Dr. Howard Smith Oncall

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 124:48:06
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Sinopsis

Howard G. Smith, M.D. is a former radio medical editor and talk show host in the Boston Metro area. He was heard on WBZ-AM, WRKO-AM, and WMRE-AM presenting his "Medical Minute" of health and wellness news and commentary. His popular two-way talk show, Dr. Howard Smith OnCall, was regularly heard Sunday morning and middays on WBZ. He also was a fill-in host during evenings on the same station.More recently, he has adopted the 21st century technology of audio and video podcasting as conduits for the short health and wellness reports, HEALTH NEWS YOU SHOULD USE, and the timely how-to recommendations, HEALTH TIPS YOU CAN'T SKIP. Many of these have video versions, and they may be found on his YouTube page: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKPOSWu-b4GjEK_iOCsp4MATrained at Harvard Medical School and a long-time faculty member at Boston Childrens Hospital, he practiced Pediatric Otolaryngology for 40 years in Boston, Southern California, and in central Connecticut. Now that his clinical responsibilities have diminished, he will be filing news reports and creating commentaries regularly.  Then several times a month, the aggregated the reports will appear as DR. SMITH'S HEALTH NEWS ROUNDUPS on his YouTube and podcast feeds.  If you have questions or suggestions about this content, please email the doctor at drhowardsmith.reports@gmail.com or leave him a message at 516-778-8864.  His website is: www.drhowardsmith.com.Please note that the news, views, commentary, and opinions that Dr. Smith provides are for informational purposes only. Any changes that you or members of your family contemplate making to lifestyle, diet, medications, or medical therapy should always be discussed beforehand with personal physicians who have been supervising your care.

Episodios

  • HealthNews RoundUp - 1st Week of April, 2019

    05/04/2019 Duración: 21min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/SW0ORYzGoY4 This is Health News You Should Use, the latest medical discoveries and commonsense advice from me that you can use in a practical way to keep yourself and your family healthy.   Here are this weeks stories: You CAN Prevent Childhood Drownings Pregnancy Illness Triggers Preventable Childhood Brain Ills ACL Repair Improved By Reducing Blood Flow Gut Bacteria Wreck Your Arteries Traffic Lights Halt Poor Food Choices 3D Mammography Eliminates Breast Biopsies Smart Toilet Seat Diagnoses Heart Disease Childhood Team Sports Prevent Later Depression For Men Creative Productivity Soars When Dollars Drive Brainstorming Followed By Reflection Losing Weight May Stop Migraines Working Nights Triggers Miscarriage Virtual Reality Cures Fear of Heights Compression-Only CPR Can Save Lives Dirtiest Air During Evening Commute Heavy Drinking Stops Brain Growth #Drowning #parenting #Choline #neuropathy #ADHD #pregnancy #ACL #sportsmedicine #Atherosclerosis #microbiome #TMAO #yogurt #oliveoil

  • Heavy Drinking Stops Brain Growth

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/z8IdZ7-cD-w Chugging those 6 packs and downing those jelly shots depresses the growth of the developing brain.  The skyrocketing alcohol consumption by teens and young adults may well be sapping the collective brainpower of our country. Neuroscientists at the Oregon Health and Science University studied this phenomenon in 71 rhesus monkeys allowed to binge on alcoholic beverages and monitored for brain growth using MRI scans.  The study found that the equivalent of 4 beers per day on a consistent basis reduced brain growth and development by 0.25 milliliters per year. This adverse effect of a young person’s brain development and likely their powers of thought and problem-solving can be added to the other dangers of alcohol abuse.  These are: liver rotting, stomach ulcers, and all those goes along with serious substance addiction.   If you find that your teen is drinking more than occasionally, and you will have to actively look, intervene to get them the help they need. Tatiana A. Sh

