On Advances in Care, epidemiologist and science communicator Erin Welsh sits down with physicians from NewYork-Presbyterian hospital to discuss the details behind cutting-edge research and innovative treatments that are changing the course of medicine. From breakthroughs in genome sequencing to the backstories on life-saving cardiac procedures, the work of these doctors from Columbia & Weill Cornell Medicine is united by a collective mission to shape the future of health care and transform the lives of their patients. Erin Welsh, who also hosts This Podcast Will Kill You, gets to the heart of her guests’ most challenging and inventive medical discoveries. Advances in Care is a show for health careprofessionals and listeners who want to stay at the forefront of the latest medical innovations and research. Tune in to learn more about some of medicine’s greatest leaps forward. For more information visit nyp.org/Advances
SportsAvengers is quickly becoming one of the leading Internet Sportstalk Networks online. We are proud to have Greg Larson on staff. Greg Larson has been a leading talk radio host since 1989. Larson spent 25 years as a popular sports columnist, covering more than 2,000 events and interviewing roughly 8,000 athletes and individuals, including the likes of Ted Williams, Pete Rose, and Willie Mays, and Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, and Raymond Floyd. He has covered every major American sporting event at least once, from the Super Bowl and World Series, to the U.S. Open and The Masters.
SportsAvengers is quickly becoming one of the leading Internet Sportstalk Networks online. We are proud to have Greg Larson on staff. Greg Larson has been a leading talk radio host since 1989. Larson spent 25 years as a popular sports columnist, covering more than 2,000 events and interviewing roughly 8,000 athletes and individuals, including the likes of Ted Williams, Pete Rose, and Willie Mays, and Jack Nicklaus, Lee Trevino, and Raymond Floyd. He has covered every major American sporting event at least once, from the Super Bowl and World Series, to the U.S. Open and The Masters.