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

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts112/v4/19/c5/cc/19c5cca4-0946-9473-f747-2675fce42e73/mza_2848794885144382075.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Once Upon A Gene
Effie Parks
345 episodes
1 week ago
As a new parent of a child with a rare genetic syndrome, I was lost. There was no guide. There was no rulebook. This was not what I had imagined. As I navigated my way through this new reality, I realized something that should have been simple, but was not. A truth that had always been there, but that I had lost sight of for a time - I am not alone. And neither are you. These are the stories of my family, and of families like ours. These are the stories of how we have persevered, cried, bonded, and grown. These are the stories of children who have been told that they cannot, and that have proved the world wrong.
Show more...
Personal Journals
Kids & Family,
Society & Culture,
Parenting
RSS
All content for Once Upon A Gene is the property of Effie Parks 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.
As a new parent of a child with a rare genetic syndrome, I was lost. There was no guide. There was no rulebook. This was not what I had imagined. As I navigated my way through this new reality, I realized something that should have been simple, but was not. A truth that had always been there, but that I had lost sight of for a time - I am not alone. And neither are you. These are the stories of my family, and of families like ours. These are the stories of how we have persevered, cried, bonded, and grown. These are the stories of children who have been told that they cannot, and that have proved the world wrong.
Show more...
Personal Journals
Kids & Family,
Society & Culture,
Parenting
https://megaphone.imgix.net/podcasts/96e02dfe-04f7-11f0-ab41-676ef22a46b3/image/db365245130aab9c4bc359cad355fcfd.jpg?ixlib=rails-4.3.1&max-w=3000&max-h=3000&fit=crop&auto=format,compress
Reimagining Pediatric Healthcare: How Imagine Pediatrics is Revolutionizing In-Home Medical Care for Medically Complex Kids and Lightening the Load for Families - Taylor Beery and Jody Copp
Once Upon A Gene
44 minutes
7 months ago
Reimagining Pediatric Healthcare: How Imagine Pediatrics is Revolutionizing In-Home Medical Care for Medically Complex Kids and Lightening the Load for Families - Taylor Beery and Jody Copp
Reimagining Pediatric Care with Imagine Pediatrics For families of medically complex kids, the healthcare system often feels broken—long hospital stays, insurance battles for basic needs, and constant caregiving without real support. But what if there was a better way? In this episode, I’m joined by Taylor Beery, co-founder of Imagine Pediatrics, Jody Copp, a full-time rare disease dad of two boys with Combined oxidative phosphorylation deficiency type 13 associated with a mutation in the PNPT1 gene and whose family has experienced firsthand the impact of their care model. Imagine Pediatrics is changing the game by providing 24/7, in-home, virtual-first medical care designed to keep kids safe at home—not in the hospital. He also has a rad foundation that we will chat about in a future episode: Raising Wheels Foundation If you are in Texas, Florida, and District of Columbia you have access to Imagine Pediatrics! We discuss: 💙 The problems with the current healthcare system for medically complex kids 💙 Why "safe days at home" should be the goal of pediatric care 💙 How Imagine Pediatrics partners with families rather than making them fight for care 💙 The economic case for home-based care and why insurance should want this model 💙 Walker’s legacy— how Taylor’s son inspired a movement to improve pediatric healthcare Kids Join the Fight 🔗 Listen now & share with families who need this
Once Upon A Gene
As a new parent of a child with a rare genetic syndrome, I was lost. There was no guide. There was no rulebook. This was not what I had imagined. As I navigated my way through this new reality, I realized something that should have been simple, but was not. A truth that had always been there, but that I had lost sight of for a time - I am not alone. And neither are you. These are the stories of my family, and of families like ours. These are the stories of how we have persevered, cried, bonded, and grown. These are the stories of children who have been told that they cannot, and that have proved the world wrong.