JAMA Editors' Summary

111
Medicine #153

Weekly Editors' Audio Summary for JAMA, the Journal of the American Medical Association

Recent Episodes
  • Behavioral Interventions for Obesity, BP Monitoring After Stroke, USPSTF on Fall Prevention, and more
    Jul 2, 2024 – 13:52
  • Prostate Cancer Active Surveillance Outcomes, Race and RAS Blockade in Heart Failure, Pruritus Review, and more
    Jun 25, 2024 – 10:30
  • Krill Oil for Knee Osteoarthritis, EHR Prompts to Improve Antibiotic Selection, FTC Action on Prescription Drugs, and more
    Jun 18, 2024 – 10:57
  • Prognostic Value of CV Biomarkers, End Points in Cancer Screening Trials, USPSTF on Breast Cancer Screening, and more
    Jun 11, 2024 – 12:00
  • Ponatinib vs Imatinib for Ph+ ALL, Cholesterol from Childhood to Adulthood and CVD Risk, Causal Inference, and more
    Jun 4, 2024 – 13:03
  • Aspirin for Breast Cancer, Smoking Cessation After Initial Treatment Failure, Mortality Disparities Among US Youth, and more
    May 28, 2024 – 13:29
  • Neurodevelopmental Outcomes After Antenatal Steroids, Sexual Orientation and Mortality, ILD Review, and more
    May 21, 2024 – 13:08
  • Regional Antimicrobial Decolonization Strategy, Diltiazem and NOAC Bleeding Risk, siRNA Targeting Lp(a), and more
    May 14, 2024 – 13:19
  • Prostate Cancer Screening, Clinical Outcomes for Cancer Drugs Granted Accelerated Approval, Lupus Review, and more
    May 7, 2024 – 09:28
  • Integrated Hepatitis C and OUD Care, Heart Transplant Disparities, Fall Prevention Review, and more
    Apr 23, 2024 – 15:53
  • α-Synuclein Skin Biopsy, Elastography Scores and Liver Events, Video Laryngoscopy, and more
    Apr 16, 2024 – 14:48
  • Oxygen Targets in the ICU, Acetaminophen During Pregnancy and Risk of Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Alcohol Use Disorder Screening Tools, and more
    Apr 9, 2024 – 11:30
  • LAA Ligation for AFib, Tumor-Infiltrating Lymphocytes in Breast Cancer, Anomalous Health Incidents, and more
    Apr 2, 2024 – 13:14
  • Paclitaxel-Coated Balloon for Coronary In-Stent Restenosis, Linkage Case Management for HIV Care, Review of Common Oral Conditions, and more
    Mar 26, 2024 – 14:00
  • Aspirin for MASLD, PrEP Adherence and HIV Incidence in Women, USPSTF on Preventing Child Maltreatment, and more
    Mar 19, 2024 – 12:34
  • Steroids With Endovascular Thrombectomy for Stroke, ADHD Pharmacotherapy and Mortality, Allergic Rhinitis Review, and more
    Mar 12, 2024 – 13:28
  • RNAi With Zilebesiran for Hypertension, Timing of IV Thrombolysis Before Thrombectomy for Stroke, Cardiac Amyloidosis Review, and more
    Mar 5, 2024 – 12:26
  • Bariatric Surgery in Diabetes, New Pediatric Sepsis Criteria, Climate Change and Migrant Health, and more
    Feb 27, 2024 – 13:56
  • Anticoagulation for Atrial Cardiopathy After Stroke, Eviction Threat and Mortality During COVID-19 Pandemic, PSVT Review, and more
    Feb 20, 2024 – 16:07
  • Azithromycin to Prevent Child Mortality, Risk Score for Heart Transplant Candidates, Food Allergy Review, and more
    Feb 13, 2024 – 10:48
  • COVID-19 Vaccination in Pregnancy and in Children, Climate Change and Health Series, Thyroid Cancer Review, and more
    Feb 6, 2024 – 09:40
  • Mood Symptoms After Dobbs, Prostate Cancer Treatment Outcomes, Speech and Language Delay Screening in Children, and more
    Jan 23, 2024 – 11:02
  • Toripalimab for Lung Cancer, Breast Cancer Mortality, Epochs of Health AI and Monitoring Its Use in Practice, and more
    Jan 16, 2024 – 11:25
  • Measuring Equity in Readmissions, Social Risk and Dialysis Facility Performance, Macular Degeneration Review, and more
    Jan 9, 2024 – 10:05