  • Dirtiest Air During Evening Commute

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/s44du_Y3pjo If you bicycle or walk home from work, go out of your way to use the side streets.  Urban scientists at England’s University of Surrey collaborated with colleagues in England, the Netherlands, and Brazil to measure air pollution during the morning and evening commutes. The scientists studied black carbon levels in these 3 cities on both the most heavily trafficked routes and on alternative byways.  The data revealed twice has high pollution levels on the main routes in all three cities.  In London, the levels of toxic carbon were twice as high in the evening as they were in the morning. If you don’t fancy sucking carbon monoxide and diesel dust during your commute, walk and cycle on the less-traveled routes.  Those streets are also safer for you overall.  If you do drive, keep your windows and sunroofs closed. Veronika Sassen Brand, Prashant Kumar, Aline Santos Damascena, John P. Pritchard, Karst T. Geurs, Maria de Fatima Andrade. Impact of route choice and period of the

  • Virtual Reality Cures Fear of Heights

    05/04/2019 Duración: 02min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/8OMzNy8ABzA Do you cringe at the thought of looking down from bridge or tall building, going up in a balloon, or parasailing?  Are you afraid of falling even if you are only up on a chair?  Some caution makes sense, but if you have a pathologic fear that limits your life choices then you probably suffer from acrophobia or the extreme, irrational phobia about height.    From 2 to 5% of us have acrophobia, and twice as many women as men suffer from it.  It can be extremely dangerous if an affected person develops a panic attack and becomes so agitated that she or he cannot safely get down. Dutch researchers developed a VR app to help acrophobics control their fears using cognitive behavioral therapy without the use of formal psychotherapy.  The app called ZeroPhobia, available on the iOS and Google Play app stores for $14, works with your smartphone and cardboard goggles. The neuroscientists studied this app in a trial involving nearly 200 subjects.  Half were treated with 6 animated m

  • Working Nights Triggers Miscarriage

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/KDuBlo4yEKs If you’re pregnant and work two night shifts in any given week, you significantly increase your chances of suffering a miscarriage.  Danish occupational medicine specialists reviewed the data from nearly 23,000 pregnant women a for a study recently published online. The data revealed that, after the 8th week of pregnancy, women who worked two or more night shifts in any given week had a 32% higher risk of miscarriage by the following week.  The risk of miscarriage escalated as the number of night shifts and the number of consecutive night shifts increased. Again, this study only unearths an association, and the cause of this phenomenon is unproven.  The investigators do add that night work disrupts the body’s circadian rhythms and diminishes melatonin release.   Melatonin is known to be a factor in normal placental function. If you are on the night shift and considering becoming pregnant, ask your managers if you can join the day crew.  This is crucial if you have a histo

  • Losing Weight Stops Migraines

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/CginQ3SSplk If you’re overweight and suffering from migraine headaches, dropping those extra pounds will literally take a load off your mind.  This conclusion comes from a new study by Italy’s University of Padova recently presented to the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society. Researchers there conducted a meta-analysis of 10 studies covering more 473 migraine sufferers.  They found that any weight loss in obese subjects led to significant improvement including fewer migraines, shorter and less intense headache spells, and less disability. The improvement did not depend upon the degree of obesity, the numbers of pounds lost, or how subjects achieved the weight reduction.  Dieting and surgery both worked, and the effects were similar in adults and children. If you’re popping pills, getting shots, having psychotherapy, using biofeedback, enjoying therapeutic massages, getting acupunctured, or wolfing down exotic herbs all to prevent or control your migraines and you are overweight,

  • Creative Productivity Soars When Dollars Drive Brainstorming Followed By Reflection

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: ttps://youtu.be/C0sWcaWvpTY Paying creatives for every idea they churn out led to optimal results.  The alternatives, paying for idea quality or offering no motivational reward at all, fell flat according to studies by business school researchers at The University of Texas-Austin and the University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign. Their data also demonstrated the most interesting finding that true creativity has an incubation period.  The greatest creative productivity occurred when the idea kids spewed out rough ideas, took at least a 20 minute break, and then returned to their initial thoughts and refined them into very practical plans. The bottom line?  When you need creative solutions throw as many ideas up on the board as you can, and don’t be cheap about paying the brainstormers or yourself.  Then go out for a walk and return to fine-tune the initial ideas many minutes or days later. Steven J. Kachelmeier, Laura W. Wang and Michael G. Williamson. Incentivizing the Creative Process: From Initial Qu

