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Podcast
Humans of Medicine
By Kevin Hou
11
0
Interviews with medical students about their experiences, learnings, and philosophies - with plenty of yarns and good fun in-between!
If you've any comments or questions, feel free to email: k.hou@sydney.edu.au.
Interviews with medical students about their experiences, learnings, and philosophies - with plenty of yarns and good fun in-between!
If you've any comments or questions, feel free to email: k.hou@sydney.edu.au.
From bench to bedside /w Max Kirkby
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine - A podcast where we interview and learn about different types of people in medicine and research.
This conversation is with Max, an Adelaide-born ANU graduate, cricket fanatic and passionate researcher who’s also headed to Oxford later this year as a Rhodes Scholar. I currently work with Max in a research lab at USyd - as well as being a great human and research buddy, he’s also extremely passionate and goes deep into areas he cares about - which is why I’m particularly keen to share this conversation.
We talked about his journey, and how different mentors have guided him, what he’ll be working on in his computational neuroscience PhD, and his perspective on all the exciting developments around “AI”. Hope you enjoy!
If you have any questions for Max, send him a message on Linkedin.
Timestamps:
0:44 Why medicine and research?
3:50 Paradigm-shifts: From bench to bedside, explore vs exploit
7:58 The value of hard work and being kind
10:26 Max’s PhD: Information representation in the brain
15:35 Research experiences and great supervisors
17:58 Challenges in Immunology and Psychiatric Disorders
23:20 Generative AI and its potential understanding the brain
26:39 Overhyped and Underhyped AI applications
29:18 Attention spans and content mediums in the age of AI
36:07 Advice for undergraduates
37:31
Intersecting public health and neurology /w Andrew Hwang
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine - A podcast where we interview and learn about different types of people in medicine and research.
Today we’ve got an international episode with Andrew, an American-Korean living in New York! After graduating from Johns Hopkins majoring in neuroscience and public health, he’s currently a first year studying a dual MD and Masters of public health at Mt Sinai. Having explored clinical research, and public health neurology, he’s currently interested in the pathway of the clinician-public health researcher.
We talked about how he came into his niche of neurology and public health, the journey of moving from Chicago to NY, and his experiences at John Hopkins, World Neurology Foundation, and World Relief. Hope you enjoy!
If you've got any questions for Andrew, feel free to email him at soonmyunghwang@gmail.com.
Timestamps:
0:48 The domino effect into medicine
5:33 1st year and exploring identity in NYC
8:10 Moving into the big city
11:14 Schizophrenia interests to multiple sclerosis research
17:08 Neurology in third world countries
22:05 World Relief and supporting migrants
26:23 Exploring your unique intersection
29:01
A kiwi doctor's journey into startups /w Izzy Bigio
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine - A podcast where we interview and learn about different types of people in medicine and research.
Today we’ve got Izzy, a kiwi doctor turned startup enthusiast, and all-round legend. After 2 years as a house officer, Izzy pivoted to learn about startups and work as a platform manager at Blackbird, an Aussie-to-NZ venture capital firm. Among other experiences, which we’ll go into more detail in the pod, she’s also building a newsletter called Bootstrapped - giving a fortnightly lowdown on NZ startups.
We chatted about her journey in figuring out what she’s passionate about, learning to take a risk on yourself, her experiences as a house officer, and the NZ startup ecosystem. Hope you enjoy!
If you have any questions, feel free to contact her at ibigio@blackbird.vc.
Timestamps:
0:44 Positive impact: From medicine to startups
7:18 The Dark Ages (House Officer Years)
9:02 Obstetrics, and the importance of patient education
13:19 Rockstar hobbies
15:20 Universal healthcare
16:16 Retaining future kiwi doctors
21:02 The growing NZ startup ecosystem
22:29 Cleantech
23:47 What’s missing in the NZ startup ecosystem?
25:11 Building Bootstrapped
27:04 Inspiration and passion
29:29 Understanding yourself and your assumptions
33:32
Understanding specialty pathways and getting through identity crises /w Tina & Charlotte
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
If you’re a medical student who’s starting to have a medical identity crisis, or want some advice on figuring out how the heck specialties and research work, this is a good episode.
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine - A podcast where we interview and learn about different types of people in medicine and research.
Today we’ve got two very lovely, and very laughy, medical interns, Tina and Charlotte. They both graduated from USyd with Bachelor of Science and Doctor of Medicine degrees - Tina having done computer science, and Charlotte having done biochemistry. They’ve also got a bunch of diverse experiences… From consulting at McKinsey, performing benchtop lab research, and engineering things at Canva - and they’ve now happily come to pursue medicine and more.
