Vinay Prasad MD MPH
Vinay Prasad MD MPH
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Impella RCT aborted, Mammography, Medical School Limitations - Cifu/ Prasad/ Mandrola
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Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor
Hematologist/ Oncologist
Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine
Author of 500+ Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100+ op-eds.
If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact
Instagram: vprasadmdmph
Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en
Substack: vinayprasadmdmph.substack.com/
Podcast: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/plenary-session/id1429998903
Personal Website: www.vinayakkprasad.com
Laboratory Website: www.vkprasadlab.com
Podcast Website: www.plenarysessionpodcast.com
Academic Publications: www.vinayakkprasad.com/papers
Follow me on:
Twitter @vprasadmdmph
Переглядів: 3 892

Відео

POST ASCO Round-up - Olivier and Prasad discuss the top abstracts from the ASCO 2024 meeting
Переглядів 2,2 тис.4 години тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 500 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Instagram: vprasadmdmph Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph....
Critical appraisal - My 2 hour presentation in Chicago during ASCO
Переглядів 4,8 тис.9 годин тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 500 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Instagram: vprasadmdmph Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph....
Did Lockdowns Work? The definitive answer is out now in Science Advances
Переглядів 33 тис.14 днів тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 500 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Instagram: vprasadmdmph Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph....
Fauci testifies to Congress | A Fair Appraisal of his Conduct
Переглядів 56 тис.21 день тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 500 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Instagram: vprasadmdmph Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph....
What to think about at the ASCO annual conference - PreGame Show
Переглядів 4,1 тис.21 день тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 500 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Instagram: vprasadmdmph Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph....
Should a 50 year old get a colonscopy w/ Z dogg
Переглядів 22 тис.Місяць тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 450 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph.substack.com/ Podcast: podcasts.apple.c...
Francis Collins sings insipid song re: 6ft distancing but now testifies to House it had no evidence
Переглядів 26 тис.Місяць тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 500 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Instagram: vprasadmdmph Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph....
How to Prepare for Journal Club| How I read a research article | Live audience
Переглядів 3,5 тис.Місяць тому
Text version www.drugdevletter.com/p/how-to-read-and-interpret-a-cancer Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 500 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Instagram: vprasadmdmph Google Scholar: scholar....
When Evidence Expires - My Grand Rounds - Mt Sinai NYC - Critical Care Dept
Переглядів 12 тис.Місяць тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 450 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph.substack.com/ Podcast: podcasts.apple.c...
COVID 19 recap - I am interviewed about COVID19 errors, particularly those made by government
Переглядів 26 тис.Місяць тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 450 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph.substack.com/ Podcast: podcasts.apple.c...
New Study documents COVID19 Vaccine harms - Low platelets, GBS, Myocarditis - I unpack