  • Multidomain Interventions for Child Neurodevelopment, Tirzepatide for Obesity, AI in Health Care, and more
    Jan 2, 2024 – 11:05
  • Prone Positioning During ECMO for ARDS, Fluvoxamine for COVID-19, Hepatitis D Review, and more
    Dec 26, 2023 – 09:31
  • Sodium and Blood Pressure, Airway Management in Acute Poisoning, Review of Foot and Ankle Conditions, and more
    Dec 19, 2023 – 15:51
  • Antithrombotic Regimens for LVADs, Cannabis in Pregnancy, Hepatitis C in Black Individuals, and more
    Dec 12, 2023 – 11:00
  • Sintilimab for Gastric Cancer, Lepodisiran Targeting Lipoprotein(a), CONSORT Extension for Factorial Trials, and more
    Dec 5, 2023 – 14:03
  • Toripalimab for Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma, Cervical Cancer Screening Strategies, Obesity Review, and more
    Nov 28, 2023 – 14:34
  • Blood, Bleeding, and Transfusion Theme Issue
    Nov 21, 2023 – 09:25
  • Vitamin C for COVID-19, Stool Test for Colorectal Cancer Screening, USPSTF on Oral Health, and more
    Nov 14, 2023 – 14:01
  • Adding Tirzepatide vs Prandial Insulin to Basal Insulin, Beta-Blockers in Septic Shock, USPSTF on Oral Health Screening, and more
    Nov 7, 2023 – 12:19
  • Traditional Chinese Medicine for STEMI, Early Metformin for Gestational Diabetes, Review of Knee Pain, and more
    Oct 24, 2023 – 14:13
  • Million Hearts Model and CV Events, Eplontersen for ATTRv Amyloidosis Polyneuropathy, Hyperthyroidism Review, and more
    Oct 17, 2023 – 11:18
  • ICU Decolonization Strategies, Follow Up of Abnormal Cancer Screening Test Results, Bipolar Disorder Review, and more
    Oct 10, 2023 – 12:08
  • Ischemic Conditioning for Stroke, Risk-Stratifying Pediatric Ovarian Masses, Adherence to CPAP and CV Events, and more
    Oct 3, 2023 – 16:22
  • Lorundrostat for Hypertension, Autoimmunity After COVID-19, Childhood Cancer Survivor Care, and more
    Sep 26, 2023 – 10:56
  • Muvalaplin Lipoprotein(a) Inhibition, Pediatric Sinusitis Antibiotics, Pregnancy Hypertension Screening, and more
    Sep 19, 2023 – 08:17
  • Afib Ablation and Mental Health, Sedentary Behavior and Dementia, Ulcerative Colitis Review, and more
    Sep 12, 2023 – 09:20
  • BP Targets After Stroke Thrombectomy, Psilocybin for Depression, Large Language Models in Medicine, and more
    Sep 5, 2023 – 12:14
  • Bypass Surgery for Stroke Prevention, Global Aspirin Use for CVD Secondary Prevention, USPSTF on PrEP, and more
    Aug 22, 2023 – 14:42
  • Magnesium in Preterm Birth, Pelvic Organ Prolapse Repair, Market Exclusivity for GLP-1 Agonists, and more
    Aug 15, 2023 – 14:42
  • Donanemab for Alzheimer Disease, Sugary Drinks and Liver Disease, Cervical Cancer Screening, and more
    Aug 8, 2023 – 08:28
  • Vestibular Schwannoma Treatment, Genetics of Dilated Cardiomyopathy, Folic Acid to Prevent Neural Tube Defects, and more
    Aug 1, 2023 – 11:23
  • Immunomodulators for COVID-19, Pessary and Preterm Birth, Antibiotics for Sinusitis in Children, and more
    Jul 25, 2023 – 12:43
  • Weekly vs Daily Insulin, Access to Postpartum Care for Immigrants, Lipid Screening for Youth, and more
    Jul 18, 2023 – 11:32
  • Bempedoic Acid for CVD Prevention, Cytisinicline for Smoking Cessation, Cushing Syndrome, and more
    Jul 11, 2023 – 12:53
  • CMV Prophylaxis in Kidney Transplant, US Maternal Mortality, Diabetic Foot Ulcers, and more
    Jul 3, 2023 – 10:29
  • DAPT vs tPA for Minor Stroke, Transgender Identity and Suicide, Screening for Anxiety, and more
    Jun 27, 2023 – 13:36
Recent Reviews
  • Mendicinored
    Good summaries
    Good summation of studies to keep Uptodate while you are driving or doing stuff.