This was a really fun chat - and I think, tackles a lot of topics that are difficult to figure out sometimes, especially as an outsider to medicine. Stay tuned for lots of laughs, stories, and practical advice. Hope you enjoy!
If you'd like to contact them or follow up with more questions, flick me an email at: k.hou@sydney.edu.au.
Timestamps:
0:57 What brought you to medicine?
4:47 Sticking through medicine
10:30 Balancing medical interning with dance and travel
12:44 Hybrid Careers: Clinician-scientists and teachers
16:38 How does research fit into medical careers?
19:41 How do specialties work? (OBGYN, Anaesthetics)
25:15 Should I be researching in med school?
29:13 Medicine Quick Fires! (Questions from my USyd cohort)
29:41 Which year was the hardest?
30:20 How did you keep things going with times were tough?
31:07 How are you treated as interns?
32:15 How do you make the most of your hospital time?
35:05 How do you ask for advice from doctors?
37:00 Tips for your first clinical exam?
38:29 Advice for first years - Travel to NZ and be open-minded
40:24 Bonus story!
42:40
Research 101 and connecting with patients /w Dhananjay Soundappan
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
If you’re a medical student who’s thinking about research, and curious about how to choose the right lab and supervisor - this episode’s a good one for you.
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine - A podcast where we interview and learn about different types of people in medicine and research.
Today we’ve got DJ, a final year med student at UNSW. He’s a research intern at the Kolling Institute, having worked on cardiology projects for the past few years (leading to some fun conference trips overseas). He’s also previously helped out with startup called Vantari VR, (which seeks to use VR in medical education) as well as tutoring at UNSW.
We chatted about the importance of research in medicine, three key tips for new researchers, and his diverse interests in public health, technology, and importantly, human connection. Hope you enjoy.
If you'd like to get in touch, feel free to message him on Linkedin!
Timestamps:
0:48 Connecting with patients
2:30 Final year of med school
3:14 Changing curriculums and adapting to AI
7:03 The value of research as a clinician
9:30 Research highlights: People, culture, and learning about possibility
12:07 Frontier research vs Improvement research
14:52 Improving the outcomes of the many
16:23 Early Career Research 101: Key advice for newbies
21:15 Reflecting in Medicine: The story of “Timothy”
23:12 Doctor-writers
25:20 Vantari VR and Startups
28:12 The many paths of medicine
29:57
The Future Astronaut-Doctors /w Henry Feng
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
This is Humans of Medicine - A podcast where we interview and learn about different types of people in medicine and research.
If you’ve ever looked up at the night sky and had the really specific thought of - hey, I want to be a doctor and go to space! This is the episode for you.
I chatted with Henry, a 3rd year MD student at the University of Sydney. He’ll explain his journey a bit more in the pod, but Henry’s an Aussie that went to the states to study a mix of science and arts at Duke and Columbia University. Mixed in with all this is his passion for space and the beyond, which has given him a fascinating list of experiences from interning at NASA, researching tissue regeneration, and organising Australian space-biology conferences.
We chatted about his journey so far, some exciting current developments in space medicine, and why now is a good time for all those future doctor-astronauts to start thinking about the field! Hope you enjoy.
He’s also got a podcast called Medicine Among the Stars (find it on insta: @amongthestars.podcast or Spotify), and is building a space-medicine interest group; if you’re interested, find him on Linkedin or contact him here: hfen8792@uni.sydney.edu.au
Timestamps:
0:57 Journeying into space/medicine
6:00 Origins of the passion for space
8:20 The Doctor-Astronaut Phenotype
9:54 Challenges of keeping humans alive in space
15:28 Space commercialisation and the future
17:10 “New space” and public-private partnerships
19:09 Australia’s space innovation landscape
21:17 Colonising mars and why now is the right time
23:08 Flight surgeons: The “space GPs”
25:25 The NASA Experience
28:42 The importance of open-mindedness
30:20
Combining Venture Capital with Medicine /w Helena Li
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
This is Humans of Medicine - A podcast where we interview and learn about different types of people in medicine and research.
Today’s conversation is interesting if you’re curious about how another student is thinking about balancing alternate careers alongside being a doctor.
I chatted with Helena, a 3rd year MD student at the University of Melbourne. Whilst being a gun in medicine, a part of the General Practice Students Network and Melbourne’s Surgical Society teams, she’s also got an alter ego - exploring the Venture Capital and startup world at the firm Rampersand.
As two early, career-curious med students, we had fun chatting about her experiences through medicine, how she hopes to combine general practice with venture capital in the future, and cool startups looking to change healthcare like harrison.ai and mindset health. Hope you enjoy!
