Kansikuva näyttelystä Social Rounds

Social Rounds

Podcast by Hippocratic Collective

englanti

Teknologia & tieteet

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Two of the happiest surgeon dropouts you’ll ever meet, Tony Chin-Quee, MD and Frances Mei Hardin, MD, have traded the OR for the mic. On Social Rounds, they give their wildly unsolicited opinions on the state of medicine, the absurdities of healthcare culture, and the chaos of the world at large. From inside-baseball medical news to pop culture drama, space doctors to Taylor Swift, no topic is too sacred (or too ridiculous) to roast, dissect, and laugh about. Smart, irreverent, and occasionally unhinged, Social Rounds is what happens when surgeons leave the scalpel behind and decide to say everything out loud.

Kaikki jaksot

39 jaksot

jakson Doctors, Medfluencers & Career Suicide on the Internet kansikuva

Doctors, Medfluencers & Career Suicide on the Internet

A fourth-year medical student goes viral for offensive videos targeting women’s health, and the internet exploded. In this episode of Social Rounds, Tony Chin-Quee, Dr. Ryan Montoya, and Dr. Janet McMordie unpack the controversy, the rise of medfluencers, professionalism in medicine, and whether physicians should be held to a higher standard online. The trio dives into the blurred line between personal branding and professional identity, the dangers of parasocial fame, physician social media culture, and how online behavior can impact trust, hiring, and patient care. Plus: a chaotic round of “Hire or Fire?” featuring doctors posting OR content, real estate side hustles, political rallies, and more. Topics include: * The medfluencer era * Social media professionalism in medicine * Women’s health and misogyny in healthcare * Parasocial relationships online * Physician identity beyond medicine * Should doctors be “cancelable”? * Privacy, branding, and internet permanence * Why some doctors leave medicine entirely Social Rounds is a podcast from the Hippocratic Collective [https://hippocratic-collective.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com] exploring medicine, culture, internet chaos, and everything in between. Hosted by: Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat Ryan Montoya: @ryan_montoya_art Janet McMordie: @janetmcmordie Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

Eilen - 43 min
jakson Big Map Conspiracies, Victorian Cholera, and Finding Work You Actually Love kansikuva

Big Map Conspiracies, Victorian Cholera, and Finding Work You Actually Love

This week on Social Rounds, Tony and Frances Mei are joined by fan-favorite “Cartographer Geoff” — historian, mapmaker, professional forager, jam-maker, and accidental proof that people can actually enjoy their jobs. What starts as a conversation about whether children should follow their parents into medicine spirals into a surprisingly deep discussion about maps as instruments of power, colonialism, propaganda, redlining, Victorian cholera outbreaks, and why the Mercator projection might have subtly rewired all our brains. Geoff also explains how he turned a PhD on colonial-era beeswax extraction into a dream career making historical maps for places like the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Along the way: * Why almost no physicians want their kids to become doctors * The hidden emotional bargain of “settling” for prestigious careers * The terrifying influence of Big Map * The real story behind John Snow’s cholera map * Stardew Valley as an aspirational lifestyle blueprint * Why Frances Mei is emotionally destabilized by someone genuinely liking their work Also featuring: “Frances Frizzante Mei,” anxiety hobbits, sea monster maps, and the phrase “everything in the world is about maps except maps; maps are about power.” Hosted by: Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat Frances Mei Hardin: @francesmeimd Guest: Cartographer Geoff Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

15. touko 2026 - 38 min
jakson CTE, Football Culture & The Science of Farts kansikuva

