Sholem's Bias: Medicine And Other Curiosities

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editor: Podcast
  • Duración: 8:31:21
  • Mas informaciones

Informações:

Sinopsis

In the medical world, I'm an internist and primary care doctor at Johns Hopkins. I see patients, do research on decision-making, uncertainty, and patient-doctor communication; I teach with residents; and I write about the complexities of healthcare.In the non-medical world, I write in English and Yiddish, translating as well between both languages. I publish poetry, short stories, and essays/journalism.

Episodios

  • Episode 13: Competition Is Good! A Economist on the US Healthcare System

    26/05/2017 Duración: 29min

    Award-winning Carnegie Mellon health economist Martin Gaynor and Zackary Sholem Berger chat in Yiddish about competition, the Affordable Care Act (otherwise known as Obamacare), and the US healthcare system -- and why it's so expensive. װאָלװיש גײנאָר און שלום בערגער שמועסן װעגן געזונט־עקאָנאָמיק, אָבאַמאַקײר, און װי מתקן צו זײַן אַמעריקעס היפּער־טײַערע געזונט־סיסטעם.

  • Episode 12: A Bilingual Poet in French and English

    07/02/2017 Duración: 32min

    Zackary Sholem Berger talks to Alexander Dickow, a poet, translator, and critic working in both French and English, about navigating countries, languages, and esthetics. With cameo appearances by Dr. Seuss, the Babylonian Talmud, and the Commonwealth of Virginia. Here is the text of the poems read by Alexander Dickow on the podcast. To a Politician Your cellophane disguise for a tongue Furiously unbefits the even knavest Of these podium fisted Catilines I hate Whose dim broadcasts encrust With craven abjectives and slick nouns, Whose paramount pronouncements’ Weighty grovel fresh veneers each victim eye, Who gape and crave at limp wealth, Puppets of their own slanted lip And their thin speech as cheap As its callous stakes are ruthless: Our brittle faith, our breath, the truth. Galaxy Measureless and vacant husks Veneer along the pale gaps Kissing the smooth-lit kernels Far across the hesitation Contours Where cycles dip Ebbing forth aromas Of nectar vicinities All gleamed among Their dim stretchings

  • Making Sense of Medicine: Reading of Chapter 3 (Poverty) by Zackary Berger

    14/09/2016 Duración: 58min

    Zackary Berger reads Chapter 3 of Making Sense of Medicine at Writers Live, Enoch Pratt Library, Baltimore, September 13, 2016.

  • Episode 11, Eve Jochnowitz: Repopularizing a vegetarian chef, and favorite culinary memories

    05/09/2016 Duración: 26min

    Zackary Sholem Berger and the culinary ethnographer, cookbook expert, Yiddish teacher and translator, and vegetarian blogger (&c., &c.) Eve Jochnowitz talk at the 2016 Yiddish Vokh about the pre-war vegetarian restauranteur of Vilna, Fania Lewando; translating cookbooks; and her favorite food memories. In Yiddish.

  • Episode 10, Maggie Dubris: a medic-poet cares for the Manhattan poor through crack, AIDS, and 9/11

    29/08/2016 Duración: 34min

    Maggie Dubris is a writer and composer in New York. She has published and performed widely. On Sholem's Bias, I talked to her about her new book, Brokedown Palace. I'll let her describe it: "For 24 years, I was a 911 paramedic at St. Clare’s, a small hospital in Hell’s Kitchen. I worked during the dawn of AIDS, the influx of crack, and the most violent years the city has experienced. My hospital had the highest percentage of homeless patients in the city in the 1980s. In 1985 we established the first AIDS unit on the east coast. Broke-Down Palace is the story of the city as seen through the lens of one poor, unsupervised institution. It begins in 1934 with the founding of the hospital by a penniless Irish nun in the depths of the Great Depression, and follows the course of its existence until 2007, when it was shut down, flipped a few times, and turned into luxury condos. The book is structured as a series of linked poems; a memory palace. In addition to exploring the story of the hospital, I am interest

  • Episode 9, Mercedes Cebrián: Choosing genres and languages - poet-essayist-journalist-translator

    23/08/2016 Duración: 31min

    Zackary Sholem Berger and Spanish essayist, poet, translator and journalist Mercedes Cebrián talk about choosing words, languages, foods, and politicians.

  • Episode 7: Barbara Glickstein talks about nursing, media, and policy

    15/08/2016 Duración: 27min

    Nurse, advocate, and media expert Barbara Glickstein talks about nurses as overlooked leaders in the fight for equity and compassion in health care.

  • Episode 8: Eli Mandel about questions, lack of belief, and raising emotionally healthy children

    09/08/2016 Duración: 34min

    Eli Mandel, still recovering from ultra-Orthodoxy, talks with Zackary Sholem Berger about raising emotionally healthy children, not caring about God, and shiurim in a language you only half understand. The conversation is in Yiddish.

  • Making Sense of Medicine: Reading of Chapter 1 (Chronic Pain)

    03/08/2016 Duración: 55min

    Zackary Berger reads Chapter 1 of Making Sense of Medicine and answers questions. Recorded August 2, 2016, at The Ivy Bookshop in Baltimore, Maryland.

  • Episode 6, Josh Garoon: Neighborhoods, Trust, and Aging in Baltimore

    27/07/2016 Duración: 30min

    Zackary Sholem Berger chats with sociologist Josh Garoon about how older people in Baltimore understand their relationships with people, places, and institutions around them. How does trust, or lack thereof, influence aging, and is trust needed for good health?

  • Episode 5, Elinor Nauen: Poetry, Baseball, Cars, and Snow

    19/07/2016 Duración: 33min

    Zackary Sholem Berger chats with poet Elinor Nauen about the variegated interests which inform her verse -- baseball, cars, and (perhaps?) snow. Current major league standings are also included.

  • Episode 4 Nathaniel Comfort: Genetics, Eugenics, and Medicine

    12/07/2016 Duración: 28min

    Zack and Nathaniel Comfort, professor of history at Johns Hopkins and NASA/Library of Congress chair in astrobiology, talk about genetics, eugenics, and present-day medicine.

  • Episode 2, Adia Benton: Can Diseases Be Exceptional?

    05/07/2016 Duración: 32min

    What does it mean for some diseases to be treated differently from others? Medical anthropologist Adia Benton discusses her work on Ebola and HIV -- and the possible application of these ideas to the Zika phenomenon.

  • Episode 3, Dovid Herskovic: Why Did Brexit Happen? (Yiddish)

    05/07/2016 Duración: 23min

    Who is the British Trump, and why did Brexit happen? Check out one of our #Yiddish podcasts with London solicitor Dovid Herskovic. טראָמפּ איז דאָך נאָר אַן אַמעריקאַנער גילגול פֿון אַן אינטערנאַציִאָנאַלן פֿענאָמען. הערט זיך צו צו אַ שמועס מיטן לאָנדאָנער אַדוואָקאַט, און חרדישן ייִד, דוד הערצקאָוויץ וועגן "ברעקסיט" און דעם נאַציאָנאַליזם אין בריטאַניע.

  • Episode 1, Sam Brown: Can ICU Care Be Made Human?

    05/07/2016 Duración: 32min

    In this new podcast, Zack Berger (known in Yiddish as Sholem) exercises his bias as he interviews people about whatever interests him.