  • GolfFiend
    Limited value
    Not very different from just reading abstract conclusions of various articles. Needs better audio and, while editors can write these summaries, better off finding people with better podcast voices.
  • PathMax
    Awesome podcast
    To all the people that love to criticize, it's easy for you to criticize, but it's much more difficult to contribute...
  • wmdny
    I like Dr. Livingston's voice.
    The new narrator (who was actually on a prior podcast episode), Dr. Livingston, is nice. That said, I agree with @flyingpoodle's review, it does make it slightly harder to follow, but if you're multi-tasking it tends to break up the segments a bit so you know. The intro of external guest voices in mid-sentence (... "an article titled...") was a bit jarring, more appropriate for, say, a narrator reading a children's storybook to children when a character's voice suddenly appears in the middle of a sentence. Sometimes news radio lead-ins will hand it off as stating a one-sentence summary or lead, and then introducing the next speaker. From a production value standpoint, with external guests, it's odd that they're recording an inbound phone call as opposed to asking the authors to record a Voice Memo on an iPhone or use any more modern high-quality call platform. The back stretch of the most recent podcast in the new format is all Dr. Livingston, though, and it's nice. While I don't dislike Howard Bauchner's voice from prior episodes, I do happen to work in New York -- so not all listeners across the country may be used to his sort of voice. Also, I admit I liked Ed Livingston's voice better, in both intonation and pacing. Like some others, I miss Dr. DeAngelis, but wow, the comments section is all over the place for prior podcast versions featuring her voice! Most recently, the JAMA podcast did away with the cute, quirky intro theme that sounded like a 2010-era iPhone ringtone. The intro theme is now replaced with stock B-roll audio that sounds like we're about to watch an HR training video. While this sounds more "professional", there are probably newer ways of adding audio bumpers to signal the start, transitions, and end of the podcast, and something that's unique to JAMA as opposed to a generic library of stock audio. The broader issue is one of the structure of medical scientific content. We are accustomed to a predictable format -- intro, methods, results, discussion -- that reveals the "so what?" at the end, with titles that tease the question but don't reveal the answer. In audio & news-bulletin type summaries, the emphasis may be more on the "so what?", potentially even inverting the format of abstracts. To each their own, I suppose. Remember how JAMA used to have cover art? Listeners may vary in their appreciation of the artistic & stylistic aspects of the Podcast, versus cold, sterile and relentless "just the facts" formats. But overall, this is a great and high-impact podcast and regardless of the stylistic elements -- the art here is getting the style elements done in a way that helps readers remember the content better. Comments sections will attract nit-pickers (like me), but most likely the vast majority of listeners to the JAMA Editors' Summary are quietly thankful and satisfied.
  • flyingpoodle
    Great summaries, old format better.
    I prefer a single voice throughout the podcast, I can understand the appeal to some of having authors speak about their articles, but it makes it harder for me to follow. I like your podcast because of the single voice format, not in spite of it.
  • guy11111111
    Good, short summary of recent research
    I'm a first year medical student trying to get an introduction to current research. This is a very approachable, quick and easy way to see what is going on. I disagree with negative comments about the host. He is great, and is very appropriate for th medium, being the editor in chief of JAMA.
  • SkepticalWV
    Recent narrators even worse than DeAngelis
    I sort of liked Dr DeAngelis's podcast readings, not a professional voice but clear and understandable and sometimes humorous. Since she left the newer narrators are much worse, not at all enjoyable or entertaining. Annals of Internal Medicine podcast also used to be great and now stinks due to lousy readers. Both journals need to get someone better!
  • MATTMT
    Needs Editing
    Regading the podcast for Vol 307, No. 2: The podcast sounds like it was recorded in brief 30 second segments and at least 2 repeat making the podcast sound like a broken record.
  • Impact Factor
    Good journal, bad podcast
    It's a good journa; great articles and excellent popular interest pieces. Absolutely terrible narration. It's distractingly bad. I haven't listened in a year and really wish I could. Wish it were more like the Annals podcast; fun narration, interviews, etc
  • whhaymd
    Needs a lot of work
    Pod cast little more than a reading of abstracts and titles of articles, not much help. Look at NEJM as an example of a useful podcast - summaries most of the articles nicely so I can select the few I really need to read completely. And if your going to to a short podcast, I think spending 10% of your time discussing a painting I can't really see on my ipod is a waste of time.
