Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Business
Society & Culture
History
Sports
Health & Fitness
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts221/v4/c8/f8/b1/c8f8b172-32b1-6971-122d-ece25d2d6937/mza_6515121940111752900.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
LSE Health Talks
LSE Department of Health Policy
8 episodes
7 months ago
Antimicrobials are essential to modern medicine, not just for treating active bacterial infections but during routine procedures such as caesarean sections, organ transplants or chemotherapy. In recent decades, there has been a lack of development of new antibiotics and old ones are becoming ineffective. Our guests, Dame Sally Davies and Dr Avi Cherla argue that without new antibiotics, along with a marked change in the way we use existing treatments, the impact of antimicrobial...
Show more...
Education
RSS
All content for LSE Health Talks is the property of LSE Department of Health Policy and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Antimicrobials are essential to modern medicine, not just for treating active bacterial infections but during routine procedures such as caesarean sections, organ transplants or chemotherapy. In recent decades, there has been a lack of development of new antibiotics and old ones are becoming ineffective. Our guests, Dame Sally Davies and Dr Avi Cherla argue that without new antibiotics, along with a marked change in the way we use existing treatments, the impact of antimicrobial...
Show more...
Education
Episodes (8/8)
LSE Health Talks
8. The race against antimicrobial resistance: Fighting a silent killer
Antimicrobials are essential to modern medicine, not just for treating active bacterial infections but during routine procedures such as caesarean sections, organ transplants or chemotherapy. In recent decades, there has been a lack of development of new antibiotics and old ones are becoming ineffective. Our guests, Dame Sally Davies and Dr Avi Cherla argue that without new antibiotics, along with a marked change in the way we use existing treatments, the impact of antimicrobial...
Show more...
3 years ago
38 minutes

LSE Health Talks
7. High-cost, high-need research: Comparing the patient journey in national health systems
The way health care systems are funded, structured, and operationalised differs vastly across countries, which makes it challenging to understand how a given health care system performs compared to its neighbours. Our guest, Dr Irene Papanicolas, argues that deriving an understanding of how health systems deliver care to vulnerable patient groups can play an important role to encourage policy transfer and mutual learning. Hosts Dr Rocco Friebel Dr Tom Hannah&n...
Show more...
3 years ago
25 minutes

LSE Health Talks
6. How much is too much? Financing health systems in the 21st century
Spending on healthcare has accelerated in countries across the world, yet there appears to be no obvious systematic pattern with the way health systems operate and the quality of care they provide. Our guest, Dr Zeynep Or tries to answer some of the most pressing questions: how can we finance our health systems in the future, and will we be able to afford it? Hosts Dr Rocco Friebel Dr Tom Hannah Guests Dr Zeynep Or (Research Director at the Institute for Res...
Show more...
3 years ago
29 minutes

LSE Health Talks
5. Brain-drain in Africa: Personal stories and reflections with Nigerian doctors
Africa has the severest form of health care workforce shortages in the world. Yet, once qualified, many health care professionals leave their home countries. What are the push and pull factors for qualified healthcare professionals to stay or leave Nigeria, and what impact has the ‘brain drain’ on those who are left behind? Our guests, Dr Sa’id and Dr Aminah argue that brain drain presents as a curse and opportunity, but beneficiaries of migration must do more to support countries that ar...
Show more...
3 years ago
33 minutes

LSE Health Talks
4. NHS under pressure: finding the right balance between public sector needs and private sector resilience
More than 5 million people are waiting for an elective surgery in the English National Health Service, and it will require innovative arrangements and policies to address patient need. Dr Michael Anderson from the London School of Economics argues that the independent sector, in other words private providers, could be one piece of the puzzle to get a handle on waiting times. Host Dr Rocco Friebel Guest Dr Michael Anderson (The London School of Economics and Politica...
Show more...
4 years ago
32 minutes

LSE Health Talks
3. Drug and Vaccine Development in Africa: unanswered ambitions or future reality?
The current pandemic has created the urgent need to supply vaccines and therapeutics fast and at large scale – though many countries are unable to procure sufficient medicines for their populations. Dr Abebaw Fekadu from the Center for Innovative Drug Development and Therapeutic Trials for Africa shares his insights into the landscape for drug discovery and development in Africa. What are the opportunities created by the pandemic - if any? And what are the concrete steps n...
Show more...
4 years ago
53 minutes

LSE Health Talks
2. Left to die? The impact of COVID-19 on the long-term care sector
The long-term care sector has been off the radar from policymakers, politicians, and the public in many countries and for many years – until now. Adelina Comas-Herrera from the London School of Economics argues that the COVID-19 pandemic has opened a window of opportunity to address some of the fundamental issues faced by the long-term care sector internationally.
Show more...
4 years ago
32 minutes

LSE Health Talks
1. Universal Basic Income: Pathway to a healthy society?
Countries across the world have seen surges in popularity for new financial redistributive policies that aim to tackle inequalities in a completely new way. By refocusing the debate around health, my guests argue Universal Basic Income can create a healthier, more sustainable world for individuals and society. Hosts Dr Rocco Friebel Tom Hannah Guests Professor Matthew Johnson (Professor in Politics, Lancaster University) Michael Pugh (Director and co-founder of Basic Income Conversation) ...
Show more...
4 years ago
52 minutes

LSE Health Talks
Antimicrobials are essential to modern medicine, not just for treating active bacterial infections but during routine procedures such as caesarean sections, organ transplants or chemotherapy. In recent decades, there has been a lack of development of new antibiotics and old ones are becoming ineffective. Our guests, Dame Sally Davies and Dr Avi Cherla argue that without new antibiotics, along with a marked change in the way we use existing treatments, the impact of antimicrobial...