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Connected By Health

Podkast av Krishna Vedala, MD

engelsk

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Connected by Health is a modern healthcare podcast hosted by Krishna Vedala, MD, MPH, MBA, CPE—a board-certified Internal Medicine and Obesity Medicine physician, healthcare executive, and innovation leader based in Oklahoma City. This show explores the intersection of clinical medicine, physician leadership, healthcare operations, AI in healthcare, and data-driven decision-making; all with one goal: creating more connected, effective, and human-centered care. Each episode features conversations with physicians, healthcare executives, innovators, and system leaders on: - Internal Medicine & Obesity Medicine - AI in Healthcare & Health Data Management - Physician Leadership & Practice Management - Healthcare Finance, Business Intelligence & Quality Improvement - Operational Excellence & Lean Six Sigma in healthcare Dr. Vedala brings a rare blend of frontline clinical experience, executive leadership training, and systems-level thinking, helping listeners bridge the gap between medicine, leadership, and innovation. 🎧 Connected by Health is for physicians, healthcare leaders, administrators, and anyone committed to building the future of healthcare together. Connect with Dr. Krishna Vedala 🔗 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drkvedala

Alle episoder

24 Episoder

episode Snapshots with Dr Herschel Brown cover

Snapshots with Dr Herschel Brown

Dr Krishna Vedala is hosting Dr. Herschel Brown, an emergency physician and candidate for Oklahoma House District 99, discusses how front-line clinical experience shapes his view that many of Oklahoma's health problems require legislative solutions. He describes seeing patients at their most dire—mental health crises, substance use, unmanaged chronic disease, and lack of prenatal care—and emphasizes that prevention and access to primary care could reduce emergency visits and downstream costs. Dr Brown identifies three urgent priorities: expanding access to healthcare providers, addressing mental health and addiction resource shortages, and stabilizing rural hospitals. He argues the legislature lacks sufficient clinical voices and calls for funding to recruit and retain physicians and mid-level providers, streamline licensing, support residency programs in underserved areas, expand telehealth, and create a rural hospital stabilization fund. He stresses that health is interlinked with education, economic opportunity, housing, and public safety, and that bipartisan collaboration is necessary to craft practical policies. He favors pragmatic, cross-aisle solutions, town halls to stay connected with constituents, and measurable progress in access and outcomes—particularly maternal health and chronic disease management. If elected, Dr Brown would measure success by visible improvements in resources and access for constituents: more local providers, stronger rural hospital capacity, better preventive care uptake, and demonstrable declines in preventable emergency cases. He pledges regular community engagement and bipartisan work to implement sustainable policies that improve Oklahoma families' health. Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ──────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

2. juli 2026 - 24 min
episode #21 - Bariatrics and Beyond - Revolutionary Modern Options cover

