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The GROklahoma Podcast Show

Podcast de groklahomapodcast

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Tecnología y ciencia

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Our podcast takes you on a journey to explore the different resources and support available for clinical and translational research in Oklahoma. We’ll speak with experts in the field, as well as researchers who have benefited from these resources. Join us as we discuss funding opportunities, collaboration tools, regulatory support, and more. Whether you’re just starting out in the field or are a seasoned researcher, our podcast is here to help you discover the resources available to support your work. From access to state-of-the-art equipment to networking opportunities with other researchers and clinicians, mentoring tips, our podcast covers a wide range of topics related to clinical and translational research resources in Oklahoma.

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29 episodios

episode The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Line That Never Crosses: On Milk, Miles, and the Mothers in Between – The One with Jaclyn Huxford: Episode 28 (2026) artwork

The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Line That Never Crosses: On Milk, Miles, and the Mothers in Between – The One with Jaclyn Huxford: Episode 28 (2026)

Jaclyn Huxford grew up in Goldthwaite, Texas: 38 classmates, 4-H projects, and a family that raised sheep. She learned early that if a baby lamb didn't get colostrum in the first twenty-four hours, it usually didn't make it. That wasn't a lesson. That was Tuesday. And it turns out, it was the beginning of a public health career. Today, she runs the Oklahoma Breastfeeding Hotline — 24/7, staffed only by board-certified lactation consultants, serving families across one of the most rural states in the country. She's a mother of three who applies this knowledge daily, a registered dietitian, an IBCLC, and the person who once used her personal cell to call back a military family in Japan on Easter Sunday because the hotline doesn't take holidays. She has been the driving force behind expanding it to include texting, telehealth, and multilingual support statewide. In this episode, Jaclyn gets real about what lactation care looks like when families can't drive three hours, can't afford out-of-pocket consultants, and are calling at 2 am with a crying baby and a crying grandmother. She talks about the PUMP Act closing loopholes that left working mothers unprotected, why free telehealth may be the most direct equity tool available right now, and her vision for a world where a lactation visit is as routine as the two-week pediatric check-up. One of the most honest stretches of this conversation happens when she’s asked about AI. She doesn’t dismiss it. She can see exactly where it could help — quick medication questions, 24/7 access, and reducing unnecessary ER visits. But she’s also watched the consumerism around breastfeeding spiral into something that could overwhelm any new mother, sleep-deprived and scrolling at midnight. And she’s cautious about what happens when AI adds to that noise instead of cutting through it. Throughout the conversation, Jaclyn reflects on the policy wins her network has fought for, the cross-organizational relationships that make Oklahoma’s lactation ecosystem function, and her vision for a future in which a telehealth visit with a lactation consultant is as routine as the two-week pediatric check-up. She also tells a story about a high-risk mother she met virtually during pregnancy, texted through the newborn period, and watched keep her baby out of the NICU. That one’s worth the whole episode. This conversation came to us through Becky Mannel (Ep. 22), who recommended Jaclyn the moment her own recording wrapped. If you haven't heard that episode, start there. These two are a single arc. If you care about maternal health, rural access, health technology, or what it looks like when a small team refuses to quit — this one’s for you.   “Do you know what the Oklahoma Breastfeeding Hotline is?” 1-877-271-MILK  •  Text OK2BF to 61222   The GROklahoma Podcast is an initiative of the Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translational Resources (OSCTR). New episodes amplify the people and programs shaping the future of clinical and translational research in Oklahoma and beyond. GROklahomapodcast@ouhsc.edu  •  GROklahomapodcast@gmail.com  •  @groklahomapodcast

29 de abr de 2026 - 55 min
episode The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Fulbright Year That Changes Everything: On Leaving, Belonging, and Coming Home Different – The One with Dr. Rita Keresztesi: Episode 27 (2026) artwork

The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Fulbright Year That Changes Everything: On Leaving, Belonging, and Coming Home Different – The One with Dr. Rita Keresztesi: Episode 27 (2026)

What if one of the most important investments you could make in your research career wasn’t a grant, a publication, or a promotion but a year that quietly rewires everything? Welcome to the first episode of 2026. I’m recording this from Seoul, South Korea, in the final months of my Fulbright U.S. Presidential STEM Scholar appointment. I came here to study cancer survivorship across cultures. What I didn’t expect was how deeply this experience would reshape how I think about research itself: who it serves, where it happens, and what we miss when we never leave the building. I didn’t want to tell this story alone. So, I’m joined by Dr. Rita Keresztesi, Professor of English at the University of Oklahoma and former Fulbright Ambassador, who took a Fulbright to Burkina Faso in 2010 and never came back the same. We come from completely different disciplines, humanities and clinical science, but Fulbright forced both of us to confront the same questions about purpose, belonging, and what it means to do meaningful work across borders. Rita was also one of the first people I called when I was preparing my own application. She didn’t give me the polished version; she gave me the real one. What it would cost, what it would give me, and what I'd need to survive it. And now I get to share that conversation with you. Together, we unpack how Fulbright actually works: from Post vs. Commission structures and protected research time to what makes an application competitive. We also talk about loneliness, re-entry shock, and how global immersion can expand the way researchers design work that truly reaches communities. This episode is for the student, the researcher, the faculty member, the dreamer, anyone who has ever felt called to something bigger, more global, more human. This one sat with me for months. I hope it sits with you too.   The GROklahoma Podcast is an initiative of the Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translational Resources (OSCTR).