Переглядів 340 тис.Місяць тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 450 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph.substack.com/ Podcast: podcasts.apple.c...
Why You Shouldn't Get a Full Body MRI - the VPZD show
Переглядів 63 тис.Місяць тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 450 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph.substack.com/ Podcast: podcasts.apple.c...
ZDogg and I discuss Maintenance of Certification | VPZD#32
Переглядів 8 тис.Місяць тому
Full video 90 min discussion through the link www.drvinayprasad.com/p/exclusive-episode-32-of-vpzd Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 450 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/c...
DanGer Shock - First Positive RCT of Impella - Cardiogenic Shock - A critical appraisal
Переглядів 11 тис.Місяць тому
Vinay Prasad, MD MPH; Physician & Professor Hematologist/ Oncologist Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Medicine Author of 450 Peer Reviewed papers, 2 Books, 2 Podcasts, 100 op-eds. If you want to contact me, do it here: www.vinayakkprasad.com/contact Google Scholar: scholar.google.com/citations?user=ym4rwk0AAAAJ&hl=en Substack: vinayprasadmdmph.substack.com/ Podcast: podcasts.apple.c...
Should Doctors Mask Forever? I unpack a recent debate
Переглядів 23 тис.2 місяці тому
Should Doctors Mask Forever? I unpack a recent debate
Patient advocates, funding from Pharma, and how MRD negativity is about forcing payment not approval
Переглядів 9 тис.2 місяці тому
Patient advocates, funding from Pharma, and how MRD negativity is about forcing payment not approval
4-12-24 : My comments at the FDA Advisory meeting on the irresponsible use of MRD for AA
Переглядів 14 тис.2 місяці тому
4-12-24 : My comments at the FDA Advisory meeting on the irresponsible use of MRD for AA
NATALIE trial - Ribociclib - Tiny IDFS and imbalanced censoring | Why the trial is flawed
Переглядів 4,5 тис.2 місяці тому
NATALIE trial - Ribociclib - Tiny IDFS and imbalanced censoring | Why the trial is flawed
Beta blockers after heart attacks don't work | A failed quality metric
Переглядів 18 тис.2 місяці тому
Beta blockers after heart attacks don't work | A failed quality metric
Blood based Colon Cancer Screening - NEJM papers - ECLIPSE - Guardant
Переглядів 41 тис.2 місяці тому
Blood based Colon Cancer Screening - NEJM papers - ECLIPSE - Guardant
Insurers denying care | Prior authorization
Переглядів 29 тис.3 місяці тому
Insurers denying care | Prior authorization
Martin Kulldorff was wrongly fired from Harvard Medical School | Sign the Petition
Переглядів 29 тис.3 місяці тому
Martin Kulldorff was wrongly fired from Harvard Medical School | Sign the Petition
Hospital Vistor Bans | Masking Kids | Delay Vax | & other unethical covid policy
Переглядів 17 тис.4 місяці тому
Hospital Vistor Bans | Masking Kids | Delay Vax | & other unethical covid policy
Ethics in Medicine 2024 | Keynote Lecture for Bioethics conference | Full Version
Переглядів 8 тис.4 місяці тому
Ethics in Medicine 2024 | Keynote Lecture for Bioethics conference | Full Version
Is a pill the answer to everything? #shorts
Переглядів 6 тис.4 місяці тому
Is a pill the answer to everything? #shorts
Impaired Medical Judgment | Placebo's, Psychiatric Drugs, Sham Cntrl - My Psych Grand Rounds
Переглядів 24 тис.4 місяці тому
Impaired Medical Judgment | Placebo's, Psychiatric Drugs, Sham Cntrl - My Psych Grand Rounds
Another Problematic Trial: What You Can Learn - Keynote - 564
Переглядів 12 тис.4 місяці тому
Another Problematic Trial: What You Can Learn - Keynote - 564
CONTACT-02 | Cabo Atezo | What happens when Doctors run unethical studies? They get promoted!
Переглядів 20 тис.4 місяці тому
CONTACT-02 | Cabo Atezo | What happens when Doctors run unethical studies? They get promoted!
Hepa Filters in Kindergartens DON'T WORK! A new paper from Germany
Переглядів 16 тис.5 місяців тому
Hepa Filters in Kindergartens DON'T WORK! A new paper from Germany

