Podcast 115 ? Listen In Live
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From all of us at Darwin Research Group, thanks for listening. Health Care Rounds is produced by me, Kim Asciutto, and is engineered by Andrew Rojek. Theme music by John Marchica. Darwin Research Group provides advanced market intelligence, and in-depth customer insights to healthcare executives. Our strategic focus is on healthcare delivery systems, and the global shift for value-based care. Find us at Darwinresearch.com. See you next round.
After growing up on a farm, she got married at age 14 to John Ford, and the pair purchased a farm and started raising their family in Lancaster, S.C. Together they had 12 children, four of whom are still alive, 68 grandchildren, 125 great-grandchildren and at least 120 great-great-grandchildren.
Her husband died in 1963 at age 57 and Ford continued to live in the house without assistance until she was 108, according to The Charlotte Observer. It was then that Ford fell and her family decided she needed some assistance.
"Her light shined beyond her local area and she lived beyond a century with memories containing real life experience of over 100 years," Patterson-Powe wrote. "She not only represented the advancement of our family but of the Black African American race and culture in our country. She was a reminder of how far we have come as people on this earth."
Listen Courageously is an immersive virtual workshop designed to make people more aware of their listening blocks and better able to engage in heart-centered conversations that lead to understanding. During the workshops, we use the documentary as a listening and engagement tool. Inspired by our methodology for conflict mediation, we invite participants to work on their own listening skills, in small groups, with our trained facilitators.
I benefit in many ways from my BNI membership and I listen to most of these podcasts. I want this message to get to Ivan Misner and others responsible for member information. Ivan is out of touch with some features of his baby. There is no 10 minute presentation any longer (some literature also refers to 12 min). Reduction of the presentation time us a form of tax on the members. When it was reduced in order to add items to the agenda, members lost value. Ivan needs to get up to date.
Excellent material for the educational slot of a chapter. Our chapter used it two weeks ago and it was really amazing to see the reaction on some of the members faces. It really and truly got the message across about being late, not listening etc. I would recommend that it be used in all chapters. Excellent.Mary Gethings, Chapter Director, BNI Falcon, Gorey, Co. Wexford. Ireland
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Dr. Grey is a professor of ancient scripture at Brigham Young University. He completed studies in archaeology and the history of early Judaism from Andrews University, University of Oxford and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he received his PhD. For the past 12 years he has been teaching courses at Brigham Young University on archaeology and the New Testament, including a year of teaching at the BYU Jerusalem Center for Near Eastern Studies. During this time, he has also been actively involved supervising archaeology work on an ancient village and synagogue. Welcome, Dr. Grey, to the Church News podcast.
And again, we think about our traditional depictions, is it just Mary and Joseph? Or is it more likely, Mary, maybe Joseph, but certainly some of the women, almost serving as midwives, to help Mary deliver the baby.
Love encouraged the audience to become voting members of the Recording Academy, noting that the energy present that evening in the Palladium should continue throughout the year. The work the BMC does goes beyond awards, he said, noting grave mishandling of justice and a lack of respect for Black lives.
The Supremes attracted listeners of all races with their simple message, catchy tunes, accessible choreography, and mesmerizing elegance, often playing to integrated audiences. Helping to unify a deeply divided America in the 1960s was a massive accomplishment in its own right, but their mere existence as a hitmaking trio of glamorous and talented Black female entertainers gave hope to a generation of young Black girls and women.
Cathy Louise's Pregnancy and Mom & Baby classes draw on her experience as a mother of three. In her Ashtanga classes too, she openly shares her journey as a woman so students may learn how best to adjust the practice of yoga in all stages of their lives.
Note: This American Life is produced for the ear and designed to be heard. If you are able, we strongly encourage you to listen to the audio, which includes emotion and emphasis that's not on the page. Transcripts are generated using a combination of speech recognition software and human transcribers, and may contain errors. Please check the corresponding audio before quoting in print. PrologueIra GlassThink for a minute about your first day. Not your first day on the job, or the first day with your spouse, or the first day in the neighborhood. I'm talking about your first first day. The first time you ever had a first day.
Ricardo Bordones, a Chilean sociologist, discovers that a century ago, a ship sank off the coast of his country, taking over 500 lives with it. When Ricardo starts to investigate the shipwreck, he realizes that almost no one knows about it. So, together with his longtime friend and marine biologist, Carlos Cortés, Ricardo decides to embark on the adventure of a lifetime, to find the Vapor Itata and honor its memory.