CTE, Football Culture & The Science of Farts

What do the NFL, brain damage, and fart tracking have in common? More than you’d think. In this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei Hardin and Tony Chin-Quee are joined again by writer and comedian Joel Walkowski to break down two wildly different, but oddly connected, stories: the long-term consequences of head trauma in contact sports, and the surprisingly scientific world of human flatulence. From new research on chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) to the cultural machine behind football, this conversation dives into the cost of entertainment, masculinity, and systems that produce “broken bodies” for spectacle. Then, in a sharp left turn: wearable “fart sensors,” digestion data, and what it reveals about the human body—and relationships. This episode covers: * New research on brain injury in football and combat sports * The cultural and class dynamics behind the NFL * Why harmful systems persist despite known risks * What CTE actually does to the brain * The science behind flatulence (yes, really) * Relationship dynamics: how “comfortable” is too comfortable? It’s medicine, culture, and chaos—exactly as intended. Hosted by: Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat Frances Mei Hardin: @francesmeimd Guest: Joel Walkowski Connect with Joel: @joelwalkowski Find his book, Honolulu Blues, available for pre-order now: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Honolulu-Blues/Joel-Walkowski/9781637749043 Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

8. touko 2026 - 34 min
jakson Burnout, Alcohol & Addiction in Medicine (The Truth No One Says) kansikuva

Burnout, Alcohol & Addiction in Medicine (The Truth No One Says)

What happens when burnout, trauma, and “just getting through the week” collide with alcohol culture in medicine? In this episode of Social Rounds, Frances Mei Hardin and Tony Chin-Quee sit down with writer, comedian, and sobriety facilitator Joel Walkowski to unpack a question most physicians never ask out loud: Do we all need an intervention? From “forgetting juice” in residency to the normalization of heavy drinking, this conversation dives into how environment shapes behavior—and how easy it is to rationalize habits that might be quietly costing more than they give. Joel shares a candid look at addiction, recovery, and the psychology behind behavior change, including why high-performing professionals are especially good at talking themselves out of a problem. This episode covers: * Why drinking is so normalized in medical training * The line between “recreational” and problematic use * How environment accelerates addiction patterns * The concept of a personal “cost-benefit analysis” * Why physicians struggle to recognize their own red flags * Actionable ways to reassess habits without blowing up your life If you’ve ever thought, “This is just what everyone does”—this one’s for you. Hosted by: Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat Frances Mei Hardin: @francesmeimd Guest: Joel Walkowski Connect with Joel: @joelwalkowski Find his book, Honolulu Blues, available for pre-order now: https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/Honolulu-Blues/Joel-Walkowski/9781637749043 Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

1. touko 2026 - 38 min
jakson Can Philosophy Fix Residency? Hedons, Burnout, and the Ethics of Residency Training kansikuva

Can Philosophy Fix Residency? Hedons, Burnout, and the Ethics of Residency Training

This week on Social Rounds, we’re joined by returning fan favorite Dr. Kate Buhrke—rogue agent of chaos and resident philosopher—to answer a deceptively simple question: can philosophy actually make the pain of medicine make sense? What starts as required reading quickly spirals into a full-blown debate on utilitarianism, Kantian ethics, and whether the system of medical training is justified simply because it “works” for most people. Along the way, we try (and struggle) to define what a hedon unit is, question whether residency is ethically defensible, and confront the uncomfortable reality that medicine may be built on competing moral frameworks with no clear answer. We also get into: * Why philosophy feels both clarifying and completely useless * The ethics behind the Match and graduate medical education * Whether outcomes alone justify suffering in training * Aristotle’s “middle path” and what it means for modern physicians * The Ship of Theseus and what it says about identity, change, and who we become in medicine Equal parts thoughtful and unhinged, this episode lives in the tension between wanting answers and realizing there might not be any. Subscribe, rate, and follow Social Rounds for more conversations at the intersection of medicine, culture, and everything we weren’t taught—but should’ve been. Hosted by: Tony Chin-Quee: @wheyouat Frances Mei Hardin: @francesmeimd Guest: Kate Burhke, DO Connect with Kate: https://www.hippocratic-collective.com/members/kate-buhrke-do Produced by: The Hippocratic Collective

24. huhti 2026 - 34 min
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