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @maxwellkrem2779
    @maxwellkrem2779 42 хвилини тому

    Studies that have a "control" arm with barely effective (basically placebo) therapy are disappointing to me as a physician. Surprised (disheartened?) that the FDA permits these types of designs. You are correct, abi-pred after enza failure is ineffective, and enza after abi failure is not great (footnote: manage a lotta old dudes who are NOT taxane candidates, options can be limited). The end results: 1) we don't learn which therapies are the best, 2) we get widespread utilization of agents that are more expensive (no one stands to make a buck from docetaxel), and 3) patients do not benefit. This study does nothing for me because my old non-taxane candidates won't be able to handle cabo. Superb video, thank you for dissecting clinical trials in a common-sense, entertaining way!!! P.S. The phenomenon you refer to around 15:00 and 21:40 is very similar to "choice overload"--having too many options leads to worse decision-making and outcomes.

  • @nursemily
    @nursemily 3 години тому

    Great discussion. Thank you!!! Looking forward to more!

  • @durantguillaume5267
    @durantguillaume5267 5 годин тому

    Main Public Interest as i said before and often about the Doc V.P. and Friends. thanx a lot Guys !!!!

  • @olibertosoto5470
    @olibertosoto5470 5 годин тому

    Send them out from 1st year on to free clinics in poor areas without fancy equipment to see and deal with all sorts of people and get some life experience under their belts. But that doesn't exist in this country does it?

  • @richardcrocker8048
    @richardcrocker8048 6 годин тому

    You eventually realize the standards for Medical School must be of the wrong type or have fallen drastically …… Docs sabotaged their own status and respect.

  • @GlobalShutterNY
    @GlobalShutterNY 6 годин тому

    As a practicing physician these discussions are so refreshing - facts and data instead of great sounding stories. Stories get you 'started' - but stories NEVER can be the final decision making pathway...

  • @dr.julia-heyakarcic8862
    @dr.julia-heyakarcic8862 6 годин тому

    Dr. Prasad, I’m looking for an undergraduate biostatistics course. Can you recommend one please.

  • @juliobro1
    @juliobro1 7 годин тому

    @vprasadmdmph URGENT! Please check, research, and comment on Jimmy Dore's video exposing the Systematic REVIEW of Autopsy findings in deaths after covid-19 vaccination study published by Forensic Science International.

  • @sheilacrook-lockwood-integ2193
    @sheilacrook-lockwood-integ2193 7 годин тому

    I love listening to you all. Thank you

  • @wiblin701
    @wiblin701 8 годин тому

    The benefit of scut is that it is work! You learn doing scut that you have to get work done and how to be efficient and that medicine is hard work. You learn how to interact with patients nurses and other staff. It is very important. It also gives you a status. You are not just a student. Also empathy is over rated. If you over empathize the patients fear can metastasize to you and result in paralysis. I would much rather a be reffered to as the "liver in room 204" by a competent physician then having a mediocre physician empathize with me about how bad I must feel about having liver failure.

  • @maryiced3931
    @maryiced3931 8 годин тому

    Cancer screening should be increased for all ages. The overwhelming majority of our food supply and water have become contaminated with cancer-causing agents. I'm shocked they want to decrease screening for cancer. In addition new ways to screen for cancer needs to be developed as the current is not good enough.

  • @robertcramer6026
    @robertcramer6026 8 годин тому

    Fauci is a criminal and belongs in prison a disgusting liar. America is doomed

  • @user-or3rv8sd2u
    @user-or3rv8sd2u 9 годин тому

    Med student here. Preclinical years do not teach us important stuff for when we enter the clinical space. Once we get to the clinical space, we are often background characters and paid little attention - making much of our clerkship experience shadowing. I’ve actually had surgeons make a point of it that medical students are not part of the team…. Was it not always like this? Makes clerkships dry and often non-educational.

  • @walterbortz355
    @walterbortz355 9 годин тому

    Lack of equipoise due to results of a trial with “may be” positive results? What sort of tortured logic is that? The interventional cardiology field is now full of procedures of unproven benefit. Regulatory agencies with oversight need to clean up their act and demand demonstration of benefit before allowing implementation.

  • @lindamcconnell6613
    @lindamcconnell6613 9 годин тому

    Nurses are taught about a lot of AP that we forget right after taking the exams. Much of that I believe is because we then go out into the world and specialize. As a patient I don't care if my orthopedist doesn't know how to regulate my cardiac meds, I just want him to know everything there is about my bones and tendons and ligaments. Now, having said that, I am forever humbled and grateful I learned all of those things that I've forgotten because I can pretty much hold my own in medical discussions. When someone mentions posterior interosseous artery my memory is triggered knowing I learned that once and I shouldn't join in the conversation thinking we are talking about the brain. I did hours upon hours of scut work throughout my young life. As a candy striper, as a nurse's aid, as a nursing student. Because of those hours I learned where everything in the hospital was. I got to interact with the different departments within the hospital and how they fit with everyone else. I held paperwork in my hands which I read and tried to understand as I delivered it to the opposite of the hospital. I entered and left patient rooms each patient with a different diagnosis, different reason for being there, and keeping my ears open to conversations. It was an education within itself as there is no course named, "Grunt Work 101".

