Explore every episode of the podcast Amplify: A Podcast Powered by Patient Voice Partners
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
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| From Motherhood to Medicine: Curiosity, Connection, and Reinvention | 15 May 2026 | 00:42:02 | |
Episode Summary This episode is sponsored by Medlior Health Outcomes Research. Sponsorship supports Amplify, while all conversations and perspectives remain independently produced.In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, Ursula Mann and Anne Marie Hayes sit down with Neelam Bance for a thoughtful conversation about leadership, lived experience, healthcare innovation, and the importance of listening deeply to patients and caregivers. Neelam shares reflections from her personal and professional journey — including motherhood, identity, advocacy, and leadership — and how these experiences shaped her perspective on creating more human-centered healthcare systems. The discussion explores the value of curiosity, empathy, and meaningful collaboration in driving change across healthcare and patient engagement spaces. From recognizing barriers within systems to understanding the emotional realities behind patient experiences, this episode highlights why lived experience must remain at the center of innovation and decision-making. This conversation is reflective, inspiring, and filled with insights for healthcare leaders, patient advocates, caregivers, and anyone passionate about creating more compassionate systems of care. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights
Links LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/neelambance/ Medical Disclaimer: The content shared on Amplify is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing discussed on this podcast—including stories, experiences, perspectives, or commentary from hosts, guests, or contributors—should be interpreted as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Always seek the guidance of your physician or other licensed provider with any questions regarding your health, medical conditions, or treatment options. | |||
| Listening to the Heart: Lived Experience as a Catalyst for Better Cardiac Care | 08 May 2026 | 00:32:14 | |
What happens when surviving cancer in your 20s leads to a completely different health journey decades later? In this powerful episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Anne-Marie Hayes sit down with Jackie to explore the realities of women’s heart health, delayed diagnosis, and why patient-led advocacy is changing the future of care. After surviving Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma at 24, Jackie went on to build a successful career in fashion and live what she thought was a healthy, “normal” life — until nearly 20 years later, she experienced chemotherapy-induced heart failure. What began as flu-like symptoms eventually led to a diagnosis of cardiomyopathy, opening her eyes to the long-term “legacy” cancer treatment can leave behind. Today, Jackie is a passionate advocate working to improve awareness, access to care, and support systems for women living with heart disease. She shares why women are still too often misdiagnosed, how heart disease symptoms can look very different in women, and why advocacy starts with simply believing that your health matters. This episode is an urgent and empowering conversation about equalizing care, listening to lived experience, and ensuring women are no longer treated as “small men” in cardiovascular medicine. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights
Resources & Organizations
About Jackie Jackie is a patient advocate living with chemotherapy-induced heart failure following treatment for Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma in her 20s. After nearly two decades working in the fashion industry as an apparel buyer, her diagnosis inspired her to dedicate her life to advocacy and women’s heart health awareness. She is the | |||
| Living Beyond Diagnosis: Colorectal Cancer, Screening, and Patient Advocacy | 23 Jan 2026 | 00:31:53 | |
In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Barry Liden are joined by Barry Stein, President and CEO of Colorectal Cancer Canada, for a powerful and deeply personal conversation about colorectal cancer, early screening, and why patient voices matter in shaping healthcare systems. Barry Stein shares his remarkable journey—from a late-stage colorectal cancer diagnosis in the mid-1990s, through multiple surgeries and innovative treatments, to becoming one of Canada’s most influential patient advocates. His story highlights how determination, shared decision-making, and advocacy can drive meaningful change at both the individual and system level. Together, the hosts explore why colorectal cancer screening is so critical, how screening programs have evolved across Canada, and the real-world barriers patients face when it comes to testing and access to care. The conversation also dives into the importance of patient engagement in research, clinical trials, and health technology decision-making—reminding us that data alone is never enough without lived experience. This episode is a compelling reminder that patients are not just stakeholders in healthcare—they are essential partners. In This Episode, You’ll Hear About:
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| Closing the Gap: Patient Voices and Pharma Transformation in the Middle East | 16 Jan 2026 | 00:27:19 | |
How is patient engagement evolving in one of the world’s fastest-changing healthcare regions? Together, they explore how patient expectations are shifting, how technology and policy are reshaping access to innovation, and why meaningful patient insight is still one of healthcare’s biggest challenges—globally. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights 00:03:32 — Entering the pharmaceutical world 00:05:03 — The rise of patient engagement in the Middle East 00:06:00 — The limits of traditional patient programs 00:07:26 — When assumptions miss the mark 00:08:42 — Shared global patterns 00:09:05 — The evolving role of patient groups 00:11:04 — Faster access to innovation 00:12:23 — Digital transformation (and no more faxing) 00:14:35 — What’s missing from patient insight 00:17:09 — Shrinking visit time 00:20:20 — Designing a connected ecosystem 00:21:43 — When patient feedback redirects strategy 00:25:30 — Surfing, seasons, and perspective Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow Patient Voice Partners on LinkedIn to help amplify more voices. | |||
| Welcome to Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices Through Listening and Action | 09 Jan 2026 | 00:20:48 | |
Welcome to the launch episode of Amplify, the podcast powered by Patient Voice Partners, where real stories spark bold conversations. In this episode, host Ursula Mann is joined by her co-hosts Brent Korte, Barry Liden, Anne Marie Hayes, and Christine Pisapia as they explore what patient engagement really means - and why it’s personal, not just professional. Together, they share stories of caregiving, lived experiences, and the ways patient voices can influence decisions across healthcare - from policy and regulation to research and clinical care. Learn why listening to patients, caregivers, and healthcare changemakers matters, how insights from lived experiences translate into action, and the impact of truly inclusive patient engagement. This episode also introduces Amplify’s mission: to provide a platform that elevates patient voices, fosters understanding, and inspires listeners to think differently, listen differently, and take action in their own healthcare ecosystems. What You’ll Learn:
Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow Patient Voice Partners on LinkedIn to help amplify more voices. | |||
| Living With Huntington’s: Inheriting Risk, Finding Purpose | 05 Dec 2025 | 00:31:40 | |
Episode Summary In this powerful episode of Amplify, hosts Ursula Mann and Christina Pisapia speak with Erin Paterson, a writer, caregiver, and advocate whose life was transformed by Huntington’s Disease (HD). Just as Erin and her husband were preparing to start a family, she learned a long-kept family secret: her grandmother may have died from Huntington’s. This revelation pushed Erin into rapid genetic testing, where she tested gene-positive. What followed was a decade-long struggle with depression, infertility, caregiving responsibilities, and fear of the future. But Erin rebuilt her life through writing, community, caregiving, and storytelling. Today, she advocates globally for people living with rare diseases and cares for her father, who is now in his 80s with late-onset HD. Her story is one of courage, connection, and the quiet beauty of finding purpose—even when living with uncertainty.
Why You Should Listen This episode is for you if you:
You’ll walk away with a deeper understanding of Huntington’s disease, the importance of slowing down in care settings, and how love and community can reshape even the hardest realities.
Episode Highlights 00:00 — Understanding Huntington’s Disease 02:35 — A family secret revealed 03:57 — Facing a life-altering diagnosis 08:28 — Becoming a caregiver 09:46 — Advocacy in the healthcare system 13:24 — Rebuilding after a difficult season 15:49 — Transforming pain into purpose 28:34 — Connection beyond words | |||
| Beyond the Dome: Humanizing Healthcare with Mark Stolow | 21 Nov 2025 | 00:32:32 | |
In this conversation, Ursula and Anne Marie sit down with Mark Stolow, Founding Director of People Before Patients, to explore what it truly means to humanize healthcare.
He also introduces the practice of asking “more beautiful questions,” examines the difference between cold and warm data, and shares how slowing down might be the most urgent step toward redesigning healthcare for the future.
Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights (Timestamps) 00:00 – Welcome to Amplify 00:34 – Meet Mark Stolow 01:04 – Mark’s origin story 02:28 – Eastern philosophies and “the wisdom of anxiety” 04:00 – What does “humanizing healthcare” really mean? 05:45 – A family carrying the weight 07:54 – Healthcare professionals are longing for humanness too 08:56 – The forest metaphor: Healthcare as a living ecology 11:00 – What’s getting in the way? The limits of industrial thinking 12:52 – Expanding the edges of illness 13:45 – Discreet solutions to complex problems 14:38 – A better metaphor: ecological thinking 16:00 – Ask a more beautiful question | |||
| Stage Zero, Full Strength: Share’s Story of Early Detection, Self-Advocacy, and Choosing Light | 12 Nov 2025 | 00:32:05 | |
A routine nudge from a family doctor changed everything. After being sent for a mammogram she had delayed, Share was diagnosed with stage 0, triple-negative breast cancer—caught extraordinarily early. In this candid conversation, she walks us through that phone call, the whirlwind of next steps, and the mindset and micro-supports that helped her stay grounded: humor, weekly friend check-ins, complementary therapies, and clear self-advocacy. We also talk about what truly helpful support sounds like, why routine screening matters (even without symptoms), and how this experience is shaping her life, work, and a new legacy-preserving project for families. Why listen
Key moments
Resources & mentions
Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow Patient Voice Partners on LinkedIn to help amplify more voices.
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| From Physician to Patient to Pioneer: Dr. Shazhan Amed on Surviving TEN and Building Haibu Health | 05 Nov 2025 | 00:42:19 | |
Episode Summary What happens when a physician becomes the patient—and then an entrepreneur? Pediatric endocrinologist Dr. Shazhan Amed shares her harrowing, transformational journey through toxic epidermal necrolysis (TEN), a rare, life-threatening reaction often triggered by medications. Shazhan opens up about pain, fear, advocacy, and the moments of kindness that sustained her. She then connects those lessons to why she founded Haibu Health: to pair empathy with data and improve how teams communicate, coordinate, and care—especially in pediatric diabetes. Why You Should Listen
Timestamps
Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow | |||
| Postpartum Psychosis: Cara’s Story of Crisis, Care, and Recovery | 29 Oct 2025 | 00:40:43 | |
Trigger warning This episode includes discussion of severe postnatal mental health challenges, including postpartum psychosis, hospitalization, and panic. If you or someone you know needs medical assistance, please contact your healthcare professional. If you’re in Canada and need support right now:
Why You Should Listen When new motherhood collides with a medical emergency, sleepless nights, and overwhelming pressure, the result can be life-threatening—but also deeply misunderstood. In this raw and courageous conversation, Cara shares her firsthand experience with postpartum psychosis, from a terrifying onset to full recovery and renewal. Whether you’re a parent, clinician, or advocate, this episode reminds us how vital it is to listen without judgment, recognize early warning signs, and respond with compassion and urgency. Cara’s journey sheds light on both the fragility and strength of mothers navigating unseen battles—and the power of the right support at the right time.
Episode overview When Cara welcomed twins via C-section in Scotland, early feeding difficulties, sleep deprivation, and a sudden medical complication spiraled into postpartum psychosis. After a terrifying crisis and an ambulance call, Cara was admitted to a Mother–Baby Unit, where specialized, compassionate care helped her stabilize, bond safely with her babies, and reclaim her sense of self. Years later—now a nurse—she shares what recovery looks like, how family and clinicians can recognize red flags, and why empathetic, practical support matters. What we cover
Episode Highlights
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| Making Data Meaningful: From Health Literacy to Real-World Evidence | 22 Oct 2025 | 00:31:39 | |
In this episode, Ursula and Christine are joined by Tara Cowling, Founder and President of Medlior Health Outcomes Research—a Canadian leader in real-world evidence (RWE), health technology assessment (HTA), and health outcomes research. Together, they explore how health data can be transformed into actionable insights that improve care, trust, and outcomes for patients. Tara shares her journey from her early work with NICE in the UK to leading an independent research consultancy in Canada. She explains how better data access and health literacy can prevent missed diagnoses, improve early detection, and strengthen public confidence in healthcare systems. From data privacy and interoperability to the promise of AI and next-generation patient registries, this conversation unpacks how collaboration between patients, researchers, and decision-makers can shape a smarter, more equitable future for healthcare. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights [00:02:00] Meet Tara Cowling — Founder and President of Medlior Health Outcomes Research shares her journey into data and healthcare innovation. [00:07:15] When data goes wrong — real stories that show why accessible, linked data can save lives. [00:10:00] Mental health and data — Tara explains why mental health checkups should be as routine as dental visits. [00:12:30] Health literacy and trust — how communication and transparency build confidence in data use. [00:16:00] Defining quality data — what makes research reliable: transparency, reproducibility, and context. [00:21:00] The promise of AI and real-world evidence — how technology and patient data can drive personalized, equitable care. [00:22:30] Building the future — Tara’s vision through the Avita Health Foundation for long-term patient registries that shape better health systems.
Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow Patient Voice Partners on LinkedIn to help amplify more voices.
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| Listening as a Leadership Superpower: A Conversation with Brigitte Nolet (Roche Canada) | 10 Oct 2025 | 00:39:46 | |
How do you embed patient voices across a complex, research-driven organization—and across a country’s health system? Brigitte Nolet shares how her own journey with psoriatic arthritis shaped her leadership, why Roche Canada created a Chief Patient Experience Officer role held by someone with lived experience, and how collaboration across government, industry, and patient groups can accelerate access to innovative medicines in Canada. Why you should listen
Episode highlights (timestamps)
Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow Patient Voice Partners on LinkedIn to help amplify more voices. | |||
| From Wheezing to Leadership: Living with Asthma and Leading Change | 01 May 2026 | 00:34:45 | |
Episode Summary This episode is sponsored by Medlior Health Outcomes Research. Sponsorship supports Amplify, while all conversations and perspectives remain independently produced.In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Anne Marie Hayes are joined by Jeff Beach, President & CEO of Asthma Canada. Jeff shares his deeply personal journey—from a childhood marked by severe allergies to a life-changing asthma diagnosis in adulthood—and how that experience shaped his path into patient advocacy and leadership. The conversation explores the realities of living with asthma, including common misconceptions, the importance of proper disease management, and what “good control” truly looks like. Jeff also provides a behind-the-scenes look at leading a national patient organization—navigating funding, maintaining independence, and ensuring patient voices remain at the center of healthcare decisions. With World Asthma Day approaching, this episode is both timely and powerful—reminding us that asthma is not just occasional wheezing, but a chronic condition that requires awareness, action, and advocacy. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights 00:01 – Introduction to Amplify & today’s conversation 04:39 – Jeff’s journey with asthma 07:21 – The reality of diagnosis 11:22 – Rescue vs. controller medication 13:14 – Signs your asthma is not controlled 14:12 – Can people with asthma stay active? 18:38 – From lived experience to leadership 23:36 – Funding, independence, and trust 27:53 – The role of patient voices in healthcare 31:17 – Looking ahead: World Asthma Day Links & References
Medical Disclaimer: The content shared on Amplify is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing discussed on this podcast—including stories, experiences, perspectives, or commentary from hosts, guests, or contributors—sho | |||
| Fresh Voices, New Perspectives: Meet Izi | 01 Oct 2025 | 00:13:11 | |
Welcome to Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, a podcast powered by Patient Voice Partners. In each episode, hosts Ursula Mann and Brent Korte bring together patients, caregivers, and healthcare change makers to spark bold conversations and build a system that truly listens. In this episode of Amplify, Ursula and Brent welcome a new member of the Patient Voice Partners team — Izi, a recent graduate bringing fresh energy, digital storytelling skills, and a passion for amplifying underrepresented voices. She shares her journey from student leadership to nonprofit advocacy, what inspires her to pursue work that helps others, and why trust and representation are so vital in healthcare. Why you should listen
Episode highlights
Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow Patient Voice Partners on LinkedIn to help amplify more voices. | |||
| A Life in Healthcare: Christine Pisapia on Caregiving, Advocacy, and Patient Voices | 24 Sep 2025 | 00:16:09 | |
In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Brent Korte sit down with their teammate Christine Pisapia for a deeply personal and professional conversation about her decades-long journey in healthcare. Christine’s path has taken her from physiotherapy to leadership in the pharmaceutical industry, to her current work in advocacy and volunteering—all tied together by one common thread: her passion for improving lives. As both a professional and a caregiver to multiple family members, Christine brings unique insights into the realities of healthcare and the transformative power of patient and caregiver voices. She shares how her own experience as a living kidney donor to her brother reshaped her perspective and ignited her advocacy in transplant care, policy, and peer support. Christine also reflects on the ripple effect of caregiving, the gaps she sees in our healthcare systems, and why caregivers must be recognized as critical partners in care. Why you should listen
