PodcastDX
PodcastDX
PodcastDX is an interview based podcast series in a “peer-to-peer supportive format." We have found that many people are looking for a platform, a way to share their voice and the story that their health journey has created. Each one is unique since even with the same diagnosis, symptoms and the way each person will react to a diagnosis, is different. Sharing what they have experienced and overcome is a powerful way our guests can teach others with similar ailments. Many of our guests are engaging in self-advocacy while navigating a health condition, many are complex and without a road-map to...
Where to listen?
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Episodes
S22 Ep2: Heart, Brain & Immunity: New Clues After a Heart Attack 26.05.2026 19:27
After a heart attack, the story doesn't end in the arteries. In this episode of PodcastDX, Lita and Jean Marie explore new science showing how the heart, brain, and immune system talk to each other during and after a heart attack—and how that three-way conversation can either protect the heart or make damage worse. We break down a "triple‑node" loop discovered in recent research, where vagus‑nerve...
S22 Ep1: Blood and Tissue Donation 19.05.2026 10:53
This week's episode does not have a guest, we are going to be discussing blood and tissue donations in medicine. The Vital Role of Blood and Tissue Donation in Modern Medicine Blood and tissue donation are indispensable components of modern healthcare, providing life-saving resources for a wide range of medical conditions and emergencies. Blood donations are crucial for patients undergoing major...
S21 Ep20: Colonoscopy and Cancer Screening 12.05.2026 35:47
Early colorectal cancer usually causes no symptoms, which means the only way to catch it at a truly curable stage—or even prevent it altogether—is through regular screening, especially colonoscopy. During a colonoscopy, doctors can not only find cancers earlier, when treatment is more effective and survival rates are much higher, but also remove precancerous polyps on the spot, stopping many cance...
S21 Ep19: The Shift in Dementia Care from Control to Connection 05.05.2026 50:03
Today we're continuing our Medicine in Transition theme with a topic that is deeply personal, professionally important, and long overdue. This episode is titled "The Shift of Dementia Care: From Control to Connection." But we're not doing this one alone. We're joined by a special guest, Jennifer Stoner. Jennie is a retired professor from Aurora University in Aurora, Illinois, where she taught in r...
S21 Ep17: Cancer Care in Transition 04.05.2026 24:41
In this week's episode, "Cancer Care in Transition: Precision Medicine, Immunotherapy, and Patient Choice," we look at how cancer treatment is changing at the exact moment when patients are trying to move from crisis mode into something like a new normal. Precision medicine now uses a person's genes, tumor markers, and even lifestyle to match them with targeted drugs or immunotherapies instead of...
S21 Ep18: The Dark Side of Patient Advocacy on Social Media 28.04.2026 57:08
The dark side of advocacy is that the same social media platforms that help health advocates reach millions can also expose them to relentless trolls, coordinated pile‑ons, and even threats to their safety and careers. Studies of physicians and public‑health advocates show that a large share—sometimes more than half—have been personally attacked online for speaking about vaccines, gun violence, or...
S21 Ep17: Cancer in Transition, Precision Medicine, Immunotherapy, and Patient Choice 21.04.2026 50:03
In this week's episode, "Cancer Care in Transition: Precision Medicine, Immunotherapy, and Patient Choice," we look at how cancer treatment is changing at the exact moment when patients are trying to move from crisis mode into something like a new normal. Precision medicine now uses a person's genes, tumor markers, and even lifestyle to match them with targeted drugs or immunotherapies instead of...
S21 Ep16: Various Types of Dementia 14.04.2026 25:21
Various Types of Dementia This week on PodcastDX, we're stepping into the complex world of dementia—not as a single diagnosis, but as a family of conditions that affect memory, thinking, behavior, and independence in different ways. We'll introduce the most common types of dementia, including Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, Lewy body dementia, frontotemporal dementia, and mixed dementia, w...
S21 Ep15: Rethinking DX: A Digital DSM and the Roots of Mental Health 31.03.2026 21:27
"Rethinking DX: A Digital DSM" looks at how the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) quietly shapes almost every part of mental health care—from who gets a diagnosis and insurance coverage to how people understand their own symptoms and identities. In this conversation, Lita and Jean Marie unpack what the DSM actually is, why the current DSM‑5‑TR matters, and how a future, f...
S21 Ep14: The Next Decade in Medicine 24.03.2026 21:27
Over the next decade, medicine won't just add new gadgets—it will change what it feels like to be a patient. In this episode of PodcastDX, we explore how AI as a clinical co‑pilot, stem cells and regenerative medicine, genomics and precision care, wearables, and hospital‑at‑home models could reshape everyday care. We talk about the promise of earlier detection and more personalized treatment, the...
S21 Ep13: Patients as Partners: Shared Decision Making in Medicine 17.03.2026 19:59
This week we are discussing the rise of a new type of health care where the patients play a vital role in their medical care. Patients as partners in care are at the heart of shared decision making (SDM), a model where clinicians and patients deliberately work together to choose tests and treatments that fit both best evidence and the patient's values and life context. What shared decision making...
S21 Ep12: End of Life in Transition: Earlier Palliative Care, Better Conversations 10.03.2026 9:58
At a time when modern medicine is allowing people to enjoy longer, fuller lives, mortality is not always a chief concern. But when a serious illness occurs, the topic becomes unavoidable. This became especially clear during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic when hospitals were overrun with patients, many with grim prognoses. "The pandemic gave all of us a sense that life can be short and the...