  • @JMK-vo8pv
    @JMK-vo8pv 10 годин тому

    Could you gentlemen have a discussion about the recent 2023 Danish study by Gyldenkerne, et al, in which it was found that STATIN therapy is worthless in type 2 diabetics with KNOWN coronary heart disease? This study appears to put another "nail in the coffin" of the "lipid-heart hypothesis."

  • @mcneillmama50
    @mcneillmama50 12 годин тому

    have Kelly Victory MD and Brian Hooker PHD on your show. They've got a lot of useful informaiton on natural immunity.

  • @mcneillmama50
    @mcneillmama50 12 годин тому

    I'm voting for RFK jr. I think he's the only gentleman running for office, and the only intelligent one of the bunch.

  • @mcneillmama50
    @mcneillmama50 12 годин тому

    what do they teach in nursing school? the single most effective way to break the chain of infection is handwashing (not vaccines or therapeutics, N95 masks, closing down schools, businesses and churches, not social distancing). It's called common sense. If you're sick stay home. If you're well get out and live your life while building natural immunity,

  • @michaelrapson
    @michaelrapson 12 годин тому

    A brilliant analysis of your field of expertise, doctor, but do specialists such as yourself comprehend the big picture? For example, did it occur to you that "Delta Omicron" is an exact anagram of "Media Control". You'll recall that the first "variant" was "Delta", followed in its wake by "Omicron". The big picture may be far more insidious on the dimension of mind control than even you are considering. They're using various media to practice mind control on people. They want people to respond to counterfeit cues.

  • @christopherdubuque7285
    @christopherdubuque7285 18 годин тому

    Thanks for being so good at saying the truth and the facts and leaving political bias out

  • @ann2252
    @ann2252 19 годин тому

    Love the beer! The ASCO Fringe Festival!!

  • @kathybrady4033
    @kathybrady4033 21 годину тому

    I strongly disagree with transplanting anyone with liver nets with anything until you save the lives of the 40,000 Americans who die per year from alcoholic liver disease. We have never denied treatment to IV drug users or anyone with ANY lifestyle disease other than alcohol which is fully legal. ETOH liver recipients live 20 years on average and most do not relapse. All with mets die in a couple of years. I have a friend and a sister in law who died by medical murder being denied transplants in their 40s, leaving a 9, 11, 15, and 18 year old behind. I became a surrogate mother to 2 of them. Mom could have been saved. Watched her suffer and die so the liver could go to someone more "deserving". These are cruel judgmental calls not made in other settings (besides I suppose now I must add murder of unvaxxed patients being denied transplants).

  • @treasuresabound0062
    @treasuresabound0062 21 годину тому

    Need more information and insight on PSA harming someone. Wish that would have been discussed a little deeper.

  • @gardenvariety-
    @gardenvariety- 21 годину тому

    Compassion is absent among trainees. I trained in medicine and pediatrics in a country and did the USMLE tests. However, some family matters took me away for 10 years. Now, that I am ready to go back to training they won't accept me because I have been away for too long. I did observership with an attendant, and I saw how students act. They lack compassion, just want to be done and leave. Yet, they are the ones chosen , not me. They were literally concerned that I didn't remember the forearm muscles. Anyways, goodbye medicine. I am at peace with it and starting a new endeavor.

  • @epigeneticnerd4244
    @epigeneticnerd4244 21 годину тому

    Visad! Please give us your analysis of gadolinium necessity and the data on safety.

  • @susandietsch6281
    @susandietsch6281 День тому

    What I hear in so much of what you all say here and on Sensible Medicine is how ridiculous the processes and procedures that have developed around supposed “best practices” have in fact fallen short of actually defining what is best for most people. We don’t need to know about every benign tumor in our bodies. Rather, we need to know how to manage the things that actually impact our quality of life! Thanks for that.