  • Childhood Team Sports Prevent Later Depression For Men

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/k3ZHb9CeRFs Playing organized team sports grows the hippocampus, the brain’s emotion and memory center, while reducing the incidence of adult depression.  This is the finding by neuroscientists at the Washington University-St. Louis.   They studied a nationwide sample over over 4000 children 9 to 11 years of age using questionnaires to determine their participation in sports and their emotional outlook.  Each underwent MRI brain imaging to measure their hippocampal volumes.  Participation in regular, organized team sports but not casual pickup games or non-sport activities such as music or art triggers hippocampal growth in both boys and girls.  The sports-playing boys but not the girls showed a notably reduced incidence of clinical depression later in life. The authors caution that this observation is merely an association and not proof of cause and effect.  Even so, it underscores the value of participation in after-school athletics as long as they don’t trigger head injuries. Lisa

  • Smart Toilet Seat Diagnoses Heart Disease

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/7s2URrwjctc Soon to enter the commercial market is a high-tech toilet seat that can monitor the performance of the heart and help to guide therapy for congestive heart failure.  This bionic bathroom throne was developed by bioengineers at the Rochester Institute of Technology. This very smart crapper topper can periodically measure the electrical and mechanical activity of the heart including EKG, heart rate, blood pressure, blood oxygen levels, and the amount or blood pumped out with every beat of the heart, better known as the stroke volume.  The seat takes all this data as well as the patient’s weight and transmits it back to the patient’ s medical team to help them plan therapy. The seat will be marketed to hospitals for connection to their telemetry systems and then given to patients.  The seats will more than pay for themselves by significantly reducing a hospital’s 30 day readmission rate and eliminating the penalty fees the hospital will owe Medicare. The seat doesn’t play mu

  • 3D Mammography Eliminates Breast Biopsies

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/sUTVOR1Ozvo Digital breast tomosynthesis, better known as 3D mammography, provides such precise imaging that many women can be saved from needing breast biopsies.  The procedure captures multiple images of the breast from varying angles and a computer synthesizes them into a 3D image allowing the radiologist to examine each image layer by itself.  Conventional mammography captures only two images: top to bottom and side to side. The UK’s National Health Service Breast Screening Programme surveyed nearly 31,000 women who were imaged with both conventional mammography or 3D mammography.  The data showed that use of 3D mammography along with conventional mammography would have cut the percentage of women referred for biopsy nearly in half from 69% to 36%.   This enhanced technique also reduced the percentage of biopsies that turned out benign and therefore unnecessary from 75 to 52%. Three-D mammography is particularly helpful for women with very large, dense, or scarred breasts.  It is

  • Traffic Lights Halt Poor Food Choices

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/WklLZeJtdEA A green light over the salad bar and a red light over the burgers and fries triggers healthier and environmentally more responsible food choices.  Experimental psychologists at London’s Queen Mary University set up a lunchtime canteen and studied the choices of over 400 subjects. They conducted two experiments.  In the first, one group of subjects saw traffic signals over the food reflecting its caloric content and healthfulness.  In the second experiment, two traffic signals were present: one again representing the health rating of the food; the second signal revealed the environmental friendliness and carbon emission quotient of the food.  The control groups saw no lights. Even though the investigators presupposed that multiple lights would be confusing, the group choosing food while exposed to the one signal for calorie count but also the group exposed to indicators for both calories and carbon emissions choose healthier options.  The bonus was that the group also expo

  • Gut Bacteria Can Wreck Your Arteries

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/-bMz1EdXGuk As the search continues to understand why our arteries self-destruct as we age, it appears that the bacteria in our gastrointestinal systems may play a key role along with, of course, cholesterol.  Physiologists at the University of Colorado report that aging leads to more pathologic bacteria in the gut and more inflammatory metabolites like trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) in the body to foster atherosclerosis-driven coronary artery disease and stroke. The investigators used a mouse model and found that eliminating pathogenic gastrointestinal bacteria reduced circulating inflammatory substances such as TMAO and improved the health of the animals blood vessels.   To apply this information for human benefit, they suggest that foods with beneficial bacteria such as yogurt, kefir, and kimchi as well as the consumption of fiber-rich foods will eliminate accumulations of harmful bacteria.  They also mention that olive oil, vinegar, and red wines are rich in dimethyl butanol, an a

