by Sameer K. Berry, MD, and William D. Chey, MD
Sameer K. Berry, MD, and William D. Chey, MD, host this Healio podcast that provides busy clinicians with quick updates that directly affect their GI practices. Through interviews and candid conversations, they explore how health policy, social media, technology, nutrition, practice management and research impact the field of Gastroenterology. Most importantly, the show also features interviews with patients to add a unique perspective on the topics that matter.
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5/16/2019
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March 26, 2025
<p>In this special crossover episode with Physicianary, previous Gut Talk guest, <strong>Austin Chiang, MD,</strong> and Physicianary host, <strong>Hansa Bhargava, MD,</strong> discuss the influence of social media in medicine and how AI continues to change the health care landscape.<br /> <br /> • Intro <strong>0:30</strong><br /> • <strong>Austin Chiang, MD, MPH</strong> <strong>0:36</strong><br /> • Tell us about your journey. <strong>1:02</strong><br /> • How did you get involved with being a social media officer at your institution? <strong>3:58</strong><br /> • Where do you think doctors should see themselves in the future of social media in medicine? <strong>6:49</strong><br /> • What are the ways in which you see AI tech making a difference? <strong>9:12</strong><br /> • Do you agree that it is helpful for doctors to be involved with product development and integration on an industry level? <strong>12:14</strong><br /> • Can you give us some insight on the process of putting through new CPT codes as a company? <strong>14:41</strong><br /> • Tell me more about your book, <a href= "https://www.austinchiang.com/gut-book">Gut: An Owner's Guide (The Body Literacy Library)</a>. What motivated you to write this book, and what do you think people will get out of it? <strong>18:35</strong><br /> • If you were the “king of health care”, what would you work on first? What is the most important aspect of health car that you think needs fixing? <strong>21:23</strong><br /> • What’s your favorite food? <strong>25:24</strong><br /> • How to reach Chiang. <strong>26:01</strong><br /> • Thanks <strong>26:20</strong><br /> <br /> <strong>Austin Chiang, MD, MPH,</strong> is the first chief medical officer for the endoscopy business of <a href= "https://www.medtronic.com/en-us/index.html">Medtronic,</a> the global leader in health technology. He is also currently an assistant professor of medicine at an academic teaching hospital in Philadelphia, PA, and serves as the director of the Endoscopic Weight Loss Program.</p> <p>Listen to Gut Talk’s very first episode with Dr. Chiang from 2019, <a href= "https://www.healio.com/news/gastroenterology/podcasts/gut-talk/episode-one"> Social Media in Medicine</a>.<br /> <br /> We’d love to hear from you! Send your comments/questions to <a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>. Follow us on X <a href= "https://twitter.com/HealioGastro">@HealioGastro</a> <a href= "https://twitter.com/sameerkberry">@sameerkberry</a> <a href= "https://twitter.com/umfoodoc">@umfoodoc</a>. Follow Dr. Bhargava on X <a href="https://x.com/hansabhargavamd">@hansabhargavaMD</a> and on Instagram <a href= "https://www.instagram.com/doctorhansamd/">@doctorhansaMD</a>. Follow Dr. Chiang everywhere on social media <a href= "https://x.com/austinchiangmd">@AustinChiangMD</a>.</p> <p><strong>Disclosures:</strong> Bhargava reports no relevant financial disclosures. Chiang reports he is the chief medical officer for Medtronic Endoscopy.</p>
February 27, 2025
<p>In this podcast episode, <strong>Prateek Sharma, MD,</strong> about how program directors can help shepherd GI fellows into clinical research spaces, providing quality exams for upper endoscopy and more.<br /> <br /> • Intro <strong>:24</strong><br /> • The interview/about Sharma <strong>:43</strong><br /> • Tell us about your family and where you grew up. <strong>1:00</strong><br /> • Did you encourage your son to go into medicine? <strong>2:17</strong><br /> • What kinds of doctors were your parents? <strong> 3:40</strong><br /> • Who were your big, early influences? <strong>4:08</strong><br /> • If you didn’t always want to be a doctor, what convinced you to change your mind? <strong>6:11</strong><br /> • When did you make the decision to go into academic medicine as a career? <strong>7:16</strong><br /> • Are you seeing fewer and fewer fellows interested in pursuing a career in academic medicine? […] Are there ways to counsel fellows to be more interested in this type of work? <strong>9:49</strong><br /> • How long have you been a program director, and are you still enjoying the work? <strong>13:58</strong><br /> • How did you choose to into internal medicine and GI? <strong> 17:22</strong><br /> • As leaders of academic research centers, what have you done or plan to do in the face of potential cuts to the NIH overhead rates? <strong>18:40</strong><br /> • How are we doing right now as a country and globally in terms of early detection of Barrett's neoplasia? <strong>22:08</strong><br /> • Why has performing high-quality surveillance