Chris Dall: [00:00:06] Hello and welcome to the Osterholm Update COVID-19, a podcast on the COVID-19 pandemic with Dr. Michael Osterholm. Dr. Osterholm is an internationally recognized medical detective and director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, or CIDRAP at the University of Minnesota. In this podcast, Dr. Osterholm will draw on more than 45 years of experience investigating infectious disease outbreaks to provide straight talk on the COVID-19 pandemic. I'm Chris Dall, reporter for CIDRAP News, and I'm your host for these conversations. Welcome back, everyone, to another episode of the Osterholm Update podcast. In this third autumn of the COVID-19 pandemic, with cases continuing to decline in the United States but now rising again in Europe and other parts of the world, the operative word of the day is uncertainty. Will one of the many new SARS-CoV-2 variants circulating around the world challenge the dominance of BA.5 and usher in a new wave of infections? Will the updated booster shots provide enough protection to keep COVID manageable? Will enough people be convinced to get the booster shot? Is our health care system prepared for what could be another tough winter? But with all the uncertainty, one thing that remains certain is the profound social disruption that this pandemic continues to cause. As much as COVID-19 has challenged our public health and health care systems, it has also strained and in some cases broken the bonds that hold communities, friends, and families together. And repairing those bonds may be the biggest challenge we face in coming years. These are some of the issues we'll discuss on this October 13th episode of the podcast as we assess the state of the pandemic here in the US and around the world and discuss what the next phase of this pandemic looks like. We'll also provide an overview of the variant situation, discuss the latest news on monkeypox and Ebola, and share a beautiful place submission from one of our listeners. But before we get started, as always, we'll begin with Dr. Osterholm's opening comments and dedication.
Michael Osterholm: [00:02:04] Thank you, Chris. And welcome back to all of you who are part of the podcast family for another update. And to all of you who may be new to this podcast, I hope that we're able to provide you with the information that you're seeking. Surely we are listening to our listeners and appreciate the input that you all have provided on how we can be most helpful. Let me begin this week's podcast emphasizing something Chris just said in the introduction, uncertainty. We are absolutely living in one of the most uncertain times in the entire pandemic. That's not something I know you want to hear. It's not something I want to talk about, but it's something that we must acknowledge because it will tell us where we're going in the days and the weeks and even the months ahead. Now, given the sense that there is uncertainty, there is one thing, however, that is absolutely certain. This pandemic continues to cause us all great pain, not only physical pain, but emotional pain. Today, we're going to talk about that. There are a lot of people who are hurting today, not because of what the virus did to them, but what the pandemic did to their relationships and their lives. And I can be the first in line to comment on that in the sense that I, too, have felt that very, very much. And so stay tuned for that part of it. I can't promise we're going to have answers that will solve all the problems, but we are going to acknowledge the challenge and provide some hopeful information about what it might look like in the future in terms of our relationships. Just in the last week, a study was released that was actually conducted by the Child Mind Institute. It was a survey sponsored by the Blue Shield of California with data collection by Ipsos, and they surveyed 3,200 parents of children aged 24 and younger. And they found a number of very disturbing findings with regard to what children have experienced with this pandemic and how it's affected their mood, their education, their entire psyche. But one of the really remarkable figures that cannot be overstated. They found that 20% of the kids, 24 years of age and younger, and that number held through all age groups down to literally infants. 20% of kids in this country have lost a family member due to COVID. That's substantial. That's incredible. And yet it's real. It's real. So today we're going to talk about that. We're going to talk about the pain of our hearts as well as the pain of our bodies. And I think that's that is something that as we talk about uncertainty and where we're going, we have to have that type of discussion to understand how we're going to move through these next months. Now, given that, of course, I have to add my balance of which is very important to me is my sunlight. And today I'm very happy to report in Auckland, New Zealand, one of my most favorite places in the world, they will have 12 hours and 54 minutes and 43 seconds of sunlight. They're gaining on average 2 minutes and 18 seconds a day. And just in the last week they've gained 16 minutes of sunlight. Now they are, I know, kindly sharing that sunlight with those of us in the northern hemisphere who are watching the days get darker and darker and darker and oh, how we love our light. So hold on. They are our beacon for the future. And I also want to do a shout out to my dear friends at the Occidental Belgium Beer Huis on the historic Vulcan Lane in Auckland, and say that you've got to help us with this light situation. And so, Chris, I think it's fair to say that today is going to be a challenging podcast for us, you and me, but for our audience. But I hope we come away from it at the end with a better understanding not only of what we know but what we feel and what we can do to improve both of those categories. 2b1af7f3a8
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