  • ACL Repair Improved By Reducing Blood Flow

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/iFJN2LvoWjA The knee takes a beating in many athletic contests, and anterior cruciate ligament repair is a frequent operative event in the world of sports medicine.  During recovery, though, there tends to be a loss of muscle mass and bone density despite good rehabilitation therapy. Orthopedic surgeons at Houston’s Methodist Hospital report to the American Orthopedic Society for Sports Medicine that precise and cyclic limitation of blood flow to the healing limbs during postoperative rehabilitation exercises reduced if not eliminated the loss of both muscle and bone mass.  An automated tourniquet was used to reduce the blood flow by about 80% on an intermittent basis. Researchers across the country and around the world are now studying this phenomenon to better understand the underlying reasons for the benefit.  If you are contemplating an ACL repair, ask your orthopod about this tourniquet technique. American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine. "Blood flow restriction therapy

  • Pregnancy Illnesses May Trigger Preventable Childhood Brain Ills

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/UqPntXmJwHk Pregnant women will suffer colds and may get the flu despite receiving the flu vaccines.  When that occurs, the babies they are carrying are more likely to develop excessive neural sensitivity.  That in turn leads to agitation for infants and toddlers and attention deficits and even serious psychosis such as schizophrenia later in life. A study by University of Colorado pediatricians and psychiatrists reveals that this problem may be prevented by sufficient levels of the essential B vitamin choline.  Choline is necessary for the synthesis of the cell membranes of neurons and the sheaths of nerves. While choline is found in some foods including eggs, red meat, and liver, 75% of pregnant women fail to consume the recommended daily 450 milligrams of this nutrient.  Unfortunately, prenatal vitamins do not contain choline. Pregnant women should take a 500 mg choline supplement daily for at least the first 16 weeks of pregnancy.  Choline may be obtained from most drugstores and

  • Preventing Childhood Drownings

    05/04/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/tuTQifoAHhg With the coming of ever warmer weather, the news here is bad news.  At least 1000 children perish due to preventable drownings every year, and accidental drowning is the single leading cause of injury-related death for kids 1 to 4 years of age.  These tragedies occur because naturally-curious kids gain unexpected access to water.  Those children also at a high risk of drowning are teens who tend to be overconfident about their swimming skills. These drownings are all preventable, and the American Academy of Pediatrics reminds parents about a few simple rules: Teach your child to swim after the first birthday if your pediatrician agrees he or she is developmentally ready. Never leave children alone or with another child near any water: pools, bathtubs, spas, or any open water including toilets. When infants and toddlers are around water, an adult who is a good swimmer should be within arm’s reach. An adult with lifesaving skills should supervise teen swimming. Drownings

  • Calorie Count Position Makes A Difference - Reprise

    30/03/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/_eha4PyY5O0 Published in October, 2018 The position of those dreaded calorie count numbers on a menu determine their effect on our food choices. #calories #dieting #restaurants #menu  

  • Bullies Beget Bullies - Reprise

    30/03/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/VKTvqhKr668 Published in October, 2018 There is no known gene for bullying, and studies show that it is a behavior learned often by imitation.  #Parenting #bullying #bully #imitation

  • Coffee Makes Women’s Skin Healthy - Reprise

    30/03/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast -https://youtu.be/oaVx_NINt8Y Published in October, 2018 Regular consumption of coffee by women reduces the risk of an annoying dermatitis. #Coffee #skin #dermatitis #rosacea

  • Unvaccinated Children May Lose Their Pediatricians - Reprise

    30/03/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/Um4_I-3NiP8 Published in October, 2018 The American Academy of Pediatrics now permits pediatricians to expel unvaccinated children and families from their practices. #vaccinedeniers #antivaxx #pediatrician #AAP

  • Acid Reduction Drugs Can Be Risky - Reprise

    30/03/2019 Duración: 01min

    Vidcast: https://youtu.be/5SG86iEupkk Published in October, 2018 Stomach acid reducing drugs, proton pump inhibitors, frequently used to treat reflux, gastritis, and ulcer have a potentially dangerous side effect. #protonpumpinhibitors #reflux #osteoporosis #gastritis #ulcer

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