Podcasts

Earning CPD by listening to Healthed podcasts is simple. Each episode is eligible for Educational Activities CPD. 

Dr Gary Grohmann

Zinc, Selenium, Melatonin, and Vitamin D supplements are useful adjuncts in the early stages of COVID-19 infection

Prof Andrew Sindone

Catching the flu significantly increases the risk of myocardial infarction, stroke, hospitalisation for heart failure and increased CV morality

Prof John Zalcberg

Pancreatic cancer accounts for about 3% of all newly diagnosed cancers and yet was the 3rd most common cause of cancer death last year

Prof Robert Booy

COVID – 5th dose, flu – concurrent annual booster, many recrudescent diseases

Dr Hannah Scott

Apart from its use in assessing sleep, one can imagine how such devices may in time come to, stream real time data of our most at risk patients when something has gone awry

Dr Deepa Gopinath

The range of treatments available for pelvic floor dysfunction in the frail elderly, and how this differs from an older patient who is otherwise in good health

Dr Joe Dusseldorp

Virtual planning for head and neck reconstruction, a comprehensive multi-disciplinary task that is highly detailed to create prosthetics to exacting standards and precision

Dr Ridia Lim

The types of traditional and novel treatments for glaucoma

Expert/s: Dr Ridia Lim
Dr Rachael Sharman

How approximately 50% of your patients, mostly the younger ones, would have looked up their health problem before seeing you

Dr Pamela Douglas

The current WHO guidelines and recommendations around breastfeeding

Dr Gary Grohmann

How healthy young people will derive little benefit from a fourth or fifth dose of vaccine, and how we should keep them for the vulnerable population, and China's response to the COVID surge being of global interest and concern

Prof Andrew Sindone

How health professionals must auscultate for murmurs in all patients over 65 years, and refer for an echo or to a cardiologist, How the symptoms of chest pain, syncope and dyspnoea appear late, and the prognosis is very poor with 50% mortality in two years, TAVI being a safe, effective, and highly cost-effective treatment for patients with aortic stenosis, and how we should be referring our patients earlier for consideration of this procedure and its current availability for only privately insured patients, unfortunately