Episode Highlights
Join our email list to get new episode updates here. | |||
| From Engagement to Inclusivity: A Conversation with Anne Marie Hayes | 17 Sep 2025 | 00:17:13 | |
From Engagement to Inclusivity: A Conversation with Anne Marie Hayes In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Brent Korte welcome their very own Patient Voice Partners teammate, Anne Marie Hayes—healthcare professional, advocate, and also one of the co-hosts of Amplify. With over 40 years in respiratory health, Anne Marie has lived through both professional milestones and deeply personal loss. Her story reveals the urgency and heart behind her commitment to patient advocacy and inclusivity. Together, they explore why language matters, how “patient engagement” differs from true “patient inclusivity,” and what it means to bring the full breadth of lived experience into healthcare decision-making. Anne-Marie also shares a powerful real-world example of how co-creation with patients changed regulatory and educational practices in Canada. This is a conversation about curiosity, courage, and creativity—and about moving beyond simply listening to patients, to actually building with them. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights [00:02:00] Anne-Marie shares why she joined Patient Voice Partners and the mission that excites her most. [00:05:00] Engagement vs. inclusivity—why the distinction is critical. [00:07:00] Language matters: honoring preferences and seeing the whole person. [00:10:00] Expanding “patient perspectives” and ensuring representation. [00:12:30] The courage to ask harder questions and listen when it’s uncomfortable. [00:14:30] Case study: co-creating a product monograph with patients in Canada. [00:15:45] Key takeaways: be curious and be creative. | |||
| From Law to Listening: Barry Liden on Data and Patient Voices | 15 Sep 2025 | 00:19:01 | |
What happens when you bring law, data, and patient stories together?
Barry shares how his early passion for data and advocacy reshaped into a mission: ensuring that patient perspectives are not an afterthought, but rather a driving force in decision-making across healthcare systems. 💡 You’ll learn:
📌 Quote from the episode: “Sometimes you ask people what’s important, and they’ll give you the expected answers. But then someone comes in with a different perspective, and it changes everything.” — Barry LidenEpisode Highlights
🎧 Listen now and discover how listening deeply—to data, to patients, to unexpected voices—can transform healthcare. | |||
| The Gift of Life, Twice: Charles Cook on Why Organ Donation Matters | 24 Apr 2026 | 00:41:40 | |
Episode Summary In this deeply moving episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, we sit down with Charles Cook—a two-time deceased donor transplant recipient who received a life-saving heart transplant in 2016 and a kidney transplant in 2017. Charles shares his extraordinary journey—from being diagnosed with a genetic heart condition at 17, to surviving a massive stroke, to enduring years of recovery and ultimately facing end-stage heart failure. His story is one of resilience, faith, and an unshakable commitment to “keep banging”—his personal mantra for overcoming life’s toughest obstacles. In recognition of National Organ & Tissue Donation Awareness Week, this conversation highlights the life-saving impact of organ donation, the importance of representation in healthcare, and why Charles has dedicated his life to giving back through advocacy and patient support. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights
Links & References: About the Guest Charles Cook is a two-time organ transplant recipient, receiving a heart transplant in 2016 and a kidney transplant in 2017 at Toronto General Hospital. He is an active volunteer and advocate, working with organizations such as the Kidney Foundation of Canada, the Transplant Ambassador Program, and the African Caribbean and Black Organ Health initiative. Driven by gratitude for the “two gifts of life” he received, Charles is committed to paying it forward by supporting patients, raising awareness, and advocating for more equitable access to transplant care. Medical Disclaimer: The content shared on Amplify is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing discussed on this podcast—including stories, experiences, perspectives, or commentary from hosts, guests, or contributors—should be interpreted as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Always seek the guidance of your physician or other licensed provider with any questions regarding your health, medical conditions, or treatment options. | |||