and screening of procedures like colonoscopy been so much more successful than performing high-quality exams for upper endoscopy? <strong>25:33</strong><br /> • If the biggest hurdle to performing these exams is time, do you feel that more education around how to perform a high-quality exam will move the needle, or are other incentives needed? <strong>28:32</strong><br /> • Do you think AI-based detection is overhyped or underhyped in GI? <strong>30:33</strong><br /> • What are your thoughts on DNA-based testing for conditions like Barrett’s neoplasia, and how should they be incorporated into standard practice? <strong>34:24</strong><br /> • What are your priorities as president of the <a href="https://www.asge.org/">American Society of Gastrointestinal Endoscopy</a> this year? <strong>38:42</strong><br /> • What do you see as the biggest threats or concerns to gastroenterologists? <strong>42:25</strong><br /> • Final thoughts? <strong>46:32</strong><br /> • Thank you, Prateek <strong>47:13</strong><br /> • Thanks for listening <strong>47:15<br /></strong><br /> <strong>Prateek Sharma, MD, FASGE, FACP, FACG,</strong> is professor of medicine and director of the GI fellowship program at the University of Kansas School of Medicine.</p> <p>We’d love to hear from you! Send your comments/questions to <a href= "mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>. Follow us on X <a href= "https://twitter.com/HealioGastro">@HealioGastro</a> <a href= "https://twitter.com/sameerkberry">@sameerkberry</a> <a href= "https://twitter.com/umfoodoc">@umfoodoc</a>. For more from Sharma, follow @KUcancercenter and @ASGEendoscopy on X and Instagram.<br /> <br /></p> <p class="MsoNormal"><strong>Disclosures:</strong> Berry and Chey report no relevant financial disclosures. Sharma reports consulting for Boston Scientific Corporation, CDx Labs, Cipla, Exact Sciences, Medtronic, Olympus Corporation, Salix Pharmaceuticals, Samsung Bioepis and Takeda and provides grant/research support to ERBE USA Inc., Fujifilm Holdings America Corporation, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals Inc. and NEC.</p>
January 22, 2025
<p>In this podcast episode, <strong>Maria Abreu, MD,</strong> current president of the AGA, discusses the unique upbringing of health care professionals who are children of immigrants, formal versus on-the-job leadership training and more.<br /> <br /> • Intro <strong>:24</strong><br /> • The interview/about Abreu <strong>:31</strong><br /> • Can you tell us about where you grew up and the impact your family had on the work you’re doing now? <strong>:54</strong><br /> • Chey and Abreu on the <a href= "https://www.gastrojournal.org/article/S0016-5085(24)00186-0/fulltext"> profile in Gastroenterology</a> in May 2024, which announced Abreu as the current AGA president and summarized her personal and professional life. <strong>3:08</strong><br /> • Abreu on her father’s involvement with the Bay of Pigs invasion in Cuba. <strong>7:00</strong><br /> • Chey and Abreu on the impact of an upbringing as children of immigrants. <strong>12:02</strong><br /> • How did you get interested in GI, specifically in IBD? <strong>13:00</strong><br /> • When did it become apparent to you that you were interested in more than traditional academia and clinical medicine, and wanted to inspire and have a broader impact? <strong>17:37</strong><br /> • What would you say to a younger physician or someone earlier in their career about formal leadership training versus on-the-job training? […] Do you think this generation needs formal training in how to manage people as health care becomes more complex? <strong>21:11</strong><br /> • Do you think that the future of academia and the phenotype of who is going to lead in academic divisions will change? <strong>28:40</strong><br /> • What are your priorities during your presidential year at AGA? <strong>34:24</strong><br /> • What have you learned so far as president of the AGA? Has anything struck you as surprising? <strong>42:03</strong><br /> • Thank you, Maria <strong>44:12</strong><br /> • Thanks for listening <strong>44:45</strong><br /> <br /> <strong>Maria T. Abreu, MD,</strong> is the current president of the American Gastroenterological Association. She is the fifth woman to lead AGA as president and the association’s first Latino president. Dr. Abreu currently serves as the Martin Kalser Endowed Chair of Gastroenterology; professor of medicine, microbiology and immunology; and director of the Crohn’s and Colitis Center at the University of Miami.<br /> <br /> We’d love to hear from you! Send your comments/questions to <a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>. Follow us on X <a href= "https://twitter.com/HealioGastro">@HealioGastro</a> <a href= "https://twitter.com/sameerkberry">@sameerkberry</a> <a href= "https://twitter.com/umfoodoc">@umfoodoc</a>. For more from Abreu, follow <a href="https://x.com/ibddocmaria?lang=en">@ibddocmaria</a> on X.<br /> <br /> <strong>Disclosures:</strong> Berry and Chey report no relevant financial disclosures. Abreu reports receiving consultant fees from serving on pharmaceutical advisory boards.</p>
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