#21 - Bariatrics and Beyond - Revolutionary Modern Options

Dr Krishna Vedala introduces Dr. Megan Sheppard, a board-certified bariatric and foregut surgeon, and frames the episode around advances in bariatric and foregut surgery and practical guidance for patients considering weight-loss or foregut procedures. Dr. Sheppard's background is summarized: Kansas native, KU medical school, surgical residency in Knoxville, and fellowship in Kansas City focusing on advanced general surgery, bariatric/foregut procedures, advanced endoscopy, and complex revisions. Dr. Sheppard shares a personal motivation for entering bariatrics: her mother's lifelong weight struggle, successful sleeve gastrectomy followed by reflux and conversion to bypass, and the dramatic improvement in activity and quality of life that inspired her surgical path. She emphasizes the wide-ranging social and health benefits of bariatric surgery beyond weight loss, including improvements in diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, and overall function. A major focus is endoscopic sleeve gastroplasty (ESG): an incisionless, endoscopic procedure that sutures the stomach from inside to reduce volume by about 70–80% without resection. Dr. Sheppard outlines the outpatient nature of ESG, the required postoperative full-liquid diet (about four weeks) to allow sutures to heal, its hormonal effects (approx. 30% ghrelin reduction at three months), and generally lower rates of reflux and nutritional deficiencies compared with surgical sleeve gastrectomy. Hiatal hernias and foregut pathology are discussed in detail. Dr. Sheppard explains what a hiatal hernia is, how it causes reflux by pulling stomach and acid into the chest and disrupting the diaphragmatic valve, and the typical diagnostic tools (endoscopy/EGD and CT). She reviews surgical considerations and risks of hiatal hernia repair—recurrence risk due to intrinsic muscle weakness, rare pleural or lung-related complications, and avoidance of injury to esophageal nerves to prevent gastroparesis. Revisional bariatric surgery is highlighted as a rapidly growing area, driven by reflux after sleeve, disease progression, or inadequate long-term weight control. Options include endoscopic revisions (re-tightening), conversion to gastric bypass, or other tailored procedures; choice depends on goals and anatomy. Dr. Sheppard also addresses GLP-1 medications: useful adjuncts that can aid weight loss but have limitations—cost, tolerability, need for ongoing injections, potential GI side effects, and weight regain after discontinuation—so surgery remains a vital, durable tool. Finally, Dr. Sheppard offers practical advice: patients should choose surgeons/programs that invest in long-term follow-up and offer a full "toolbox" of procedures rather than a single option; the best outcomes occur with the right initial operation. For trainees, she encourages persistence through residency and fellowship, noting surgery is demanding but compatible with family life and ultimately rewarding. Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ──────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

29. juni 2026 - 30 min
episode #20 - Integrating Mental Health: Systems, Gaps, & Solutions cover

#20 - Integrating Mental Health: Systems, Gaps, & Solutions

The episode opens with Dr Krishna Vedala introducing Dr. Crystal Hernandez, a forensic psychologist turned system architect and activator with an MBA and over 20 years in behavioral health administration. Dr. Hernandez frames her work as operational — designing and implementing real-world systems that integrate behavioral and physical health rather than only producing policy on paper. Dr. Hernandez shares deeply personal drivers for her mission: the loss of a close friend whose prescription-led addiction trajectory went unaddressed because behavioral health was absent from the care pathway, and growing up with a father in long-term recovery. These experiences motivate her insistence that systems must provide warm handoffs, screening, and continuous behavioral-health involvement to prevent avoidable harm. The conversation emphasizes why integrating mental health into primary care and community systems matters: untreated or misdiagnosed behavioral health conditions worsen physical health, impair relationships, employment, education, housing, and increase downstream costs through emergency care, incarceration, and institutionalization. Mental health exists on a continuum, and lack of coordinated care disproportionately harms those with serious mental illness. Dr. Hernandez outlines common failure points in integration efforts: good intentions and policies often fail in practice because decision-makers miss frontline perspectives. True integration requires people who understand day-to-day operations at the table, standardized parity in practice (not just law), workable billing and payer rules, and pragmatic implementation that translates policy into improved access and outcomes. Workforce shortages, especially in psychiatrists and psychologists, and gaps in data and funding accountability are recurring themes. Dr. Hernandez praises models like CCBHCs and 988 but warns that pilot/adoption without robust infrastructure, standardized data collection, and ROI measurement leads to uneven quality. She urges investments in training, specialization, standardized metrics, 1115 waivers for re-entry, and protections for promising models. The episode closes with Dr. Hernandez discussing her forthcoming book Obedience for a Paycheck (to diagnose and remediate toxic workplace cultures), encouragement for people to enter the broad behavioral-health field, and a concrete policy wish list: stabilize state mental-health agencies, standardize CCBHC data/reporting, expand specialty courts, integrate intellectual/developmental disability and behavioral-health services, reduce out‑of‑state placements for children, and create actionable pathways for re‑entry — all aimed at making integration real, person-centered, and measurably effective. Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ──────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

22. juni 2026 - 39 min
episode #19 From Numb to Unnumb: Reclaiming Purpose and Compassion cover

