Beyond The Clinic: Living Well With Melanoma – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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Podcast Beyond The Clinic: Living Well With Melanoma

Beyond The Clinic: Living Well With Melanoma

AIM at Melanoma Foundation

Forme & Santé

Fréquence : 1 épisode/31j. Total Éps: 49

Hosting podcast Spotify for Podcasters
Beyond the Clinic: Living Well With Melanoma features fresh perspectives into topics seldom discussed in the exam room. Director of Cancer Survivorship for Kaiser Permanente San Francisco, Raymond Liu, MD, hosts the Beyond the Clinic podcast featuring unfiltered discussions with researchers, caregivers, patients, and medical professionals. Each episode pulls back the curtain to share advice on handling life after a melanoma diagnosis and how to ride the emotional rollercoaster that often follows.
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Surviving the Spotlight: From Melanoma to Filmmaking

Saison 3 · Épisode 10

mardi 8 octobre 2024Durée 32:30

In this compelling episode of “Surviving the Spotlight,” we sit down with Jessica Gilstrap, a melanoma survivor and independent filmmaker, whose inspiring journey from cancer diagnosis to creative success is both moving and motivating. At just 19 years old, Jessica's life took an unexpected turn when she was diagnosed with Stage IV Melanoma—a discovery that came not from a routine check, but from a serendipitous visit to her doctor for a different issue.

Jessica’s story unfolds with the urgency of immediate surgery and the emotional rollercoaster of battling a life-threatening illness. After numerous biopsies and surgeries, she emerged with a renewed outlook on life, embracing sun safety while maintaining her passion for travel and adventure.

Today, Jessica channels her experiences and newfound perspective into her work as an independent film producer. Her dedication to bringing compelling stories to the screen is matched by her commitment to advocating for sun safety and helping others navigate their own challenges.

In this episode, Jessica shares her personal journey, the impact of her melanoma diagnosis on her life choices, and how she has integrated sun safety into her daily routine without sacrificing her love for travel and exploration. She also offers practical advice on skincare and sun protection, aiming to empower others to live fully and safely.

Join us to hear Jessica's incredible story of resilience, creativity, and advocacy, and learn how she turns her challenges into opportunities for helping others and making a meaningful impact.


Restful Recovery: Navigating Sleep and Cancer with Dr. Daniel Barone

Saison 3 · Épisode 9

mardi 10 septembre 2024Durée 23:19

Join us for an insightful episode of "Restful Recovery," where we explore the crucial interplay between sleep and cancer with Dr. Daniel Barone, a leading expert in sleep medicine. Dr. Barone, the Associate Medical Director at the Weill Cornell Center for Sleep Medicine, shares his extensive knowledge and experience in the field, offering valuable guidance on how sleep impacts cancer treatment and recovery.


Dr. Barone's illustrious career began with his summa cum laude graduation from Fordham University, followed by his medical degree from New York Medical College. His path included an internship in Internal Medicine at Saint Vincent's Catholic Medical Center, and subsequent Neurology training, where he was named Chief Resident. He completed his Neurology residency at Beth Israel Medical Center and a fellowship in Sleep Disorders at Stony Brook University Medical Center.


As an Associate Professor of Clinical Neurology at Weill Cornell Medical College and an Attending Neurologist at NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, Dr. Barone specializes in managing various sleep disorders, including sleep apnea, insomnia, and restless legs syndrome. His certifications and affiliations, including those with the American Academy of Neurology and the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, underscore his expertise.


In this episode, Dr. Barone discusses how sleep affects cancer patients, strategies for improving sleep during treatment, and the latest research findings. His insights are drawn from his peer-reviewed publications, media appearances, and his books, "Let’s Talk About Sleep" and "The Story of Sleep: From A to Zzz."


Tune in to learn how better sleep can be a powerful ally in cancer care and recovery, and gain practical tips for improving your sleep health during challenging times.

The Clinical Trial Experience: A Patient’s Perspective

lundi 18 décembre 2023Durée 33:40

In 2010, Mary Elizabeth Williams was diagnosed with metastatic melanoma. The following year, she was offered the opportunity to participate in a Phase 1 immunotherapy clinical trial. She wrote about that experience in A Series of Catastrophes and Miracles: A True Story of Love, Science, and Cancer. In this episode, Mary Elizabeth shares her story and insights into her journey as a clinical trial participant. Williams says she was in a place of desperate and deep panic, but she remembers having a conversation with someone who said, "This doesn't have to be your last resort. This can be our first resort for you." That perspective-changing conversation began her belief in the special relationship between hope and science.