  • @HiroshimaMS
    @HiroshimaMS День тому

    Put physical exams on curriculum. Doctors don't do physical exams anymore, X-rays and MRIs and Ct's and echoes should be prescribed to confirm physical exam, not because doctors are lazy, they don't want to get their butt out of the chair, not because they don't want to get their hands dirty, or simply not because they just don't know how to do physical exams.

  • @aron.gortman
    @aron.gortman День тому

    Medical school in 2024 is twitter before Elon made X.

  • @susandietsch6281
    @susandietsch6281 День тому

    I try to encourage people to look at numbers *first* to help them ask the important questions. P=0.4 does not inspire questions aside from, “why would we pursue this right now?”

    • @fredlindberg
      @fredlindberg 23 години тому

      In the trial p=0.04, but many other issues as discussed.

  • @jamesthompson7282
    @jamesthompson7282 День тому

    Dr. Prasad makes disturbing comments (~40:00 min. & again at 43:15) about cultural failings in medical education. Wow - cultural awareness; that's not normal Kudos to him for mentioning lack of empathy. He is more concerned about medical decision-making: that's disturbing to hear, but not generally something we'd see as patients the way Vinay does as a peer reviewing patient files. If he's concerned, I'm really concerned! I hope the problem isn't so much generational as specific to his institution. Med School culture compared Would Vinay be willing to comment on a specific educational issue that may have a bearing on this? Engineering at my University (U of Toronto) has a 35% fail rate year one. 30% year two. And ANOTHER 30% year three. They don't kick you out of school, just counsel you to perhaps consider another career option, do mining or general science or... medicine even. Here's the thing: they need you to be able to do the math. If your algebra isn't up to par, you're out. Blow the math & a building falls down, people die. The Engineering Society gets REALLY cranked up when someone blows the math & people die. So there's a fail rate. How about Pharmacy? I checked: same fail rate years 1, 2 & 3. Interesting. And as with Engineering, if you make mistakes on the job & people die, they strip you of your credential - you'll never practice again - and may even call the police & say "Whack this guy." Seen it done. Mistakes aren't tolerated. Medicine is different What do we call the guy with the lowest grade in Med School? "Doctor." I know: unfair joke, but it's true. I get that medicine is NOT like engineering: you can't constrain the field, limit the variables, control for all eventualities & outcomes. Medicine is inherently unlike engineering. Human bodies aren't as consistent as inanimate materials & structural elements; diseases don't follow hard rules; doctors treat in a medical system on teams with other professionals; reality is variable & unpredictable. I get it. But - to a patient - the attitude towards medical errors appears beyond cavalier. Cultural indifference causes REAL harm The stats are NOT good. One third of all patients admitted to residential care for more than one night will suffer at least one medical error - most probably inconsequential, but they SHOULD NOT OCCUR. And one third of all hospital mortalities are CAUSED by a medical error. How is it dealt with? If you raise an error as an issue with a clinician, they call it "Medical Complications." NO: it's an error! Want to make an snit about it? (I've had occasion to do so more than once): They have malpractice insurance for that. And in Canada (don't know about the US) the policy doesn't even name the doctor: it's in the name of the hospital. Doesn't reflect on the MD at all, unless something sufficiently egregious occurred resulting in a review by the College of Physicians or the CMA. And that won't likely happen unless the patient (or family, if they're dead) launches resolute legal action. Acknowledged: service delivery is hard I've worked in management consulting on quality improvement initiatives for services delivery. As acknowledged above, services delivery of any sort is always hard - a much less predictable field than engineering - and inherently subject to difficulties outside the control of individual service delivery agents (in this case, doctors). But not impossible - we do it all the time There IS an ISO standard & system for measuring & managing quality assurance in business systems. And - hard as it is to implement - it DOES work: you can vastly improve quality of service, of care, in difficult & multi-disciplinary systems. Unfortunately it isn't apparent to the public that the field of medicine has heard of this. If that's true, they're about 50 years behind the times. Even for medicine, being 50 years out of date is extreme. An underlying problem of indifference From a patient's perspective, it's the sociopathy of medical culture we experience. And yes: I chose the word deliberately. Doctors DO care I realize most doctors share the attitudes & motivation driving Vinay & his two peers interviewed here: they work incredibly hard to qualify in a difficult & demanding profession because they care. It's a culture problem Doctors call "clinical detachment" an ethic. No. It's inculcated - trained sociopathy. THAT is too often how it comes across to patients. This attitude is inculcated in the training process, in Med School Clinical detachment used to be discussed formally - for 10 min. - in the Clinical Practice course during your first 2 years of med school. But where it's trained - where, I've been told "it's beaten into you" - is in Internship & Residency. And dear god, they all get it. It's trained sociopathy. And it's pathological. Culture kills It's undeniable - as Vinay acknowledges - that this compromises quality of care & clinical decision-making. It's also proven to directly affect patient outcomes psychologically. One specific change instituted to deal with this in the UK made one tiny, 5-second change in clinical practice - that's all! - but caused significant documented reduction in the incidence of patient suicides. THAT clinical outcome is every bit as real & significant as improvements in clinical decision-making - and it turns out, very much easier to improve.

