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It's a Lung Story: Aging and Cystic Fibrosis

Podcast de Dr. Ahmet Uluer and Lauren Harvey

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Tecnología y ciencia

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It’s a Lung Story is a podcast about aging with cystic fibrosis, hosted by Ahmet Uluer, DO, MPH, and Lauren Harvey, and produced by Andrea Gavin Becker. As medical advances allow more people with CF to live longer, the show explores what growing old with cystic fibrosis really looks like—the medical, the emotional, and the personal sides. Featuring expert guests and voices from all walks of the CF community, It’s a Lung Story offers honest conversation, lived experience, humor, and everything in between.

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20 episodios

episode "This Is How People Die": Will Cathcart's Novel About CF, Mortality & Stealing Chopin's Heart artwork

"This Is How People Die": Will Cathcart's Novel About CF, Mortality & Stealing Chopin's Heart

What if the future you spent your entire life preparing not to have suddenly became possible? In this episode, Ahmet Uluer, DO, MPH, Lauren Harvey, and Andrea Gavin Becker welcome journalist, war correspondent, and author Will Cathcart, who lives with cystic fibrosis, to discuss his debut novel, This Is How People Die—a literary thriller that blends espionage, romance, and cystic fibrosis into an unforgettable exploration of survival. Together, we explore how Will transformed the realities of growing up with CF into fiction, why survivor's guilt and the CFTR modulator era became central themes in the novel, and how those experiences continue to shape his work around the world and his ongoing fight for equitable access to CF modulators. Also: Anthony Bourdain, Bob Flanagan, and the Gullah legend of the Haint.

30 de jun de 2026 - 1 h 0 min
episode Phage is the Rage: Bacteriophage Therapy for CF artwork

Phage is the Rage: Bacteriophage Therapy for CF

In this episode, Ahmet Uluer, DO, MPH, Andrea Gavin Becker, and Lauren Harvey explore one of the most talked-about emerging therapies in cystic fibrosis care: bacteriophage therapy. They’re joined by Steffanie Strathdee, PhD, infectious disease epidemiologist, co-founder of UC San Diego’s Center for Innovative Phage Applications and Therapeutics, and co-author of the memoir “The Perfect Predator”—to discuss how viruses called bacteriophages help fight dangerous antibiotic-resistant infections. Steffanie shares the story of how phage therapy helped save her husband’s life after he developed a multidrug-resistant superbug infection no antibiotics could treat, and explains why scientists are once again turning to phages after decades of relying almost exclusively on antibiotics. Together, they unpack the science behind phage therapy, the challenges of bringing it into mainstream medicine, and what phage therapy could mean for the CF community, where chronic infections, repeated antibiotic exposure and multi-drug resistance remain major concerns. They’re also joined by Maggie Donovan, who shares her experience becoming one of the first people with CF to receive nebulized phage therapy for chronic MRSA through the FDA compassionate use pathway. Plus: lazy phages, sewage and duck ponds, and why some of the most cutting-edge medicine in the world starts in places most people would never willingly visit—deep in the bowels of large cities!

29 de may de 2026 - 55 min
episode Don’t Slouch on This One! Functional PT & CF artwork

Don’t Slouch on This One! Functional PT & CF

In this episode, we talk with Karen von Berg, a physical therapist at Johns Hopkins who’s spent her career helping people with cystic fibrosis navigate movement, function, and the realities of living in their bodies over time. We go beyond what most people might expect from physical therapy, diving into posture, breathing mechanics, and our favorite, exercise as snacks (really!). We also talk about the pelvic floor (yep, you have one) and its connection to incontinence, pain, and why so many people don’t bring it up. We get into what actually makes an exercise plan stick, why it’s so hard to know where to start, and how the all-or-nothing mindset gets in the way when energy, time, symptoms, or blood sugars don’t cooperate. Andrea and Lauren share their own experiences: what it’s like to lose momentum, struggle with motivation, and find movement that doesn’t look anything like a traditional workout. Also in this episode: weighted hula hoops, backstage bourbon, and Jane Fonda—naturally.

30 de abr de 2026 - 48 min
episode The CF Community & the Chase for a Cure: Bijal P. Trivedi’s “Breath from Salt” artwork

The CF Community & the Chase for a Cure: Bijal P. Trivedi’s “Breath from Salt”

In this episode, we talk with science journalist Bijal Trivedi, author of “Breath from Salt,” the definitive and surprisingly human account of how families, scientists, and clinicians helped transform cystic fibrosis (CF) from a fatal childhood disease into one of the greatest success stories in modern medicine. Joining the conversation is Kate O’Donnell, president of the Joey Fund and sister of Joey O’Donnell, whose life and legacy helped inspire one of the most powerful fundraising movements in the CF community. Bijal shares the story behind the book—how a single interview with Joey’s parents, Joe and Kathy O’Donnell, revealed a much bigger narrative about relentless parents, brilliant scientists, bold philanthropy and the power of community that helped drive breakthroughs like the development of CFTR modulators like Trikafta. Kate reflects on growing up in a family shaped by CF advocacy, what it means to carry that legacy forward, and how the community continues pushing toward treatments for everyone. We talk about the messy, human side of scientific progress: false starts, competing egos, impossible odds, and the moments when one insight can change everything. We also explore the infrastructure that helped make those breakthroughs possible—from centralized CF care centers to the patient registry that allowed researchers to track mutations, outcomes, and treatments across an entire community. Finally, we explore the questions the CF community is asking now: how the story evolves as people live longer, how to support those still waiting for therapies and why the work isn’t finished yet. Also in the episode: trips to the morgue, dark humor and a very special appearance by an English bulldog named Beans.

31 de mar de 2026 - 1 h 13 min
episode Next Generation CF Care: CFRI'S Patrick Nash Fellows Training Program artwork

Next Generation CF Care: CFRI'S Patrick Nash Fellows Training Program

Most people with cystic fibrosis (CF) know their lungs better than anyone. But what happens when living longer means needing care that reaches beyond the lungs? In this episode, our very own Ahmet Uluer, DO, MPH—co-founder of the CFRI Patrick Nash Fellows Program—joins Carolyn Nash to share the story behind the national initiative designed to prepare subspecialists to care for adults growing older with CF. Inspired by Patrick Nash’s legacy, the program was created to tackle one of the most urgent challenges in cystic fibrosis today: a growing mismatch between the number of adults with CF and the specialists prepared to care for them. From GI and liver disease to sinus health and cancer risk, the burden too often falls on patients to educate their own doctors. You’ll hear from inaugural fellows Spyros Zouridis, MD, a gastroenterology and hepatology fellow, and Jessa Miller, MD, a rhinologist and skull-base surgeon focused on sinonasal health. They share their experiences and what surprised them most, along with how centering real patient stories is reshaping the way future specialists learn to care for adults with CF and what it means to build a national network of CF-informed subspecialists. We talk about mentorship, research, and what this could mean for people with CF—now and decades from now. Along the way, you’ll hear about colonoscopy heroics, the ketchup-on-hot-dog controversy, and the fellowship’s true “secret sauce.” The content presented in this podcast is for informational and educational purposes only, and is not intended as medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

27 de feb de 2026 - 55 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
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