Episodes
Today! I sit down with students from the Vanderbilt MSTP to discuss their training in the MD/PhD program (so far!). On the program: Rachel Brown, Maggie Axelrod, Lizzie Flook, Michael Raddatz, Abin Abraham, and Patrick Wu. If you're considering medical school, graduate school, or an MD/PhD program, or you're in the midst of one right now, you will really appreciate the words that these experienced students have to share.
Published 09/16/18
Published 09/16/18
On this episode of But Why: Zika Virus and Emerging Pathogens. Dr. James Crowe, Director of the Vaccine Research Center and Professor of Microbiology and Immunology at Vanderbilt University, sat down with me to talk about emerging pathogens, such as Zika virus, which can cause disease that appears to come out of thin air. How do we identify the cause of new diseases? How do we treat these new diseases? and how do we prevent more individuals from getting sick? Tune in for the...
Published 11/14/16
In part four of this series, I sit down with Cody Stothers, an MD/PhD student in his second year of training. Cody has a really unique journey to the Vanderbilt MSTP, that all started with strong grade school science and an even better Vanderbilt summer research internship program for high school students called 'The Aspirnaut'. We discussed why Cody decided to join the MSTP, and how he his navigating his new career in science and medicine. The Aspirnaut: http://www.aspirnaut.org/ The...
Published 08/01/16
In part three of this four part series, I sit down with Dr. Bruce Carter, Professor of Biochemistry and Neuroscience at Vanderbilt University. Dr. Carter is a faculty advisor for the Vanderbilt MSTP, which means he mentors students throughout all phases of the program, and has enormous insight into the MD/PhD training process. We discussed the experiences he has had mentoring MSTP students, with all the struggles and triumphs that an 8 year program can bring. Dr. Carter's lab:...
Published 07/06/16
In part two of this four part series, I sit down with Megan and Tanner Freeman, M4 MSTP students in the Vanderbilt MD/PhD program (and just weeks away from graduation). We discuss their experience in the Vanderbilt MSTP over the past 8 years, and get a few insights from 24th grade.
Published 04/19/16
In the first of this four part series, I sit down with Nathan Bloodworth, G3 graduate student in the Vanderbilt MD/PhD program, in the WRVU studios to discuss his experience in the MSTP. What is the MSTP? what's it like to be a student in the program? and is it really worth 8 years of school?
Published 04/13/16
Dr. Roger Chalkley, Senior Associate Dean for Biomedical Research, Education, and Training (BRET) at Vanderbilt University, and I sat down to discuss how PhD programs are training biomedical scientists of the next generation. We focused on how students, post-docs, Vanderbilt, and the government are responding to the rapidly evolving field of biomedical science.
Published 11/30/15
Dr. Karen Ng, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Vanderbilt University, and I sat down to discuss the German philosopher Hegel and the influence he has today. You can learn more about Dr. Ng here: http://www.vanderbilt.edu/AnS/philosophy/_people/_ng.html .
Published 09/28/15
Dr. Vincent Racaniello, Professor of Virology at Columbia University and host of the podcast This Week in Virology (TWiV), and I sat down to talk podcasts, viruses, and new ways to teach science. Background track: Anitek - The 3rd https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Anitek/ Side note: There were some nasty audio issues while recording the interview I was unaware of (clicks, pops, other vile sounds). Lesson learned. I have done my best to scrub them from the track, but please excuse any...
Published 09/21/15
Rachana Haliyur: Type 1 Diabetes by Ben Fensterheim
Published 05/25/15
Ben sits down with Michael Litt, MD/PhD student at Vanderbilt University, to discuss obesity and new drugs that can trick the brain to stop eating. Background Song: Broke For Free - Night Owl : http://freemusicarchive.org/music/Broke_For_Free/
Published 05/05/15
In this interesting short interview, Dr. Larry Churchill, Professor of Medical Ethics at Vanderbilt University, and I discuss the importance of communication in medicine, science, and everyday life.
Published 02/08/15