#19 From Numb to Unnumb: Reclaiming Purpose and Compassion

Dr Krishna Vedala opens the episode by introducing Dr. Stephanie Byerly, an anesthesiologist-turned-coach who helps people move past numbness to reclaim clarity, purpose, and meaning. He frames the conversation around the common existential question—"Is this all there is?"—and highlights Dr. Byerly's focus on supporting people through burnout, loss, and loss of direction. The introduction sets the tone for a discussion that bridges medicine, coaching, and trauma-informed personal transformation. Dr. Byerly describes her dual career: 25 years in academic anesthesiology while training as an ICF-certified coach, speaker, and founder of UnNumb Coaching Collective. She explains that while anesthesia allowed her to help patients in acute moments, coaching offered a way to support ongoing, life-long change. Her coaching blends life, leadership, women-centered, and trauma-informed approaches to help clients show up more fully in every conversation and relationship. A central theme is numbness as a survival strategy rooted in trauma and early nervous-system programming. Dr. Byerly explains how trauma—both "big-T" and "little-t"—can force the body into protective states (fight/flight/freeze) and lead people to live physically present but emotionally absent. She also highlights social and gendered pressures that lead many high-achieving women to shrink themselves or substitute achievement for worth, perpetuating disconnection and chronic numbness. Dr. Byerly outlines the UnNumb method as more than goal-setting: true transformation requires identity-level change. Her work uncovers internalized barriers—family-of-origin patterns, cultural conditioning, and subconscious "operating systems"—and uses targeted behaviors and new habits to rewire identity. She emphasizes trauma-awareness, small exposure to visibility and discomfort, and practical behavior change so clients shift from numbed survival to intentional, felt living. Toward the end, Dr. Byerly previews her upcoming TEDx talk about her own epiphany—realizing she had been numb after a psychodrama exercise—and stresses the ripple effects of understanding trauma (including ACE scores and vicarious trauma from media). Her closing advice urges radical self-compassion and inner work for anyone entering caregiving or healing professions: you must begin with your own healing so helping others doesn't become a substitute for self-worth. Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ──────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

15. juni 2026 - 20 min
episode #18 - Protecting Tomorrow: Tackling Gun Violence with Science, Data and Empathy cover