If you'd like to reach out, feel free to message her on Linkedin or email her at helenahenecia@gmail.com.
Timestamps:
00:51 Why medicine?
1:50 Experiences in Melbourne University
4:30 Specialties and variety in medicine
5:40 Fitting Venture Capital with General Practice
6:50 What is a VC?
7:33 Harrison.ai and Mindset Health: Medtech Startups
11:14 Medicine and other careers
13:05 Why VC?
16:25 Medicine in the future
18:40 80/20 and Efficiency
20:34
Following your why, from a former lawyer /w Domenic Marrocco
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
”The most intimate of details for the patient, become common knowledge for us.” - Dom
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine! This started off as an idea to get advice, learnings, and yarns from a range of medical students later on in their degrees, to help new students get acquainted with what’s to come.
In this conversation I chatted with Domenic Marrocco, a 3rd year student at the University of Sydney, placed at Nepean hospital. He comes from a less traditional background, graduating from a Science/Law degree and having worked as a lawyer.
We talk about his career shift, the privilege of perspective that medicine comes with, inspiring junior doctors and their hidden roles, and how to keep following your why. If you'd like to ask him any questions, flick him an email at dmar6938@uni.sydney.edu.au.
This is a longer chat - so if you’d like to hop around, check out the time stamps below. Hope you enjoy!
Timestamps:
00:47 What brings you to medicine?
01:55 Life experiences from law
06:16 Sticking to your why
11:56 Comparing medicine to other career paths
14:13 The privilege of perspective
20:28 Inspiring junior doctors and their hidden roles
26:00 What doctors to look up to
31:59 Gravitating towards interests (i.e. Orthopaedics)
38:45 Tips for the MD project
41:44 Advice for first years
44:28
Study habits and surviving the first KAT /w Jessica Wei & Leon Chen
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
“I really recommend using external resources! Maybe to supplement - maybe to replace - SMP resources.”
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine! This started off as an idea to get advice, learnings, and yarns from a range of medical students later on in their degrees, to help new students get acquainted with what’s to come.
Jess and Leon are both 2nd year students placed at Royal North Shore Hospital. They come from opposite ends of the undergrad spectrum; Jess started off with English in a Bachelor of Arts, and Leon studied computer science with his Science degree - but they’re both incredibly intelligent and great fun to chat to!
In this conversation, we start off learning a bit about their motivations in medicine, veer off track to talk about Netflix and gymming, academic goals and opposing study habits, learning to cram, and advice for our first KAT coming up.
26:36
Being Realistic with Specialties and Life Balance /w Henry Chen
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
On the transition to 3rd year clinical: “You don’t have a purpose - you have to make your own.”
On neurosurgery: “I haven’t seen my kid since Sunday - and it was Wednesday.”
On choosing a specialty: “There’s a difference between liking the content versus liking the job.”
Welcome back to Humans of Medicine! This started off as an idea to get advice, learnings, and yarns from a range of medical students later on in their degrees, to help new students get acquainted with what’s to come.
This second conversation is with Henry, a 3rd year placed at Westmead. He’s another friendly kiwi who’s always been up for a candid chat about life.
We talk about being realistic with specialties, the journey of learning how to balance medicine with your life, some study tips, and how to not go insane during the grind. Hope you enjoy!
If you want to get in contact with Henry, you can contact him at hche4801@uni.sydney.edu.au.
Timestamps
00:00 Introduction
00:34 3rd Year so Far
03:42 Overtime
04:40 ED and Mental Health
07:06 “Bestmead” and Westmead-specific tips
10:15 Physician vs Surgeon, and choosing a specialty
14:04 Transitioning from Foundations to MSK
15:25 Studying efficiently
17:11 “High Yield vs Low Yield”
20:14 Free time
22:04 Burnout and giving up
27:00
Concord, Haematology, and Critical Care Yarns /w Sashi Peiris
Episode in
Humans of Medicine
Welcome to Humans of Medicine! This started off as an idea to get advice, learnings, and yarns from a range of USYD medical students later on in their degrees, to help first years get acquainted with what’s to come.
This first conversation is with Sashi, a 3rd year placed at Concord. He’s a good kiwi mate of mine, and one of the smartest and most medicine-driven guys I’ve known since high school.
In this chat, we go into some fun stories about his ED rotation, the best parts of Concord, his interest in haematology, trauma-bonding, and fighting imposter syndrome. Hope you enjoy!
If you want to get in contact with Sashi, hit him up on facebook or contact him at cpei5953@uni.sydney.edu.au.
30:05
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