The Experts Speak - An Educational Service of the Florida Psychiatric Society show

The Experts Speak - An Educational Service of the Florida Psychiatric Society

Summary: Listen to 15-20 minute long interviews of experts on various topics related to mental and general health. The topics will be continuously expanded. The interviews are designed for both professionals and non-professionals. Topics range from climate change issues and the basis of new medication research, COVID-19 issues, the effect of media on girls's self-images, discussions of violence, same-sex marriages, pollution, bullying, divorce, OCD, addictions, borderline personality disorders, mental health issues in the deaf, hallucinations, obesity, addiction in physicians, TMS, depressions, anxiety and stress, hypnosis, bullying, emotional and sexual abuse, MAOI, domestic violence, IBS, self-cutting, medication and children, eating disorders, medication metabolism, pharmacogenomics, forensic issues, dementia, suicide psychiatric treatment, love, care-giving youth, teenage LGBT issues, stuttering, play, PTSD, medication side effects, the effect of war violence on children, and so on. Please note that any opinion or position expressed in these interviews is not necessarily that of the host or of the Florida Psychiatric Society. Any individual treatment decision must be the product of a proper doctor-patient interaction. Likewise, new or additional information on each topic may have developed since the time the interviews occurred. Consult your physician for such possible changes. Additional production funding support comes from the Wellington Retreat, Florida. Knowledge has the power to understand and improve ourselves.

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  • Artist: Abbey Strauss MD
  • Copyright: Florida Psychiatric Society 2022

Podcasts:

 Vanishing and Changing Playtime Styles for Children | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:16

Joan Almon, Executive Director for the Alliance for Childhood, offers frank observations and concerns that healthy playtime for children is vanishing from our schools and society. Her comments reflect the report Crisis in The Kindergarten -- Why Children Need to Play in School.

 Religion and Psychotherapy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:27

Kenneth Pargament PhD describes how most mental health work underestimates the power of religion in many people's lives. He talks of the importance of exploring this dimension with a patient.

 Reflections on 62 years of being a psychologist | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 16:02

Robert Weitz, PhD, is 96 years old. He worked as a clinical psychologist for 62 years. This is a spirited, instructive and thoughtful overview of his experiences and observations about mental health treatment from 1945 until is retirement just a few years ago. He talks of analysis, cognitive therapy, hypnotism, etc., and of the needed professional cooperation among all who treat mental illness.

 OIL SPILL - Dealing with community collective grief | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 16:58

David Randle, EdD, from St Petersburg Florida, explains the notion of collective grief on the community and those individuals who are suffering from the multiple losses following the oil leak. He further explains the attack and loss of collective identities, and the critical need to keep community and family systems intact.

 Origins and Nature of Late Life Depressions | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:35

Dan Blazer MD, from Duke University, speaks to items which can cause or worsen late life depression. These include the commonly considered biological issues, but he speaks too of social, psychological and spiritual-religious domains. There is an interesting discussion of wisdom.

 Women: Depression & Cardiac Disease | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:39

Valerie Taylor MD, psychiatrist from McMaster University in Canada, speaks to the associations between depression and cardiovascular disease in women. Included are discussions of the metabolic syndrome, that adipose tissue becomes an endrocrine organ, the role of inflammation, gender bias, being overweight, etc., and how they can increase mortality and increase the risks of depression and cardiovascular problems.

 Substance Abuse Among Prisoners | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:17

Susan Foster, MSW, reports findings on the 2010 report, Behind Bars II, Substance Abuse and America's Prison Population from CASA at Columbia University (NY). She talks of the positive effect of treatment, the disparities between gender and racial-ethical needs and characteristics, and even about Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. www.casacolumbia.org

 Childhood Psychosis - Early Detection and Intervention | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 17:57

Steven Adelsheim MD, professor of psychiatry at the University of New Mexico, talks of the program of outreach, detection, intervention and treatment for children showing early signs of psychosis. This is further outlined in the EARLY program at www.earlyprogram.,org

 Exercise: maintaining weight loss & psychiatric benefits | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:28

Sylvia Karasu MD, from Weill Cornell Medical College, co-author of The Gravity of Weight, discusses one chapter devoted to the science and concepts of maintaining weight loss, exercise, and the mental health benefits of exercise.

 OIL SPILL - Known and unknown environmental effects | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 16:26

Leonard Berry, PhD, director of the Florida Center for Environmental Studies, speaks of the known and unknown effects of oil spills, with specific concerns on the food change, shore plants, dispersant safety, how hurricanes may shift the oil, etc.

 OIL SPILL -The effects on human mental and physical health | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 15:49

Gina Solomon MD speaks to the known health effects of exposure to crude oil, such as following the continuing April 20, 2010 leak in the Gulf of Mexico.. She discusses her concerns and worries about the legacy of the exposure on human and wildlife, shifting winds, hurricanes, etc. Included is an overview of the nature of crude oil. Dr. Solomon is a scientist with the Natural Resources Defense Council and is on staff at the University of California - San Francisco, Dept of Occupational and Environmental Health

 Trends, quality and disparities in US mental health care | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 15:48

Ernest Moy, MD, medical officer for the US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, explains the recently published data on the trends and disparities in mental health care in the United States.

 Treating Borderline Personality Disorders | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 19:24

Lois Choi-Kain MD, medical director at the Gunderson Residence, discusses the nature, challenges, and outcome of the treatment of the borderline personality disorder.

 Borderline Personality Disorder | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 18:36

John Gunderson, MD, professor of psychiatry at Harvard University, offers an update and recent insights into the origin, nature, and treatment of patients with a borderline personality disorder.

 Obesity: Trends in Healthcare Quality and Disparities | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: 14:45

Lieut. Karen Ho, with the US Public Health Service, the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) and the Center for Quality Improvement and Patient Safety, speaks about data just published by AHRQ on the trends, quality, and disparities in the delivery of health care regarding obesity.

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