Heritage College faculty take to the podcasting airwaves
Podcasting is filling up more and more of the world鈥檚 listening bandwidth, with shows discussing every conceivable topic from politics to fashion to science to entertainment. Alert to this growing trend, some Heritage College faculty members are using the podcast medium to enlighten listeners on important health care issues.
On her monthly show, , professor of the history of medicine Jacqueline Wolf, Ph.D., shares guests鈥 personal stories of 鈥渋llness, accident and recovery.鈥 , co-hosted by associate professor of family medicine Todd Fredricks, D.O. (鈥93), bills itself as a 鈥weekly podcast of all things medical and science.鈥 , the creation of associate professor of health policy Dan Skinner, Ph.D., offers listeners a twice-monthly 鈥湹弁趸崴 health policy and politics report.鈥
鈥淧ractically since its creation, our college has been reaching out beyond the campus to share health care information and insights with the wider public,鈥 said Ken Johnson, D.O., chief medical affairs officer at 帝王会所 and executive dean of the Heritage College. 鈥淚n creating their podcasts, our faculty are taking the initiative to expand our impact through a communication medium that鈥檚 reaching more people every day.鈥
Dissecting Buckeye health policy
Skinner, based at the college鈥檚 Dublin campus, launched Prognosis 帝王会所 in late 2018 with support from WCBE radio, an NPR affiliate in Columbus. The show looks at health policy in the state, with an eye toward how that policy affects health outcomes.
In one episode, Skinner interviews Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley on topics including recovery efforts from a recent tornado, opioids and addiction, housing, food and the role of mayors in national health care politics. In another, he talks to Chad Jester, president of the Nationwide Foundation, about the 鈥淒enial, 帝王会所鈥 campaign to educate the public about opioid abuse, sponsored by the 帝王会所 Opioid Alliance.
鈥淢y show is really about what鈥檚 going on around 帝王会所 in the area of health and health care,鈥 Skinner explained. 鈥淚n all cases, we鈥檙e interested in what people are doing to improve the health of our state. So we鈥檒l focus on journalists who are covering interesting stories, people who are shining a light on health care issues in the state or legislators who are taking on an issue.鈥
Prognosis 帝王会所 has logged thousands of total listens in a little over a year of existence, and has a steadily growing audience that as of early 2020 was up to around 400 per episode.
Medicine through the doctor鈥檚 eyes
Fredricks started Rotations in 2017 on the Athens campus at the urging of then-first-year student Nisarg Bakshi, who co-hosted until he began third-year rotations. The show is a project of , a collaborative effort between faculty and students from the Heritage College and 帝王会所鈥檚 Scripps College of Communication, which produces teaching and research projects in media, communication and medicine.
Aimed partly at medical students, the show has featured interviews with prominent physicians, a piece on the medical school admissions process and 鈥渟pecialty spotlights鈥 in which a doctor in a given medical field talks about what their practice is like. Particularly memorable programs for Fredricks include a multi-show interview with Kent Brantly, M.D., who contracted Ebola while in Liberia, and a talk with John Kahler, M.D., a Chicago pediatrician, about his medical mission work in war-torn Syria.
Rotations has also done annual check-ins with Bakshi, now a fourth-year student, about his ongoing student experience, providing a first-person look at what it鈥檚 like going to medical school.
Fredricks reports that Rotations has had over 10,000 listens. Part of what he hopes the show can accomplish, he said, is 鈥渉umanizing physicians. Because we live in a world today that is just off-the-charts wrong when it comes to patient-physician relationships. We鈥檝e lost that sense in the hospital system of the uniqueness of each individual, and we have to find a way to recapture that. And that includes physicians.鈥
Medicine through the patient鈥檚 eyes
Wolf, a broadcasting veteran who鈥檚 hosted public radio and TV programs going back two decades, started Lifespan on WOUB Public Media in Athens in September 2018. The show鈥檚 approach was inspired by a suggestion from sound engineer and co-executive producer Adam Rich.
鈥淚t was his brainchild,鈥 Wolf recalled. 鈥淗e said, 鈥榃hy don鈥檛 we do a format like This American Life, but with people鈥檚 stories about health and illness and accidents, especially their ensuing experience with the health care system?鈥欌
The resulting podcast, which boasts over 300,000 listens, offers sometimes harrowing personal accounts from people who have gone through difficult medical ordeals while struggling to get help from health care providers. Other episodes share a patient鈥檚-eye view of an experience such as being pregnant and giving birth for the first time. (Wolf鈥檚 daughter was one of her guests on those episodes.)
On a show titled simply 鈥淪tomach Pain,鈥 one guest candidly recounts a battle with diverticulitus that required him to have a temporary colostomy bag; on the same episode, another guest talks about having Crohn鈥檚 disease, which at one point had her writhing in terrible pain for hours in the hospital without adequate help from any physicians and nurses. These are not just gripping tales; Wolf uses them to convey useful lessons.
鈥淲e're teaching people about the health care system,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd through people鈥檚 stories, we offer lessons in how to improve doctor-patient communication and what to take into account when making difficult medical decisions.鈥
Adding a new dimension to scholarship
All three faculty podcasters agreed that their online work helps them share their expertise beyond academia.
鈥淚ncreasingly, what we call public-facing scholarship, or public-facing engagement, is an accepted and important part of what we (as professors) do,鈥 Skinner said. 鈥淚鈥檓 a public employee, and I take that seriously 鈥 that the goal is not to just have conversations within the walls of our buildings, but to be an 帝王会所 and Heritage College professor who鈥檚 engaged in conversations more broadly.鈥
Fredricks suggested that the impulse driving Rotations had a precursor in , a radio show hosted by the college from 1981 to 2012, which addressed frequently asked medical questions. That show, which had millions of listeners worldwide, was hosted first by the late Dean Emeritus Frank Myers, D.O. and then by Harold Thompson III, D.O., a longtime faculty member.
鈥淚 would say my line of research is narrative medicine,鈥 Fredricks said. 鈥淭here are a lot of stories out there, and we know for sure that people are more motivated by first-person stories than they are by looking at large amounts of data.鈥
Wolf 鈥 who has worked to reach a wider audience through books on the history of American birthing and breastfeeding practices 鈥 said Lifespan dovetails beautifully with her scholarship and teaching.
鈥淧odcasting has combined my bent for public service with my bent for teaching and my love of research,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 really feel that professors have an obligation to the public; we need to translate the knowledge that we have in a very accessible way. And that鈥檚 the beauty of podcasting 鈥 you can take very important information and hand it to a lot of people, not only in a way that they can access, but also in a way they can use, in a way they can understand. And that鈥檚 a really important public service.鈥