| Breaking the Silence: Harjeet Kaur on Rare Cancer, Cultural Stigma, and Turning Pain into Purpose | 10 Apr 2026 | 00:37:50 | |
Episode Summary In this powerful episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, Harjeet Kaur shares her journey through an ultra-rare stage IV blood cancer—subcutaneous panniculitis-like T-cell lymphoma (SPTCL)—and the life-altering moments that followed. From months of unexplained symptoms and relentless advocacy for answers, to undergoing a stem cell transplant during the height of COVID-19, Harjeet’s story is one of resilience, courage, and survival. But her journey goes beyond the medical. As a South Asian woman, Harjeet opens up about the cultural silence surrounding cancer, the stigma she faced, and the emotional weight of navigating illness without open conversations. Today, she is using her voice to break that silence—advocating for awareness, representation, and more inclusive support systems for patients from underrepresented communities. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights 00:00 – Introduction to Harjeet’s ultra-rare cancer journey 03:39 – Early symptoms and being dismissed as “just a viral illness” 06:02 – Months without answers—and fighting to be heard 07:50 – The life-changing moment: stage IV cancer diagnosis at 32 10:37 – Emotional impact and silent suffering 14:47 – “I want to live”: facing limited treatment options 15:47 – Choosing a stem cell transplant—and her brother as donor 17:37 – Transplant during COVID and complete isolation 19:32 – Cultural stigma and silence around cancer in South Asian communities 24:47 – Turning pain into purpose: advocacy and building Chai & Hope Resources & Links
Medical Disclaimer: The content shared on Amplify is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing discussed on this podcast—including stories, experiences, perspectives, or commentary from hosts, guests, or contributors—should be interpreted as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Always seek the guidance of your physician or other licensed provider with any questions regarding your health, medical conditions, or treatment options. | |||
| Two Steps Forward: Living, Advocating, and Rebuilding After a Brain Tumor with Claire Snyman | 27 Mar 2026 | 00:31:02 | |
What happens when your life changes in an instant—and you’re left to navigate uncertainty, fear, and a system that isn’t built around you? In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Brent Korte sit down with Claire Snyman, a brain tumor survivor, patient advocate, and health data champion. Claire shares the moment everything shifted—from a sudden onset of vertigo to an unexpected diagnosis of a brain tumor. What followed was not just a medical journey, but an emotional and systemic one—marked by uncertainty, gaps in communication, and the need to advocate for her own care while critically ill. Through her story, Claire reveals what it means to “surf the waves of uncertainty,” rebuild life after brain surgery, and transform personal experience into purpose. Today, she is helping reshape how patients access care, understand their data, and take an active role in their health journey. This episode is a powerful reminder that behind every patient is a story—and a system that still has work to do. Why You Should Listen
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| From Dialysis to Second Chances: The Truth About Kidney Transplants and Patient Advocacy | 20 Mar 2026 | 00:37:08 | |
Kidney disease is often called a “silent illness”—but for those living with it, the reality is anything but quiet. In this powerful episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, Ursula Mann joined by Christine Pisapia and special guest Susan McKenzie, a kidney transplant recipient and leading patient advocate. Sue shares her deeply personal journey—from delayed diagnosis and emergency dialysis to receiving a life-changing transplant from her sister-in-law. Together, they unpack the hidden challenges within the healthcare system, including missed early detection, long donor testing timelines, and the emotional toll of dialysis. The conversation also shines a light on the transformative impact of peer support through the Transplant Ambassador Program, and why a “transplant-first” approach could improve both patient outcomes and healthcare costs. This episode is a candid, eye-opening look at the realities of kidney disease—and a hopeful call to action for better awareness, advocacy, and patient-centered care. 🎧 Why You Should Listen