About our guest, Mary Elizabeth Williams

Mary Elizabeth Williams is a metastatic melanoma survivor, clinical trial veteran, and the author of "A Series of Catastrophes and Miracles: A True Story of Love, Science, and Cancer." She has written for the LA Times, the Guardian, Health, and other publications. In 2021, her New York Times essay was adapted for the second season of Amazon Prime's "Modern Love." She has spoken for ASCO, PRIM&R, Bristol Meyers Squibb, DIA, and is the 2020 AMWA Walter Alvarez Award winner. She is currently a doctoral student of Medical Humanities at Drew University, where she recently completed her conflict resolution certification.

Melanoma Cancer and Financial Toxicity

Saison 2 · Épisode 11

mardi 14 novembre 2023Durée 28:50

While being diagnosed with cancer alone can put a person under tremendous amounts of mental and emotional stress, the additional burden of outrageously expensive medical care only adds to the strain. Cancer treatment requires more than medicine — families need a roof over their heads and food on their tables to survive. The dramatic rise in the cost of cancer treatments has now given rise to what is being called financial toxicity.

On this episode, Liz Geisel, Director of Program Delivery for Family Reach, discusses the psychological stress related to financial toxicity and the role of Financial Navigators who help families discuss their concerns and guide them to community resources.


About our Guest, Elizabeth Geisel, MSW

Elizabeth Geisel, MSW, is the Director of Program Delivery for Family Reach, where she leads trauma-informed trainings and oversees the team responsible for providing financial support to families facing cancer. Elizabeth has dedicated the last twenty years to the field of social work, specializing in healthcare, mental health, and substance abuse. Her clinical approach focuses on trauma-informed practices, harm reduction, and building collaborative partnerships with patients. Before Family Reach, she worked at several leading Boston-based healthcare organizations, including the Sidney Borum Health Center (now part of Fenway Health), the Institute for Health and Recovery, and Boston Medical Center.

That Good Night: Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour

Saison 2 · Épisode 10

mardi 10 octobre 2023Durée 33:09

A growing discipline, palliative care medicine remains underutilized. Studies suggest that patients and providers commonly confuse palliative care with end-of-life care.

In this episode, Dr. Liu is joined by Dr. Sunita Puri, Program Director of the Hospice and Palliative Medicine Fellowship at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center & Chan School of Medicine and author of That Good Night: Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour. During their discussion, Dr. Puri explains how fears related to misconceptions about palliative care can rob patients of their opportunity to engage in important conversations about living with chronic disease. As in her book, Dr. Puri uses stories to illustrate that palliative medicine moves its focus away from cures – focusing instead on questions regarding quality of life - about symptom management, hope, and what a ‘miracle’ might really mean.


About our Guest, Sunita Puri, M.D.

Dr. Sunita Puri is the Program Director of the Hospice and Palliative Medicine Fellowship at the University of Massachusetts Medical Center & Chan School of Medicine, where she is also an associate professor of clinical medicine. A graduate of Yale University, she completed medical school and residency training in internal medicine at the University of California San Francisco followed by fellowship training in palliative medicine at Stanford. She is the author of That Good Night: Life and Medicine in the Eleventh Hour, a critically acclaimed literary memoir examining her journey to the practice of palliative medicine, and her quest to help patients and families redefine what it means to live and die well in the face of serious illness. She is the recipient of a Rhodes Scholarship and a Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowship for New Americans. Her writing and book have been featured in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Slate, JAMA, the Atlantic, NPR, India Today, the Asian Age, the Oncology Times, and, forthcoming, the New Yorker.

In 2019, the Guardian made a mini-documentary of her work in palliative medicine which has been viewed nearly 3 million times. She has been interviewed on the PBS Cristian Amanpour show, at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco, ZDogg MD’s show, and numerous podcasts. In 2018, she was awarded the Etz Chaim Tree of Life Award from the USC School of Medicine, awarded annually to a member of the faculty who, in the eyes of the campus community, models and provides humanistic and compassionate care. She has taught medical memoir and literary nonfiction to medical students and residents, and has delivered talks about palliative medicine, the centrality of narrative and storytelling in medicine, and physician well-being in forums around the world.