    • @petramaas8574
      @petramaas8574 16 годин тому

      Wow, I would've given you a series of 👍 if I could. As a potential patient with the determination "they won't get me alive" the thought of ever having to see a medical professional is more like knowing to have to fight to preserve my health than expecting care. You are very right about the practice of "clinical detachment", calling it trained sociopathy. It hurts at the time when you need empathy the most.

  • @sassysandie2865
    @sassysandie2865 День тому

    Well, the “academic leaders” certainly weren’t brave during the Covid debacle.

  • @michaelplunkett5124
    @michaelplunkett5124 День тому

    Just as Dr. Fauci never did a mask study there has never been a colonoscopy study in this country with the end point of death due to colon cancer and/ all cause mortality because the colonoscopists know, like Dr. Fauci, that they’ll lose.

  • @jamesthompson7282
    @jamesthompson7282 День тому

    Great interviews & discussion. I really enjoy Dr. Prasad's candor & critiques of clinical practice & research. I'm subscribed! Mammograms should be required wherever a clinician approves at ANY age If you think there's something amiss, you should take it to your GP. If they agree it looks suspicious, it shouldn't matter what age you are - or gender. The test is a no-brainer. Vinay makes a terrific point: the cost of the test is trivial Cost of cancer treatment is RUINOUS - both financially for the patient, and for the hospital/health care system in financial terms and in terms of resource allocation. Clinical resources are always constrained. It's insane to limit use of low-cost trivial tests & pretend that's saving the system. This is MBA disease: optimize a specific budget cost without regard to total cost outcomes to patient, treatment center & system overall. Men too I mentioned gender. Breast cancer occurs in men too - rarely. 1 in 100 cases of breast cancer are male. Just as unpleasant, treated the same way, and is equally fatal if not caught soon enough. In fact, the mortality rate is a higher for men than for women: 1) it's often not caught as soon - no one expects it is a possibility; 2) clinicians may discount the likelihood - doctors have told me they've never seen a case in their career, but my GP - who caught mine - says she's seen three in recent years. You don't see what you don't expect to see; 3) Treatments have been scientifically tested on women, and don't appear to work as well on men. We don't know why, but whatever's working on women, the same treatments don't seem to work as well on men: mortality is significantly higher. But we're not going to see studies done on men: cases are so rare & dispersed over time & geography, that no one's going to be able to assemble a group to study. So if you find a lump, get it checked. Doesn't matter what age or gender you are. _______________________ I really appreciate Vinay's closing comments on medical culture. He's refreshingly candid about the failings of clinical education. I hope the system is listening. With respect to John Mandrola (& it's warranted) I beg to differ with his stereotyping of clinical practice as "not static" but constantly changing. I'm sure it matters a lot who you are & where you practice. If you're teaching in a medical school, "the culture of learning" may well be present. Wonderful. Reality ain't med school But if you're working outside an actual teaching hospital, not so much. If you work waaaaay out in the boonies - 10 miles away! - standard practice hasn't changed in two decades. I've documented this in a major hospital for a variety of medical practices over decades. They all stop reading! Again, I get that Dr. Mandrola practices - & I'm sure he teaches - a culture of learning. But for most clinicians your average patient will see - in ANY specialty (& I'm including specialists here too) - the stereotype that applies is this: they all stop reading/learning once they graduate. This situation is normal One classic example: the discovery that stomach ulcers are bacterial in etiology dates back to a landmark 1982 article in