⏱️ Episode Highlights [00:00:00] – Introduction to Kidney Transplant Conversations [00:02:00] – Sue’s Personal Journey with Kidney Disease [00:04:30] – Delayed Diagnosis and Missed Opportunities [00:06:00] – Finding a Living Donor [00:08:30] – What Donor Testing Really Involves [00:12:00] – Why Preemptive Transplant Matters [00:14:30] – The Reality of Dialysis [00:17:00] – The Hidden Struggles Patients Face [00:18:30] – The Power of Peer Support [00:24:00] – Advocacy and the ‘Transplant First’ Movement [00:26:00] – The Cost of Dialysis vs. Transplant [00:29:00] – Barriers to Living Donation [00:32:00] – Debunking Myths About Donor Risk [00:33:30] – What People Don’t Know About Kidney Disease [00:34:00] – A New Podcast to Amplify Kidney Patient Voices [00:35:00] – A Heartwarming Ending Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. | |||
| Impact in Action: Leadership, Caregiving, and System Change | 14 Mar 2026 | 00:35:59 | |
In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Brent Korte sit down with Sandra Walker, venture capital partner at Hard Climate Venture Studio and founder of Viacern. Sandra has spent decades working across global healthcare systems—spanning pharmaceuticals, biotechnology, diagnostics, venture capital, and now climate innovation. Throughout her career, she has been drawn to tackling the kinds of complex, messy problems that require systems thinking, collaboration, and bold leadership. The conversation explores how leaders make decisions within complex systems, why unconscious bias often shapes those decisions, and how personal experiences—like caregiving—can influence how we approach change. Sandra also shares her journey as a remote caregiver for her father during a critical health period, highlighting the emotional and logistical challenges many caregivers face but rarely talk about. From healthcare leadership to climate innovation, this episode examines how different systems intersect—and why solving tomorrow’s healthcare challenges requires thinking beyond traditional boundaries. | |||
| Redefining Care: Women’s Wellness, Emotional Wellbeing, and Leadership | 13 Feb 2026 | 00:28:25 | |
Episode Summary In this episode, Ursula Mann is joined by Christine Pisapia for a thoughtful conversation with Sigrun Watson, a healthcare leader and entrepreneur passionate about improving women’s health and reducing stigma around mental health. Sigrun shares her personal journey with perfectionism, an eating disorder, depression, and what it meant to seek help—and why storytelling and community can be powerful first steps toward healing. The conversation also explores gaps in women’s health education and care, including pelvic floor health and menopause, and what Sigrun is building through her work with UROSPOT to make pelvic health support more accessible and modern. Why you should listen Listen if you want:
Episode Highlights [00:00:00] Introduction [00:03:00] Meet Sigrun Watson [00:06:11] Perfectionism & Eating Disorders [00:08:54] The Impact on Young People [00:12:15] Depression & Dark Thoughts in University [00:14:03] The Power of Storytelling & Unsinkable [00:18:52] Mental Health Access & Affordability [00:22:45] Women’s Health Gaps [00:23:19] Sigrun’s Menopause Journey [00:27:55] Pelvic Floor Health Explained [00:30:36] What UROSPOT Does [00:33:41] The Reward of Being Close to Patients [00:34:43] Closing Reflections Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you& | |||
| Beyond the Clinic: How Communities Shape Health | 30 Jan 2026 | 00:32:57 | |
Episode Summary In this episode of Amplify: Elevating Patient Voices, hosts Ursula Mann and Brent Korte speak with Reg Joseph, CEO of Health Cities, about how community-based care, patient empowerment, and system design shape real healthcare outcomes. Reg shares insights from his background in biotechnology, finance, and healthcare innovation, explaining why technology alone cannot fix healthcare challenges. The conversation highlights the importance of redesigning care models, supporting patient self-management, and integrating healthcare into communities—especially in rural and underserved settings. Drawing from real-world examples and personal experience as a patient, this episode explores prevention, data use, access to care, and why the future of healthcare must extend beyond hospitals and clinics. Why You Should Listen
Episode Highlights (with Timestamps)
Want to Share Your Voice? If you’re a patient or caregiver, you can join Patient Voice Connect to share your experiences and help shape healthcare here. Join our email list to get new episode updates here. Together, we can bring more voices to the table and shape the future of healthcare. Share this episode, leave a review, and follow Patient Voice Partners on LinkedIn to help amplify more voices. Medical Disclaimer: The content shared on Amplify is for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing discussed on this podcast—including stories, experiences, perspectives, or commentary from hosts, guests, or contributors—should be interpreted as medical a | |||