ABOUT THE BOOK

Interweaving evocative stories of Puri’s family and the patients she cares for, That Good Night is a stunning meditation on impermanence and the role of medicine in helping us to live and die well, arming readers with information that will transform how we communicate with our doctors about what matters most to us.


Becoming a Melanoma Caregiver- Now What? PART III, with guest host, Melissa Wilson, PA-C, MPAS, UPMC Hillman Cancer Center

Saison 2 · Épisode 9

mercredi 6 septembre 2023Durée 27:49

Last year, over 197,000 Americans were diagnosed with melanoma—and we know they won’t go through that experience alone because there will be a caregiver, usually a family member or close friend, at their side. Becoming a caregiver is often unexpected and life-changing. To talk about the benefits of caregiving, the types of support that are most effective, and essential communication skills for caregivers, Melissa Wilson, PA-C, MPAS, and AIM's Ask a Medical Expert, sits down with Allison J. Applebaum, Ph.D., Director of the Caregivers Clinic at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.

Discussion topics include what should a melanoma caregiver expect, how to maximize the potential benefits of caregiving, what types of support are most effective, and communication skills for caregivers.

Dealing the Emotional Rollercoaster that Follows a Melanoma Diagnosis : PART II with guest host, Melissa Wilson, PA-C, MPAS, UPMC Hillman Cancer Center

Saison 2 · Épisode 8

mardi 8 août 2023Durée 29:03

Receiving a melanoma diagnosis can be an overwhelming and life-altering experience. The emotional rollercoaster that follows can be intense, as individuals navigate through fear, anxiety, and uncertainty. Coping with these emotions is crucial for maintaining mental well-being during the treatment process.

Fear and anxiety is often the first emotion that arises after a melanoma diagnosis. Fear of the unknown, fear of pain, and fear of death can consume one's thoughts. It is important to acknowledge these fears and seek support from loved ones or professional counselors who can provide reassurance and guidance.

Uncertainty about the future is another common emotion experienced after a melanoma diagnosis. Thoughts about how it will impact relationships, career prospects, and overall quality of life may arise. 


In this episode, guest Emily A. Meier, PH.D. talks to Melissa Wilson, PA-C, MPAS about how to deal with the emotional rollercoaster following a melanoma diagnosis—acknowledging fears, managing anxiety through stress-reducing techniques, seeking support from loved ones or professionals when needed, and addressing uncertainties. By actively addressing these emotions head-on, individuals can better cope with their diagnosis while maintaining their mental well-being throughout their treatment journey.


GUEST:
Emily A. Meier, Ph.D. Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry
Licensed Psychologist PSY25266
Co-Director for Psycho-Oncology Training and Education
Psychiatry & Psychosocial Services
UC San Diego Moores Cancer Center

I've Been Diagnosed With Melanoma...Now What? PART I with guest host, Melissa Wilson, PA-C, MPAS, UPMC Hillman Cancer Center

Saison 2 · Épisode 7

mardi 4 juillet 2023Durée 25:21

The test results are back. You’ve talked to the doctor and learned you have melanoma.

Whether it’s your first or fifth melanoma diagnosis, your reaction to a new melanoma diagnosis often comes down to a single question: What do I do now? To help you navigate your next steps after a new melanoma diagnosis, Melissa Wilson, PA-C, MPAS, and AIM's Ask a Medical Expert sits down with Yana Najjar, MD, a medical oncologist specializing in the treatment of melanoma at UPMC.


About our Guest: Yana Najjar, MD, is an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine a medical oncologist specializing in the treatment of melanoma. Board-certified in internal medicine and medical oncology and board eligible in both hematology and oncology, she received her medical degree from the American University of Beirut in Lebanon. Dr. Najjar completed her internal medicine residency at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio and her hematology/oncology fellowship at UPMC.

Dr. Najjar's research interests include immunotherapy, translational research, tumor immunology, and remodeling the tumor microenvironment. Specifically, she is interested in immunotherapy in advanced melanoma and its impact on the tumor microenvironment and the peripheral immune system.