S21 Ep11: Is Mental Health Care Changing Fast Enough 03.03.2026 32:35
This week we discuss the current status of Mental Health Care. Mental health care is changing, but most experts argue it is not changing fast enough relative to the need, especially on access, equity, and workforce. Where change is too slow Unmet need is huge. In the U.S., millions with a diagnosable condition still receive no treatment each year; a recent national report notes that many adults wi...
S21 Ep10: Rehabilitation Reimmagined 24.02.2026 18:34
The integration of Artificial Intelligence (AI) into post-injury rehabilitation is transforming recovery paradigms by enabling personalized, adaptive, and efficient rehabilitation pathways tailored to individual patient needs. This podcast reviews the current advances in AI applications that facilitate assessment, monitoring, and optimization of rehabilitation programs following injuries. Through...
S21 Ep9: The Gut Brain Revolution: Why One System Can't Be Treated Alone 17.02.2026 21:47
The gut–brain revolution is about treating the digestive system and the nervous system as one integrated network instead of two separate organs that happen to share a body. The gut–brain axis is a bidirectional communication system: the brain influences digestion, motility, and gut sensation, while the gut and its microbiota send chemical, neural, and immune signals back to the brain that can shap...
S21 Ep8: Promising New Cancer Screening Methods 10.02.2026 20:23
Promising new cancer screening methods are pivoting toward multi-cancer early detection (MCED) blood tests (liquid biopsies) and AI-enhanced imaging, which aim to detect multiple cancer types from a single, non-invasive sample, often before symptoms arise. These technologies, including the Galleri test and Novelna's protein-based tests , analyze DNA, proteins, or methylation patterns to identify c...
S21 Ep7: Chronic Illness Isn't Rare Anymore: Why The System Is Trying To Catch-up 03.02.2026 9:20
Chronic illness is now the norm, not the exception, and our healthcare system is scrambling to keep up. In this episode, "Chronic Illness Isn't Rare Anymore: Why The System Is Trying To Catch Up," we dig into why so many adults are living with at least one chronic condition, how the current system was built for short-term, acute care, and what that mismatch means for people trying to manage compl...
S21 Ep6: From Survival to Quality of Life: Why Outcomes are Being Redefined 27.01.2026 21:19
FROM SURVIVAL TO QUALITY OF LIFE: WHY OUTCOMES ARE BEING REDEFINED THE FUNDAMENTAL SHIFT IN MEDICINE For decades, medicine measured success through a singular lens: survival. Did the patient live? Did the procedure work? While these metrics remain important, healthcare is undergoing a profound transformation that redefines what "winning" actually means[1]. The new standard is no longer just extend...
S21 Ep5: Ai in Medicine Tool Partner or Problem 20.01.2026 9:51
*:first-child]:mt-0"> AI in medicine is best understood as a powerful tool and a conditional partner that can enhance care when tightly supervised by clinicians, but it becomes a problem when used as a replacement, deployed without oversight, or embedded in biased and opaque systems. Whether it functions more as a partner or a problem depends on how health systems design, regulate, and integrat...
S21 Ep4: Medicine in Transition: Why Healthcare Looks Different tThan a Decade Ago 13.01.2026 17:24
Medicine has transitioned due to massive tech adoption (Electronic Health Records EHRs, Artificial Intelligence AI, Telehealth), shifting patient expectations (consumerism, convenience), the rise of value-based care, new treatments (precision medicine), and increased focus on population health and prevention, all while grappling with rising costs, data security, and persistent access/equity gaps,...
S21 Ep3: A Stem Cell Primer 06.01.2026 10:14
This week we discuss stem cells. Having great therapeutic and biotechnological potential, stem cells are extending the frontier in medicine. Not only replace dysfunctional or damaged cells, the so-called regenerative medicine, stem cells may also offer us new perspectives regarding the nature of aging and cancer. This review will cover some basics of stem cells, their current development, and po...
S21 Ep2: Functional Fitness 30.12.2025 28:38
This week we will discuss the topic of "functional fitness" With the new year upon us many people want to add fitness or getting healthy as goals and we are here to help! Functional fitness is a simple, effective way to keep your body moving and reduce restlessness. It focuses on exercises that help you perform everyday activities more easily and safely—like getting up off the floor, carrying groc...
S21 Ep1: Why New Year Resolutions Often Fail 28.12.2025 24:57
By the end of the first week of the new year, nearly 77% of New Year's resolutions have already failed (Norcross, 1988). That's discouraging—but it doesn't mean you should stop trying. It means most of us are setting resolutions in ways that don't work. You aren't weak or lazy. More often, the problem is a misaligned system—one that relies too heavily on willpower and short-lived motivation. Motiv...
S20 Ep20: The Lymphatic System 16.12.2025 20:36
The lymphatic system, or lymphoid system, is one of the components of the circulatory system, and it serves a critical role in both immune function and surplus extracellular fluid drainage. Components of the lymphatic system include lymph, lymphatic vessels and plexuses, lymph nodes, lymphatic cells, and a variety of lymphoid organs. The pattern and form of lymphatic channels are more variable and...
S20 Ep19: Pancreatic Cancer 09.12.2025 30:12
This week we are talking about Pancreatic cancer. This is a type of cancer that begins as a growth of cells in the pancreas. The pancreas lies behind the lower part of the stomach. It makes enzymes that help digest food and hormones that help manage blood sugar. The most common type of pancreatic cancer is pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. This type begins in the cells that line the ducts that car...
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