On the Pulse Podcast

By: Johns Hopkins Nursing Magazine
  • Summary

  • On this podcast, we will take a deep dive into the experiences of frontline providers and researchers. We’ll explore their insights and invaluable stories of how health care works in today’s world – both locally and globally. Each month, we will host guests who are experts in topics from climate change to pregnancy to palliative care. And we’ll hear some of their personal stories too – why they got into health care and what drives them each day. Health care is complicated, and it’s always changing. But stories of resilience, helping people across the world, and developing ground breaking research is what nursing is all about. We can’t wait for you to join us!
    © 2020-2023 Johns Hopkins Nursing Magazine
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Episodes
  • Episode 43: Health Care From an Indigenous Worldview
    Nov 21 2024
    In this episode, Dr. Allison Kelliher, the first and only physician trained as a Traditional Healer in a Tribal Health setting, discusses her research and what it is to be a traditional healer in and out of Indigenous communities.
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    22 mins
  • The Resilient Nurse, Episode 16: Leveraging Our Collective Power
    Nov 6 2024
    In this episode, we are joined by Katie Boston Leary, PhD, MBA, MHA, RN, NEA-BC, CCT, Director of Nursing Programs at the American Nurses Association, to reflect on key findings from the "Slow Talk" report. Drs. Rushton and Boston Leary touch on ways nursing professionals can unite and use their collective power to advocate for themselves and fellow nursing professionals.
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    37 mins
  • Episode 42: Food as Medicine in the Black Community
    Oct 24 2024
    Earlier this week, Bunmi Ogungbe, PhD, MPH, RN, held the "Food as Medicine in the Black Community" summit at the Institute for Policy Solutions at the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing. The summit convened over 150 thought leaders and changemakers to catalyze conversations around integrating the cultural diets of African diaspora foods and promoting Black-owned businesses within the growing “Food as Medicine” movement. In this episode, Dr. Ogungbe discusses some of the key outcomes from the summit, her involvement in the movement, and future goals. Dr. Ogungbe is a cardiovascular epidemiologist dedicated to using her clinical, research, and public health expertise to improve cardiometabolic outcomes among populations experiencing social marginalization. She collaborates on several community-engaged multi-level interventions leveraging digital technologies to improve hypertension control and management of chronic conditions. She is an emerging leader in community-engaged research seeking to advance cardiovascular health equity, both locally in the US and globally.
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    27 mins

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