Why Peer Support is Important for People Coping With Melanoma

Saison 2 · Épisode 6

mardi 6 juin 2023Durée 31:03

People living with melanoma often benefit from practical help and advice from others who have lived through similar situations. Support groups bring people together and provide a safe forum for exchanging perspectives, sharing concerns, and gaining confidence to face the future. Of course, each of us has to find a way of dealing with a melanoma cancer diagnosis. None will take us back to where we were before, but the key is finding the one that lets you live the best, most positive life today and tomorrow. In this episode, two melanoma survivors who serve as volunteer mentors in AIM's Peer Connect program talk about finding meaning and empowerment while helping others. About our Guests:

Carrie Brophy

Carrie was diagnosed with Stage IA melanoma in 2020 and again in 2021. Over the past couple of years, she has had four early-stage tumors removed and says she has more skin biopsy scars than she can count. Carrie has joined a mole mapping study at Stanford University and is treated at CPMC in San Francisco.

Carrie lives with her husband, Tim, and six children in Sonoma, California, where she works part-time as a pediatric nurse. Carrie and Tim’s children are aged 8 – 20. She tries to be transparent with them about her treatment and uses this journey as an opportunity to teach sun safety.

Carrie’s Peer Connect experience began in early March 2022 when she requested a mentor. She indicated that she felt a lot of guilt from her many years in the sun and was looking for ways to cope and feel comfortable in her skin. Carrie was looking for someone who could genuinely be empathetic and would understand how she felt.

Carrie is a strong believer that by helping others, you will always help yourself!


Bob Polkinghorn 

Bob was diagnosed with Stage III melanoma in 2016 and has been treated by Dr. Adil Daud at the University of California, San Francisco.  He had all his lymph nodes removed from under one arm and was in a clinical trial testing Keytruda vs. placebo for five years, including one year of infusions.   

Bob lives with his wife, Kathy and dog, Lady, in Winters, CA.  They are both retired from the University of California and the public school system.  Bob and Kathy have five adult children and 17 grandchildren, including two great-grandchildren.  Their large family keeps them happy and on the move!  

Bob is actively involved in AIM at Melanoma and other support systems for melanoma patients and caregivers.  He co-coordinated the 2022 Northern CA Bay Area "Walk Against Melanoma" and plans to do so again in 2023.  He is also one of AIM's peer support "mentors" for newly diagnosed melanoma patients. For the past couple years, Bob has served as a "Consumer Reviewer" for the US Department of Defense's "Melanoma Research Program" reviewing cutting-edge grants from scientists nationwide.

Bob is a road cyclist, swimmer, hiker, and meditator. He has been a hospice volunteer for six years at the state prison.  He considers it one of his life's most engaging, healing experiences.  Bob is also an IRS-certified tax preparer who volunteers as part of a county team to provide free income tax preparation and e-filing to low-income families. Bob also serves as a member of his church's social justice and outreach team that provides a range of support to local families in need.  

Bob says melanoma had a profound life-changing experience in the most positive sense.  He would never wish melanoma on anyone - ever!  But everything he has experienced and everyone he’s met has made his life so much better and more meaningful. He feels blessed.


A Beginner’s Guide to the End: Practical Guide To Living Life and Facing Death

Saison 2 · Épisode 5

mardi 9 mai 2023Durée 30:50

“There is nothing wrong with you for dying,” hospice physician B.J. Miller and journalist and caregiver Shoshana Berger write in A Beginner’s Guide to the End. “Our ultimate purpose here isn’t so much to help you die as it is to free up as much life as possible until you do.” An honest, surprising, and detail-oriented guide to the most universal of all experiences, A Beginner’s Guide to the End is “a book that every family should have, the equivalent of Dr. Spock but for this other phase of life” (New York Times bestselling author Dr. Abraham Verghese).


About Our Guest:

Dr. BJ Miller is a longtime hospice and palliative medicine physician and educator. He currently sees patients and families via telehealth through Mettle Health, a company he co-founded with the aim to provide personalized, holistic consultations for any patient or caregiver who needs help navigating the practical, emotional and existential issues that come with serious illness and disability.

BJ has given over 100 talks nationally, and internationally, on the topics of death, dying, palliative care and the intersection of healthcare with design. His 2015 TED Talk: “Not Whether But How” (aka “What Matters Most at the End of Life”), has been viewed over 11 million times and his work has also been the subject of multiple interviews and podcasts, including Oprah Winfrey, PBS, The New York Times, The California Sunday Magazine, GOOP, Krista Tippett, Tim Ferriss and the TED Radio Hour. His book, A Beginner’s Guide to the End, was co-authored with Shoshana Berger and published in 2019.


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