#18 - Protecting Tomorrow: Tackling Gun Violence with Science, Data and Empathy

Krishna Vedala interviews Po Murray, co-founder and chairwoman of the Newtown Action Alliance, about community-led and policy-driven efforts to prevent gun violence. She frames gun violence as a public health crisis, sharing that her advocacy began after the 2012 Sandy Hook massacre, and describing the Alliance's work supporting survivors, organizing vigils, and pushing for evidence-based reforms. The conversation is set during National Gun Violence Awareness Month and underscores the human and communal toll of both high-profile mass shootings and everyday firearm deaths. li_p]:m-0 [&_li>ol]:mt-3 [&_li>ul]:mt-3 [&_hr]:border-core-borders-default [&_hr]:my-3 [&_hr]:border-t-[1.5px] [&_hr]:border-r-0 [&_hr]:border-b-0 [&_hr]:border-l-0 [&_blockquote]:border-core-borders-default [&_blockquote]:text-core-foreground-secondary [&_blockquote]:border-l-4 [&_blockquote]:pl-4 [&_blockquote]:italic [&_blockquote_p:first-of-type]:before:content-[open-quote] [&_blockquote_p:last-of-type]:after:content-[close-quote] [&_h1]:mt-4 [&_h1]:mb-3 [&_h1]:text-4xl [&_h1]:leading-tight [&_h1]:font-bold [&_h1]:tracking-wide [&_h2]:mt-4 [&_h2]:mb-3 [&_h2]:text-3xl [&_h2]:leading-tight [&_h2]:font-semibold [&_h2]:tracking-wide [&_h3]:mt-4 [&_h3]:mb-3 [&_h3]:text-2xl [&_h3]:leading-tight [&_h3]:font-semibold [&_h3]:tracking-wide [&_h4]:mt-4 [&_h4]:mb-3 [&_h4]:font-semibold [&_h5]:mt-4 [&_h5]:mb-3 [&_h5]:font-semibold [&_img]:my-3 [&_figure>*]:my-0 [&_video]:my-8 [&_figure]:my-8 [&_:not(pre)>code]:before:content-["`"] [&_:not(pre)>code]:after:content-["`"] [&_pre_code]:before:content-none [&_pre_code]:after:content-none [&_a_code]:text-inherit [&_h1_code]:text-inherit [&_h2_code]:text-inherit [&_h3_code]:text-inherit [&_h4_code]:text-inherit [&_blockquote_code]:text-inherit [&_thead_th_code]:text-inherit [&_hr+*]:mt-0 [&_h2+*]:mt-0 [&_h3+*]:mt-0 [&_h4+*]:mt-0 [&_table]:w-full [&_table]:table-auto [&_table]:border-separate [&_table]:border-spacing-0 [&_table]:text-left [&_table]:block [&_table]:overflow-x-auto [&_thead]:bg-core-surface-secondary [&_thead_th]:border-core-borders-default [&_thead_th]:border [&_thead_th]:p-2.5 [&_thead_th]:px-4 [&_thead_th]:text-sm [&_thead_th:first-child]:rounded-tl-lg [&_thead_th:last-child]:rounded-tr-lg [&_thead_th:not(:first-child)]:border-l-0 [&_tbody_td]:border-core-borders-default [&_tbody_td]:border [&_tbody_td]:border-t-0 [&_tbody_td]:p-2.5 [&_tbody_td]:px-4 [&_tbody_td:not(:first-child)]:border-l-0 [&_tbody_tr:last-child_td:first-child]:rounded-bl-lg [&_tbody_tr:last-child_td:last-child]:rounded-br-lg *:first:mt-0 *:last:mb-0"> Ms Murray challenges common misconceptions about gun-violence prevention, stressing that advocates seek to reduce deaths and injuries—not confiscate firearms. She highlights proven interventions such as universal background checks, safe-storage laws, extreme risk protection orders, and limits on assault-style weapons. Ms Murray also emphasizes the wide reach of gun harm, pointing out that about 110 people die daily from firearms and that two-thirds of gun deaths are suicides, illustrating the need for comprehensive prevention strategies. The guests discuss political barriers to reform, noting that while there is strong public support for many common-sense measures, partisan dynamics and lobbying influence have stymied broader action. She cites the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act as an example of progress—especially its funding for community violence intervention programs and expanded checks for younger buyers—but warns that policy gains are vulnerable to political reversal. She stresses the importance of sustained funding and political will to maintain reductions in firearm homicide rates. Ms Murray outlines practical community and individual steps to reduce gun harm: engage elected officials, attend local meetings, volunteer with prevention organizations, promote safe-storage practices, and vote for candidates who prioritize safety. She recommends approaching conversations across the political divide with shared values and stories, focusing on keeping children and families safe. She also notes specific risk statistics—such as increased domestic homicide risk when a gun is present—to support evidence-based persuasion. The interview closes with a clear call to action: honor victims with tangible policy change and civic participation. Ms Murray urges listeners not to be apathetic, reminding them of the power of voice and vote to protect lives. Vedala reiterates the framing of gun violence as a national public-health disaster that requires collective, nonpartisan effort to safeguard future generations. Where Health, Society, and Innovation Intersect Connected by Health is a forward-thinking podcast built on a simple but powerful truth: healthcare is not a cost to be cut — it is an investment that shapes the future of everything around us. Millions of people struggle with healthcare challenges each year — whether it's lack of insurance, unaffordable costs, limited access to care, or managing chronic disease — affecting not only their health, but their financial stability and overall quality of life. Their stories are not isolated — they are all connected. From economic growth and workforce productivity to education, technology, national security, and community stability, health is the thread weaving them together. Each episode blends real-world stories with data-driven insight to show how strategic healthcare investment drives innovation, reduces long-term costs, strengthens public health infrastructure, and fuels economic resilience. Grounded in evidence but driven by purpose, Connected by Health reframes healthcare not as a line item expense, but as foundational infrastructure — because when we invest in health, we invest in people, potential, and the strength of our entire society. ──────────────────────────────────────── 🤝 If today's conversation resonated with you, share it with someone who needs to hear it. ⭐ If you found value in this episode, please take a moment to leave a review, it truly makes a difference. 🎧 And don't forget to follow the podcast on your favorite platform so you never miss a new episode when it drops.

10. juni 2026 - 21 min
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