Inspired To Heal

Infectious Outbreak Responses Inform Opioid Crisis Control

41 min · 30 jun 2026
aflevering Infectious Outbreak Responses Inform Opioid Crisis Control artwork

Beschrijving

How do lessons from combating Ebola and MERS stop opioid overdoses? Former Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner and CDC official, Dr. Allison Arwady, reveals how applied public health methods can defeat the deadliest drug epidemic in U.S. history.  The illicit drug trade changed forever with the increased introduction of synthetic opioids. Opioid overdoses quickly became the leading cause of death among young adults, eventually claiming over 100,000 American lives per year. Discover how Dr. Arwady responded to the opioid overdose crisis like a lethal infectious disease outbreak, using frontline epidemiology and data-driven pandemic response tactics to save lives. Additional guest information & links to podcast platforms are available at www.inspiredtoheal.net.  Please like and follow us on your favorite platform. Contact us with feedback and suggestions through the website.

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Alle afleveringen

42 afleveringen

aflevering Infectious Outbreak Responses Inform Opioid Crisis Control artwork

Infectious Outbreak Responses Inform Opioid Crisis Control

How do lessons from combating Ebola and MERS stop opioid overdoses? Former Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner and CDC official, Dr. Allison Arwady, reveals how applied public health methods can defeat the deadliest drug epidemic in U.S. history.  The illicit drug trade changed forever with the increased introduction of synthetic opioids. Opioid overdoses quickly became the leading cause of death among young adults, eventually claiming over 100,000 American lives per year. Discover how Dr. Arwady responded to the opioid overdose crisis like a lethal infectious disease outbreak, using frontline epidemiology and data-driven pandemic response tactics to save lives. Additional guest information & links to podcast platforms are available at www.inspiredtoheal.net.  Please like and follow us on your favorite platform. Contact us with feedback and suggestions through the website.

30 jun 202641 min
aflevering Preventing Hepatitis: WHO's International Injection Interventions artwork

Preventing Hepatitis: WHO's International Injection Interventions

How do global public health leaders stop the spread of bloodborne viruses? In this episode of the Inspired To Heal podcast, host Dr. William Trick sits down with Dr. Yvan Hutin from the World Health Organization (WHO) to expose how unsafe injection practices—like reusing syringes and sharing contaminated medication vials—drive global Hepatitis B and C transmission. Discover how a strategic public health campaign to improve injection safety developed through insights from the WHO and CDC (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) improved the safety of healthcare, preventing transmission of hepatitis and HIV, and hear about Dr. Hutin's impact evaluation of hepatitis B immunization to prevent cirrhosis and cancer for the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI) in China. Additional guest information & links to podcast platforms are available at www.inspiredtoheal.net.  Please like and follow us on your favorite platform. Contact us with feedback and suggestions through the website.

16 jun 202639 min
aflevering CDC's Early Investigations into HIV-AIDS in New York City: Defining the Pandemic artwork

CDC's Early Investigations into HIV-AIDS in New York City: Defining the Pandemic

In this episode, I sit down with Dr. Pauline "Polly" Thomas, who began her career with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in New York City in 1981—the exact year the HIV/AIDS crisis first surfaced in public health reports.  As one of the world's first medical field investigators, Dr. Thomas worked on the front lines to identify how the virus spread. Her evaluations were instrumental in proving that HIV was transmitted via blood and body fluids rather than casual contact.  She was in the field for critical early investigations identifying transmission by intravenous (IV) drug use, heterosexual contact, mother-to-infant transmission, and blood transfusions. She also evaluated a possible link to alkyl nitrites ("poppers") and the controversial classification of Haitian nationality as a risk factor.  Most importantly, Dr. Thomas's persistent research proved that HIV could not be transmitted through casual contact, a discovery that fundamentally protected human rights and combated global stigma.  While the world has seen tremendous progress in HIV prevention and treatment, these life-saving advancements now face threats, from underutilized pre-exposure prophylaxis to the withdrawal from the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), the program launched by President George W. Bush in 2003 that has saved millions of lives worldwide. Additional guest information & links to podcast platforms are available at www.inspiredtoheal.net.  Please like and follow us on your favorite platform. Contact us with feedback and suggestions through the website.

2 jun 202632 min
aflevering ER Toxicology: Poisonous Pleasures—Rat Poison & Pufferfish artwork

ER Toxicology: Poisonous Pleasures—Rat Poison & Pufferfish

Dr. Steven Aks led the Toxicology Division and served as a physician in the legendary Emergency Department at Cook County Hospital—the real-life Pitt. As the frontline expert for life-threatening poisonings, he managed fentanyl overdoses, rat poison laced synthetic cannabinoids, and accidental ingestion of puffer-fish (Fugu). Human curiosity, thrill-seeking, and desperation continually fueled new threats, many of which uncovered larger outbreaks solved through investigations by the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention and the Illinois Department of Health. Additional guest information & links to podcast platforms are available at www.inspiredtoheal.net.  Please like and follow us on your favorite platform. Contact us with feedback and suggestions through the website.

19 mei 202638 min
aflevering An Epidemiologist Gives Back to His Pancreatic Cancer Team artwork

An Epidemiologist Gives Back to His Pancreatic Cancer Team

What happens when an epidemiologist becomes a patient? Dr. Juan Alonso-Echanove spent most of his career in public health, including using epidemiologic principles to prevent firearm-related deaths in Puerto Rico.  After Juan was treated for pancreatic cancer, he chose to give back. Through lending his research skills and his public health mantra "information for action” to clinical oncology, he is helping his care team study the outcomes of cancer patients and how best to refine the healthcare journey for future patients. In this episode, he describes his public health career, his experience being treated for pancreatic cancer, and what he thinks the United States healthcare system should import from Spain.  Additional guest information & links to podcast platforms are available at www.inspiredtoheal.net.  Please like and follow us on your favorite platform. Contact us with feedback and suggestions through the website.

5 mei 202636 min