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nurse-jackieThe opioid epidemic has received increasing attention as it reaches into communities across the country. One group it has long affected is healthcare professionals–nurses, physicians, and pharmacists, in particular, who may have easier access to prescription opioids. Often referred to as “impaired health professionals”, these caregivers may come to the attention of colleagues and health care organizations when they demonstrate erratic behavior or evidence of the misuse of opioids prescribed for patients is linked to the health professional.

The impaired professional may be reluctant to seek help or their colleagues may be unwilling to report them for fear of revocation of the person’s professional license to practice and, thus, their livelihood.

But many state boards that have the authority to issue and revoke professional licenses have responded to this concern by developing Peer Assistance Programs for the addicted person to get treatment and, sometimes, even continue to work under close supervision.

Kate Driscoll Malliarakis, PhD, APN-C, RN, is a leading advocate for Peer Assistance Programs, particularly in nursing, and spoke with me about impaired health professionals, peer assistance programs, and the new Surgeon General’s Report on Facing Addiction in America. Dr. Malliarakis is an Assistant Professor with the George Washington University School of Nursing. She is the President of KAM Associates, a health care consulting firm specializing in substance abuse and leadership issues. Dr. Malliarakis maintains a private counseling practice specializing in addictions and impaired health professionals.

You can listen to the interview here:

The interview aired on HealthCetera Radio on WBAI-FM on December 1, 2016.

The opioid epidemic has received increasing attention

 

Credit:PriyaRaja

Credit:PriyaRaja

 

Priya Raja is a second year medical student at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas and this year is a fellow in the Stanford-ABC News Fellowship in Media and Global Health. She’s policy focused and understands the power of multimedia and storytelling in influencing health and health policy. As a fellow, she spent time earlier this year in New Dehli reporting on the World Health’s Organization’s celebration of India’s most recent public health achievement, the elimination of yaws, a chronic disfiguring infectious disease. She shares that people say “yaws begans where the road ends” implying it hits populations hardest in the most impoverished communities globally.

 

  [caption id="attachment_11890" align="alignleft" width="295"] Credit:PriyaRaja[/caption]   Priya Raja is

Being at this year’s TEDMED fired up neurons in my brain that haven’t been turned on ever or for quite awhile. Innovative ideas in science, medicine, music, art and techno-fashion will do that to you.

 

The theme was “What if?” described by Jay Walker, chairman of TEDMED, as the “two words of the scientific imagination.” In addition to the TEDMED speakers presenting on the famous big red dot stage there was a large conference room named “The Hive,” where you could have a conversation with people from early- to mid-stage start-ups in the Hive program.

 

In addition to these two vibrant spaces, the agenda made room for conversations and community building and yes, networking.

 

Today’s HealthCetera highlights conversations with two millennium women – a practicing emergency medicine physician, writer, speaker and a medical student who has already had an impact on global public health is in medical school and is took this year to be a media fellow at Stanford University. She’s also a TEDMED scholar.

Credit:AmyFaithHoMD

Credit:AmyFaithHoMD

 

Amy Faith Ho, MD is an emergency medicine physician, writer and speaker with a strong interest in health policy. She is currently working in a busy urban medical center in Chicago. She talks about gang violence and it’s impact on women. She said that on weekends, “Its’ when the ER turns into a morgue” and tells us why every ER physician has PTSD.

Listen to this interview by clicking here:

amyho

 

 

 

 

 

Credit:PriyaRaja

Credit:PriyaRaja

 

 

Priya Raja is a second year medical student at The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas and this year is a fellow in the Stanford-ABC News Fellowship in Media and Global Health. She’s policy focused and understands the power of multimedia and storytelling in influencing health and health policy. As a fellow, she spent time earlier this year in New Dehli reporting on the World Health’s Organization’s celebration of India’s most recent public health achievement, the elimination of yaws, a chronic disfiguring infectious disease. She shares that people say “yaws begans where the road ends” implying it hits populations hardest in the most impoverished communities globally.

Listen to the interview by clicking here:

priyaraja

 

HealthCetera airs on WBAI Pacifica radio WBAI 99.5 FM and streamed live on www.wbai.org on Thursday, December 8th at 1:00 PM.

 

We were asked to complete the question “what if” and the answer was posted on our name tags. TBW\WorldHealth was on hand in the HIVE turning our “what if” answers into tweets with original art. Here’s mine below.

Credit:TBWA\WorldHealth

Credit:TBWA\WorldHealth

Being at this year's TEDMED fired up neurons