the Lancet - completely ignored at the time. In 2005, Barry Marshall and Robin Warren were awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for their discovery (23 years prior) that peptic ulcer disease (PUD) was primarily caused by Helicobacter pylori - and immediately & effectively resolved with a simple course of antibiotics. On the occasion of their Nobel award, the Toronto Star investigated clinical practice at hospitals across the Greater Toronto Area (4 million pop.) - including the teaching hospitals! - & documented that very few patients were being treated in any institutions with antibiotics. I had been tracking this with a personal study at Richmond Hill Hospital for a decade already. The norm was treatment with Zantac or Tagamet: from a patient's point of view, high-strength Rolaids (& just as effective). Long-term unresolved infections are mutagenic: unresolved ulcers absolutely DO cause cancer, so this situation was beyond reprehensible. This is the norm Clinical practice is widely acknowledged to lag research findings by a good 15 years. And I'd assert that clinical practice in Canada traditionally lags US practice by another 10. So we're 20-25 years behind the times in Canada (not always, but too frequently). My own experience in the past year concerning cancer treatment suggests that at my two hospitals (3 different specialties involved) we're maybe only 5 years behind US practices, at least in oncology. In neurology & endocrinology it's closer to 10, but one of those two (neuro) is concerned & looking to catch up. Yay. The other is not just indifferent but irritated & determinedly resistant: they've achieved perfection already. Not just doctors: it's the system TBF it isn't just that doctors are resistant to change (& let's face it, we ALL are); sometimes the resistance to change is baked into the field or into the system. The field actively resists change. Clinical treatment centers don't want doctors winging it with new & novel ideas all the time: there are rules that mandate patient care should adhere to "the standard of care", and it takes time for that to change in the profession. A lot of time. So doctors may be constrained in their choices, at least in their default choices. I think the profession provides them with the ability to step outside the lines, carefully, with patient consent, where it's warranted. Off-label treatment using approved medications is beyond normal, after all. And the system resists change. In Canada we have a single-payer system. There are myriad situations where a patient will be told we have a medical solution (drugs) for a problem the insurance Plan covers only for surgery - an older, less medically-sound alternative that has poorer outcomes & MUCH higher costs, but which is already approved. So a surgical solution is covered; the newer medical alternative is not, and may require significant cost to the patient. Sometimes it's a change in surgical treatment (in Toronto a Dr. Shouldice invented a vastly-improved minimally-invasive surgical technique for hernia repair. Left Sunnybrook Hospital when he couldn't get them to see reason, set up his own specialty hospital up the street. It still provides world-leading hernia repair; his techniques were only grudgingly adopted by the Ontario medical system decades after he'd decamped. More commonly there are new medical options, either for existing ones or as alternatives to surgery. Same problems prevail. There may be no malice involved: the bureaucracy is slow at updating coverage charts. But it imposes real constraints on care. What to do? Patients need to get militant when they discover they're dealing with this. If you need a specialist, ask your GP to refer you to one they KNOW is up to date & committed to staying current. If your GP cannot do that, ask to be referred to one under 30. So they've recently graduated to the specialty, and at least they're up to date for the present. 'Cause in 10 years they won't be. Dr. Prasad: what else can we do? Are there other - perhaps better - ways to deal with this? THANK YOU We need more motivated doctors like these three!