  • MarkSelden
    Not the Right Person for the Job
    Just tuned in this week for the first time, so very disappointed to hear at the end of the podcast that the editor intends to continue as the reader/personality. I found it grating; humor that falls completely flat, and a singsong reading style that just doesn't convey meaning very well. I see others like the podcast, so perhaps it's a matter of taste. I will say she sounds like a very nice person. For a more professional, entertaining, information-rich equivalent, try the Johns Hopkins Podmed (relevant, informative), or the Annals of Internal Medicine Podcast (interviews, clear article summaries, and very funny humor).
  • pterandon
    Too sing-songy a voice
    I had to stop listening.
  • Pestisboy
    not my fav
    The operative term is annoying. I used to read JAMA religiously, I pick and choose now. I keep hoping the podcast will be more informative and less preachy. Also, the inane prattling on about the cover artwork has got to end. JAMA is supposed to be about medicine. An article synopsis would be nice.
  • huffstra
    great stuff!
    I appreciate that Dr. DeAngelis takes the time to make this podcast both informative and entertaining. You definitely won't fall asleep listening to her! Excellent work and hope to see more podcasts from JAMA in the future.
  • littlebitofall
    good info but too boring
    This journal is full of great info, but I found this podcast difficult to remain focused. It could be presented in a more entertaining way.
  • 0898BeautifulSouth
    Too technical for the layman
    I understand that JAMA's audience is medically-inclined. But some of us laity have an interest in health and medical news and it would be nice if JAMA could produce a "consumer" podcast that summarizes the latest week's issue IN PLAIN ENGLISH. If AMA is going to spend millions of dollars pumping out stories for television stations across the country to poach, the least they could do is a consumer podcast. One star only because I cannot rate it zero stars.
  • itunes_site
    Dr. D is a hoot
    It is funny to hear her repeatedly butcher the pronunciation of "cannabis" and other words. Overall, the podcast is good for what it is -- a quick survey of each week's JAMA contents.
  • WildHog
    Refreshing Informative
    Its nice to hear these summaries & commentaries. I like Dr D's voice & her manner. She is not dry or boring, like so many medical lectures. Ever fall asleep in Grand Rounds with a speaker that drones on & on? At least this speaker keeps your mind from wandering AND presents important information.
  • SoWhat
    Yuck. Gotta agree with Al.
    Her commentary isn't cute. She made a Hooters joke. Seriously this journal is too prestigious for her to be reading it. It doesn't sound professional. Even if she was hilarious, they should hire a reader.
  • mensetmanus
    DiAngelis rocks
    I love her dry wit. She kills me...and makes the pocast great! I wasn't expecting it to be so entertaining!
  • pogi pogi
    Fluff
    Just a bunch of B.S. the more I hear, the more I believe the pharm industry is writing this stuff.
  • Berkhof
    Disagree with Al
    I've listened to the podcast and quite frankly I am a bit surprised by the idea that the good doctor is not right to voice this program. Podcasts are not meant to be professional in most cases and therein is the beauty of them. What makes Dr. D. qualified to speak is that she is the Editor-in-chief and not that she has a NPR quality voice! Get real, Al. I personally do enjoy her presentations as they are done by her, though it might also be good to do an interview concerning a most important article as mentioned. Great podcast.
  • your pal Al
    Dropping the ball
    Dr. De Angelis should put down the mic and let someone with real speaking skills do the job of podcasting. JAMA is an important journal and her cute, homey style is not appropriate. She lacks both presentation and organization skills. (For example, doesn't bother to correctly pronounce names of authors and places and she fails to include an upfront listing of each episode's contents.) This is all very inconsiderate of the listener and and creates a sloppy, stream-of-conciousness feeling to the work. There are very good examples of quality medical/science podcasting and JAMA is failing to make the grade. JAMA has the content, but the delivery is horrible.
  • rmtphd
    very interesting and entertaining
    Dr. DeAngelis explains and summarizes the complicated cutting-edge research articles by putting articles into a broader context to general science listeners. She is also very entertaining to listen to! It's a perfect example of what a educational podcast should be.
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