Academic Medicine Podcast
Een podcast door Academic Medicine - Maandagen
152 Afleveringen
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Accessibility and Inclusion in the Clinical Learning Environment
Gepubliceerd: 13-8-2024 -
Running the (Check)List
Gepubliceerd: 15-7-2024 -
There Is Always a Lesson
Gepubliceerd: 24-6-2024 -
Putting Learners in the Driver's Seat for the Next Era of Assessment and Precision Education
Gepubliceerd: 10-6-2024 -
Near Naked Vulnerability
Gepubliceerd: 20-5-2024 -
Presence With Patients is a Gift: Building Meaningful Patient Relationships
Gepubliceerd: 30-4-2024 -
What Cancer Did Not Teach Me
Gepubliceerd: 1-4-2024 -
Our Achilles’ Heel: Vulnerability and Medical Uncertainty
Gepubliceerd: 18-3-2024 -
Pain, Palliative Care, and Practicing Empathy
Gepubliceerd: 4-3-2024 -
Language Equity in Medical Education
Gepubliceerd: 20-2-2024 -
A Familiar Question
Gepubliceerd: 5-2-2024 -
Seeing Death for the First Time
Gepubliceerd: 22-1-2024 -
The Closeted Curriculum
Gepubliceerd: 15-1-2024 -
Biopsy
Gepubliceerd: 8-1-2024 -
The Window
Gepubliceerd: 1-1-2024 -
I See You
Gepubliceerd: 18-12-2023 -
Do What You Do Better: Using AI Tools to Ease the Workload Burden on Faculty
Gepubliceerd: 13-12-2023 -
The Nail Salon
Gepubliceerd: 4-12-2023 -
The Unspoken Language of Compassion
Gepubliceerd: 20-11-2023 -
Put Some Gloves On
Gepubliceerd: 13-11-2023
Meet medical students and residents, clinicians and educators, health care thought leaders and researchers in this podcast from the journal Academic Medicine. Episodes chronicle the stories of these individuals as they experience the science and the art of medicine. Guests delve deeper into the issues shaping medical schools and teaching hospitals today. Subscribe to this podcast and listen as the conversation continues. The journal Academic Medicine serves as an international forum to advance knowledge about the principles, policy, and practice of research, education, and patient care in academic settings. Please note that the opinions expressed in this podcast are the guests’ alone, and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the AAMC or its members.