26 de mar de 2026 - 1 h 21 min
episode The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Work Behind the Work: Community, Care, and Networking – The One with Dr. Dee Terrell: Episode 26 (2025) artwork

The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Work Behind the Work: Community, Care, and Networking – The One with Dr. Dee Terrell: Episode 26 (2025)

In this year-end episode, we sit down with Dr. Deirdra "Dee" Terrell, a Professor of Epidemiology at the Hudson College of Public Health at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, for a thoughtful conversation about what it really takes to do research that stays connected to people. Dr. Terrell reflects on her journey from growing up in a small rural town in Oklahoma to becoming a clinical epidemiologist whose work focuses on platelet disorders such as immune thrombocytopenia and thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. She shares how family, early experiences with illness, and life outside the lab have shaped her approach to science and leadership. We talk about why listening to patients matters, what qualitative and mixed-methods research can reveal that clinical measures alone often miss, and how research decisions affect people’s daily lives in ways that are not always visible on paper. The conversation also explores mentoring, networking, and community building as relational work. Dr. Terrell shares how meaningful connections, thoughtful sponsorship, and everyday kindness have influenced her path and her approach to guiding students and colleagues. As we close out the year, we reflect on sustainability, rest, and staying grounded while carrying responsibility. This episode is an invitation to pause, take stock, and think about what kind of work, relationships, and values we want to carry into the year ahead. We’ll see you in the new year, ready to keep the conversation going.   The GROklahoma Podcast is an initiative of the Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translational Resources (OSCTR).

23 de dic de 2025 - 1 h 21 min
episode The GROklahoma Podcast Show | Where Data Meets Humanity: Transforming Child Health in Oklahoma – The One with Dr. David Bard: Episode 25 (2025) artwork

The GROklahoma Podcast Show | Where Data Meets Humanity: Transforming Child Health in Oklahoma – The One with Dr. David Bard: Episode 25 (2025)

In this episode, I sit down with Dr. David Bard, Professor, Children’s Health Foundation Endowed Research Chair in Pediatrics, and the Chief Research Informatics Officer at OUHS,  to unpack what it really takes to turn data into action in a state where health disparities run deep. Born in Oklahoma but raised across several states, Dr. Bard brings a uniquely flexible lens to his work at the intersection of psychology, quantitative science, informatics, and implementation. Together, we explore the realities of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), why real-world data is both messy and essential, and how Oklahoma’s rural and underserved communities shape the science in profound ways. From geospatial tools to cross-agency data harmonization, from AI’s promise to its pitfalls, and from “don’t lean on me” mentoring philosophies to the wisdom of simple models, this episode is a masterclass in doing science that actually changes lives. What struck me most was his grounded leadership philosophy: ask questions, stay curious, and lean on the collective expertise around you. In an era of AI, silos, and data overload, that reminder felt like a breath of fresh air. So if you care about health equity, data, or the future of Oklahoma’s children and families, this episode is for you.   The GROklahoma Podcast is an initiative of the Oklahoma Shared Clinical and Translational Resources (OSCTR).

26 de nov de 2025 - 1 h 6 min
episode The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Gauntlet of Research: Lessons in Grit, Innovation, and Academic Medicine – The One with Dr. Courtney W. Houchen: Episode 24 (2025) artwork

The GROklahoma Podcast Show | The Gauntlet of Research: Lessons in Grit, Innovation, and Academic Medicine – The One with Dr. Courtney W. Houchen: Episode 24 (2025)

In this episode, we welcome Dr. Courtney W. Houchen, George Lynn Cross Research Professor and Chair of Oncology at the OU Health Sciences Center. Dr. Houchen’s journey began in Brooklyn, where he was among the first children in the U.S. Head Start program. A love for math, science, and baseball led him to Howard and Atlanta University, where Nobel-trained mentors first introduced him to research. Choosing a summer in the lab over clinical shadowing changed everything as it opened the doors to one of the most competitive fellowships in gastroenterology and instilled in him a lifelong question: not just how to treat patients, but how to cure them. That mindset led to groundbreaking work on cancer stem-like cells, the rare, drug-resistant drivers of tumor growth and metastasis. His discovery led him to file a patent and launch COARE, a biotech company founded to “kill cancer at its core.” In this conversation, Dr. Houchen reflects on: * The gauntlet of research and why mentorship and persistence matter. * The pressures of academic medicine, where revenue often outweighs discovery. * The power of networking, from cold-calling Harvard scientists to building collaborations across disciplines. * The lessons of entrepreneurship, and why learning from others’ mistakes is essential. * The future of research, from AI’s productivity boost to the promise of the immune system as the “holy grail” of science. For Dr. Houchen, joy comes from finding connections that explain scientific phenomena. His parting challenge: How will we re-energize academic medicine? Whether you’re a budding researcher, clinician-entrepreneur, or someone navigating the messy middle of science and academia, this episode offers lessons in grit, discovery, and resilience. Quote to remember: “Even though I just wanted to be a doctor, my goal all my life was to cure cancer.” – Houchen, CW

30 de sep de 2025 - 54 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 ..!!
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