Life Can Change In A Moment
Today we have two special guests in studio. Dr. Alexandra H. Solomon PHD, and Dr. Pari Ghodsi, MD . We talk through a variety of mens and womens sexual health issues and try to find a common ground for the battle of the sexes.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
Sarah Sunshine is in studio talking about how she planned an executed her solo travels around the world. She brought some costumes For both of us to wear which really brought the energy in the interview to another level.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
Tyler Capen Ramsey is a Los Angeles–based artist known for his performance art, his "drip painting" of shoes for company Toms Shoes and for painting only with his fingers, rather than with brushes.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
Tyler Capen Ramsey is a Los Angeles–based artist known for his performance art, his "drip painting" of shoes for company Toms Shoes and for painting only with his fingers, rather than with brushes.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
This week's guest is a very good buddy of mine, Shouvik Banerjee. Stanford grad, Harvard Public Policy guy. After a career in solar, he was inspired to found Averpoint.com, a movement hoping to inspire truth and facts in the public discourse by facilitating citations, check it out the website. Shouvik can both code, and discuss politics. Brilliant and a very good man, I'm lucky to call him a friend and enjoy talking about how we want to make the world a better place.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
This week's guest is a very good buddy of mine, Shouvik Banerjee. Stanford grad, Harvard Public Policy guy. After a career in solar, he was inspired to found Averpoint.com, a movement hoping to inspire truth and facts in the public discourse by facilitating citations, check it out the website. Shouvik can both code, and discuss politics. Brilliant and a very good man, I'm lucky to call him a friend and enjoy talking about how we want to make the world a better place.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
Sarah Sunshine is in studio talking about how she planned an executed her solo travels around the world. She brought some costumes For both of us to wear which really brought the energy in the interview to another level.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
Dr. Alexandra H. Solomon is a clinical assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at Northwestern University and a licensed clinical psychologist at The Family Institute at Northwestern University. In addition to writing articles and chapters for leading academic journals and books in the field of marriage and family, she is the author of the book Loving Bravely: Twenty Lessons of Self-Discovery to Help You Get the Love You Want (New Harbinger, 2017).
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
Tricia Nelson is an internationally acclaimed author, transformational speaker and emotional eating expert. She has been featured on dozens of radio and television networks, including FOX, NBC, CBS, KTLA and Discovery Health.
info_outlineLife Can Change In A Moment
Tricia Nelson is an internationally acclaimed author, transformational speaker and emotional eating expert. She has been featured on dozens of radio and television networks, including FOX, NBC, CBS, KTLA and Discovery Health.
info_outlineI met Carina through Trek (a legend you will meet in a few weeks closer to the end of Season 1 of the show), and he said you’ve got to have her on the show. He was right. Born in St Croix, Virgin Islands, the youngest of 9 children, she’s a Children’s Book Author and into tech, and works with sustainable Christmas Trees.
So what is the process of kidney donation? What did Carina have to do once she decided to get checked. First, she had to be evaluated to be a match, which involved first basic blood typing (A positive, B negative), and then additional antigen “matches.” Then she had a psychological evaluation, which, someone has to be competent, able to freely make this decision of sound mind, not mentally ill. And also, I imagine stable enough to handle surgery and the loss of a kidney, understand the risks, etc. Then further testing of her own medical conditions. You wouldn’t want to transplant a kidney from someone with cancer, HIV, Hepatitis C, etc or you would be giving the recipient a new disease. She was scanned, I assume to rule out cancer. She spoke of having a reaction to contrast that is injected in the IV, the contrast helps the radiologist to see organs light up better, and mild reactions are common and not a big deal. After appropriate psychological and medical testing, including matching, the surgery is scheduled.