    • @valeriehancock1724
      @valeriehancock1724 День тому

      My grandfather had breast cancer. He was discharged from hospital on my wedding day ☺️. He was a breast cancer survivor and lived a long life after, died in his late 90’s. His daughters weren’t son fortunate and many of them passed away young. My mother was the youngest of the sisters to die, at the age of 36. Many of her brothers have had prostate cancer, but most of them are still living. It was a big family of 6 girls and 6 boys.

  • @user-yd8wp8rz2b
    @user-yd8wp8rz2b День тому

    Excellent, as always. Shared it to family to watch.

  • @VT-zz3ik
    @VT-zz3ik День тому

    Your videos should be accredited for continuing education hours.

  • @kellygarvin9006
    @kellygarvin9006 День тому

    I’m a Vinay Groupie 🤣

  • @barbaraberwick8993
    @barbaraberwick8993 День тому

    Accuracy, what a great point. So many people are misdiagnosed or mistreated which is obvious in hindsight, but are the original physicians ever aware of their errors? I think not.

  • @barbaraberwick8993
    @barbaraberwick8993 День тому

    One point, those of us who have a doctor that are like cannot ever actually see our doctors when we are ill. We can see them for our scheduled physicals. However, chat GPT answers are always generic and never really help. Its like needing to talk to someone at the bank about a specific problem, they make you go through these bots first and it is totally frustrating.

  • @orienteqbano
    @orienteqbano День тому

    A beacon of information. Reliable information. Thank You for carrying the torch that truth is! Bless you Dr.

  • @baystgrp
    @baystgrp День тому

    When I moved to San Francisco in 1975 the City had a kind of magic, or vibe, that set it apart from other US cities. It had the natural beauty and incredible weather (even allowing for the summer fog) - low humidity, survivable temperatures that did not require air conditioning. Culturally it had its iconic symphony, opera, and of course the ardent literary tradition. A range of cuisine that was truly superb. In the decades since, succeeding administrations have turned the city into a literal shithole in which the liberal elites live in enclaves while the ever-increasing homeless population literally cover the sidewalks with shit and piss while many of them die of drug overdose, and crime is through the roof. Congratulations. “Progressivism” is a mental disorder.

  • @dietmarhaudegen3932
    @dietmarhaudegen3932 День тому

    In regards to Ipi/NIvo. Havent you published a paper a month or two ago, where you found that Ipi/Nivo benefits patients with PDL1 neg compared to Nivo alone and that this benefit drives the overall OS benefit of Ipi/Nivo vs Nivo?

  • @reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql
    @reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql День тому

    It’s actually quite scary what they are doing to patients… Sh*ty trials that are biased and mostly designed to serve the interests of pharma, some posing serious ethical issues, it’s quite unsettling and to Vinay’s point: is it time to change how things are done? This has gone too far… 😢

  • @sethturnlund1992
    @sethturnlund1992 День тому

    Was looking forward to this, hope you do this going forward for more conferences.

  • @reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql
    @reginamemoriesforever-vc8ql День тому

    Loved Vinay’s commentary regarding the standing ovation as typical of the pagentry of these conferences that mostly are big show for big pharma. It mostly works for pharma not for medicine.

  • @barbaraberwick8993
    @barbaraberwick8993 День тому

    20.6 months OS. Please evaluate current treatments of all cancers and what the OS are. Many people would not feel that adding 3 months or 20 months is enough to justify the loss of quality of life, but everyone is left not knowing what to do.

  • @barbaraberwick8993
    @barbaraberwick8993 День тому

    😂 I loved the coffee comment. Thank you Dr. Prasad. Please continue pointing out all these horrendous studies.

  • @nicolethibodeau464
    @nicolethibodeau464 День тому

    Preaching a good word right here 🙌🏻

  • @thegamejunkie1
    @thegamejunkie1 2 дні тому

    👍

  • @seandejesus623
    @seandejesus623 2 дні тому

    First