‑level recommendations Create dedicated IPC leadership/champions and, ideally, a departmental structure that links IPC with quality, safety, and equity functions.Integrate IPC into quality measures and safety initiatives (e.g., involve all team members in fall prevention, discharge planning).Standardize team processes: required huddles/rounds with backup plans, agreed communication tools (SBAR, closed‑loop) used consistently, and defined expectations for what is communicated.Make collaboration measurable and accountable: include IPC goals in performance metrics, safety workplans, and equity initiatives.Broaden stakeholder involvement: include non‑clinical sectors (community organizations, education, public health) where relevant to address upstream determinants of health. Practical examples & applications mentioned Use of interdisciplinary rounds and morning huddles as partial models — need uplift to full IPC.Applying IPC to inpatient concerns like falls: involve environmental services, ...
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    31 mins
  • #08 - Vaccine$ and Economic$: Prevention, Policy, & Pro$perity
    Apr 13 2026
    Episode framing Host Krishna frames vaccines as both medical and economic interventions, calling this discussion a "deep dive" into the economic ramifications of vaccination for public policy, health systems, insurers, employers, schools and GDP. Historical impact Edward Jenner's 1796 cowpox inoculation led to eventual smallpox eradication (WHO declared eradication in 1980). Smallpox eradication produced huge economic savings (U.S. estimate: >$1 billion/year saved by no longer vaccinating against smallpox; global savings much larger). Vaccination is characterized as "elimination of future liability," and Krishna asserts vaccines are the single most important driver of the roughly doubled human life expectancy over the past 150 years. Modern vaccine infrastructure and CDC modeling Childhood immunization programs prevent nearly 4 million deaths globally per year; about 42,000 deaths annually in a U.S. birth cohort and ~20 million hospitalizations over lifetimes. CDC modeling: routine childhood vaccination prevents $406 billion in societal costs and $76 billion in direct healthcare costs for a U.S. birth cohort. Return on investment: ~ $10 saved per $1 spent on childhood vaccines (near 1,000% ROI). Per-child economics: full immunization series costs ~$1,100–$1,500; direct healthcare savings per vaccinated child ~$7,000; societal savings ~$30,000. Actuarial effects & older adults Vaccination reduces expected claims liability, stabilizing premium growth. Medicare/elderly example: pneumonia and influenza hospitalizations average $12k–$20k per admission; ICU $30k–$50k; readmission rates 15–20%. Small percentage reductions in hospitalizations among seniors translate into hundreds of millions in annual savings and smooth actuarial "shock" spikes. Case studies of preventable illnesses Measles: pre-1963 had 3–4 million U.S. infections/year, 48k hospitalizations, 400–500 deaths. Vaccination cut cases ~99%. 2019 U.S. outbreak costs: $20k–$140k per case to public health departments (contact tracing, labs, isolation, staffing, school exclusions). MMR cost: ~$20–$25 per dose; two doses ≈97% protection — contrast tiny cost vs. large outbreak containment cost. Polio: pre-vaccine ~35,000 paralytic cases/year in U.S., lifelong disability, iron lungs. Lifetime cost for severe paralysis estimated $1–3 million per person; 10,000 cases would imply $10–30 billion in lifetime liabilities. Polio vaccine series in U.S. costs under $100; vaccine-derived polio re-emergence in under-vaccinated communities is alarming due to permanent paralysis and long-tail costs. Hepatitis B: infecting infants leads to ~90% chronicity without vaccination; chronic hepatitis B lifetime management costs $100k–$500k per patient; liver transplant ≈$800k+ first-year. Birth dose costs ≈$20. Vaccination avoids long-term specialist care, imaging, antivirals, cancer treatment and transplant costs — shifting liabilities away from Medicaid/Medicare. COVID-19: 2020 global GDP contracted ~3–4%; U.S. economy shrank ~$2.3 trillion. COVID vaccines prevented millions of hospitalizations and ~1 million deaths (U.S. figure cited), preserving workforce capacity and preventing trillions in productivity losses. Hidden costs of declining vaccination rates Direct: surges overwhelm hospitals (especially pediatric units), increase ICU utilization, skilled nursing transfers, and 30-day readmissions. Indirect: schools close or shift remote, causing learning loss; employers face more sick leave and absenteeism; insurers face higher claims leading to premium increases. Public health containment costs (contact tracing, overtime, lab testing) and uncounted societal losses (missed wages, long-term disability, educational setbacks) vastly exceed vaccine costs. Behavioral/market dynamics: "population memory" (generations without direct memory of severe disease undervalue vaccines), plus misinformation causes overweighing of rare adverse events and underweighing of invisible benefits, creating market failure and collective vulnerability (herd immunity erosion). Policy recommendations and interventions Strengthen school-entry vaccine requirements. Encourage insurance coverage mandates and involve insurers in promoting vaccination. Improve public education and outreach to vaccine-hesitant populations; admit past communication failures and emphasize empathetic engagement. Employer-based incentives, paid sick leave for brief vaccine side effects (24–48 hours), and workplace vaccination programs. Maintain or expand compensation programs for rare vaccine injuries to build trust. Protect and prioritize vaccine funding; cutting vaccine programs is likened to cancelling fire insurance to save money until disaster strikes. Ethical framing and conclusion Vaccination balances individual liberty with collective responsibility; vaccines protect vulnerable groups (infants, cancer/chemotherapy ...
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    27 mins
  • #07 - Prevention, Policy, and People: Public Health in Practice
    Apr 6 2026
    In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Kerry Morgan, public health professor and health behavior researcher at the University of Central Oklahoma, to explore the foundational role of public health in shaping healthier, more resilient communities. From disease prevention and health education to burnout, research, and policy, this conversation highlights how public health operates far beyond hospitals—impacting every aspect of society. We dive into the importance of investing in prevention systems like vaccination, sanitation, and disease surveillance, and how these efforts not only save lives but reduce long-term healthcare costs. Dr. Morgan also shares practical strategies for addressing burnout, improving health literacy, and making physical activity more accessible—while emphasizing the critical role of research in driving meaningful, evidence-based change. As we recognize National Public Health Week, this episode serves as a powerful reminder: the health of a society is built long before patients ever walk into a clinic. When we invest in public health, we invest in everything. 🔑 Key Highlights & Takeaways 🌍 Public Health = Prevention First Focuses on stopping problems before they become crises Reduces: Hospitalizations Healthcare costs Lost productivity Example: Vaccination and surveillance systems prevent outbreaks before escalation 💡 Health Is Shaped by More Than Medicine Behavior, environment, relationships, and policy all influence outcomes Public health works at the population level, not just individual care 🧠 Burnout Is Both Personal AND Systemic Individual strategies: Identify "depleters vs energizers" Lean into what restores energy System-level solutions: Flexible work environments Protected time for decompression Strong communication culture 📚 Health Education = Empowerment Health literacy enables better decision-making Small gaps in understanding (e.g., nutrition labels) can lead to major health impacts Critical for: Obesity prevention Chronic disease management Long-term behavior change 🏃 Physical Activity = Underrated Medicine Benefits go far beyond weight: Improves mental health (anxiety, depression) Enhances sleep and mood Reduces chronic disease risk Community design plays a key role in accessibility 🔬 Research Drives Everything Forward Innovations (like GLP-1 medications) take years to decades Requires: Rigorous scientific testing Replication across studies Long-term investment Without research → no safe or scalable solutions 🤝 Community Engagement Is Essential Trust is built through direct engagement Policy must be: Evidence-based Community-informed UCO's MPH program emphasizes real-world partnerships Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ────────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.
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    22 mins