loader from loading.io

Grand Rounds: Dr. Molly Fuentes, Health Inequities Among Children with Disabilities: Focus on American Indian and Alaska Native Children. Part 1

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Release Date: 05/08/2025

Drs. Steven Flanagan and Jonathan Whiteson: Leadership Transition, Part 3 show art Drs. Steven Flanagan and Jonathan Whiteson: Leadership Transition, Part 3

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Dr. Steven Flanagan is Howard A. Rusk Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine and Chairperson of the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at Rusk. He provides care for patients with physical and cognitive disabilities. He specializes in treating those who are recuperating from a stroke or brain injury. He is accompanied in this interview by Dr. Jonathan Whiteson who holds the rank of professor in both the Department of Medicine and the Department of Rehabilitation at Rusk Rehabilitation. Dr. Whiteson’s skills and expertise focus on patients recovering from coronary and lung...

info_outline
Drs. Steven Flanagan and Jonathan Whiteson: Leadership Transition, Part 2 show art Drs. Steven Flanagan and Jonathan Whiteson: Leadership Transition, Part 2

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Dr. Steven Flanagan is Howard A. Rusk Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine and Chairperson of the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at Rusk. He provides care for patients with physical and cognitive disabilities. He specializes in treating those who are recuperating from a stroke or brain injury. He is accompanied in this interview by Dr. Jonathan Whiteson who holds the rank of professor in both the Department of Medicine and the Department of Rehabilitation at Rusk Rehabilitation. Dr. Whiteson’s skills and expertise focus on patients recovering from coronary and lung...

info_outline
Drs. Steven Flanagan and Jonathan Whiteson: Leadership Transition, Part 1 show art Drs. Steven Flanagan and Jonathan Whiteson: Leadership Transition, Part 1

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Dr. Steven Flanagan is Howard A. Rusk Professor of Rehabilitation Medicine and Chairperson of the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine at Rusk. He provides care for patients with physical and cognitive disabilities. He specializes in treating those who are recuperating from a stroke or brain injury. He is accompanied in this interview by Dr. Jonathan Whiteson who holds the rank of professor in both the Department of Medicine and the Department of Rehabilitation at Rusk Rehabilitation. Dr. Whiteson’s skills and expertise focus on patients recovering from coronary and lung...

info_outline
Dr. Ted Joyce: Tension Between Artificial Intelligence and Online Learning, Part 2 show art Dr. Ted Joyce: Tension Between Artificial Intelligence and Online Learning, Part 2

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Ted Joyce is a Professor of Economics at Baruch College and the Graduate Center, the City University of New York and a Research Associate in the National Bureau of Economic Research’s program in Health Economics. He has published extensively in the area economic demography and reproductive health policy.  His work on abortion policy has appeared in the Journal of Political Economy, New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of the American Medical Association, the Journal of Human Resources and the Review of Economics and...

info_outline
Dr. Ted Joyce: Tension Between Artificial Intelligence and Online Learning, Part 1 show art Dr. Ted Joyce: Tension Between Artificial Intelligence and Online Learning, Part 1

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Ted Joyce is a Professor of Economics at Baruch College and the Graduate Center, the City University of New York and a Research Associate in the National Bureau of Economic Research’s program in Health Economics. He has published extensively in the area economic demography and reproductive health policy.  His work on abortion policy has appeared in the Journal of Political Economy, New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of the American Medical Association, the Journal of Human Resources and the Review of Economics and...

info_outline
Grand Rounds Dr. Haruki Ishii: Corticosteroid vs. Platelet-Rich Plasma Injections, Part 2 show art Grand Rounds Dr. Haruki Ishii: Corticosteroid vs. Platelet-Rich Plasma Injections, Part 2

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Both corticosteroid injection and PRP demonstrate initial efficacy where steroid appears to provide superior pain relief, as you can see here going down within the first four weeks, whereas PRP demonstrated longer lasting effect, as you can see that the VAS score is actually going down all the way up to 24 weeks, where the corticosteroid injections kind of peak at four weeks, and then slowly the pain comes back to its original level by 24 weeks, maybe around, even like a 12 weeks’ time mark. So, both steroid and PRP are considered safe and an effective treatment for the GTPS. But in more...

info_outline
Grand Rounds Dr. Haruki Ishii: Corticosteroid vs. Platelet-Rich Plasma Injections, Part 1 show art Grand Rounds Dr. Haruki Ishii: Corticosteroid vs. Platelet-Rich Plasma Injections, Part 1

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Dr. Haruki Ishii discussed a review paper on the risks and benefits of corticosteroid injections versus plasma injections in patients. The aim of this review was to compare the evidence for clinical applications of these injectates as a treatment for a variety of musculoskeletal conditions in patients. Platelet-Rich Plasma (PRP) injections for clinical use as discussed here, is defined as autologous  plasma, extracted from minimally processed blood, and then containing activated platelets. So PRP delivers concentrated growth factors and cytokines acting as extra cell signaling...

info_outline
Grand Rounds Part 2, Dr. Kathleen Martin Ginis: Education About Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) and Physical Activity show art Grand Rounds Part 2, Dr. Kathleen Martin Ginis: Education About Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) and Physical Activity

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Dr. Kathleen Martin Ginis is a Distinguished University Scholar and a Professor in the Department of Medicine (Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation) and in the School of Health and Exercise Sciences at The University of British Columbia. She holds the Reichwald Family Chair in Preventive Medicine and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences, the Canadian Society for Psychomotor Learning and Sport Psychology, and as is an International Fellow of the National Academy of Kinesiology. The focus of Dr. Martin Ginis’s research is placed on...

info_outline
Grand Rounds Part 1, Dr. Kathleen Martin Ginis: Education About Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) and Physical Activity show art Grand Rounds Part 1, Dr. Kathleen Martin Ginis: Education About Spinal Cord Injury (SCI) and Physical Activity

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

Dr. Kathleen Martin Ginis is a Distinguished University Scholar and a Professor in the Department of Medicine (Division of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation) and in the School of Health and Exercise Sciences at The University of British Columbia. She holds the Reichwald Family Chair in Preventive Medicine and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences, the Canadian Society for Psychomotor Learning and Sport Psychology, and as is an International Fellow of the National Academy of Kinesiology. The focus of Dr. Martin Ginis’s research is placed on...

info_outline
Dr. Kedzierska & Dr. Fay: Comprehensive Vestibular Rehabilitation: Multidisciplinary Approaches Across the Continuum of Care, Part 1 show art Dr. Kedzierska & Dr. Fay: Comprehensive Vestibular Rehabilitation: Multidisciplinary Approaches Across the Continuum of Care, Part 1

RUSK Insights on Rehabilitation Medicine

With over 20 years of extensive clinical experience, Dr. Kedzierska is a Board Certified Clinical Specialist in Neurologic Physical Therapy from the American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties. She serves as a faculty member of an Accredited Physical Therapy Neurology Residency Program. She mentors department staff on assessment/treatment for related diagnosis. She has presented in local and national conferences and is a published author in the ANPT newsletter and Brain Injury Journal. She received her Master’s Degree in Physical Rehabilitation in Poland, Advanced Master’s Degree from...

info_outline
 
More Episodes

Dr. Molly Fuentes is medical director at the inpatient rehabilitation unit at the Seattle Children’s Hospital. Dr. Fuentes is an assistant professor of rehabilitation medicine at the University of Medicine. She also is a pediatric physiatrist. She completed her undergraduate degree at Stanford University and is a graduate of the School of Medicine at the University of Michigan. She completed her residency at the University of Washington and later completed a pediatric fellowship at the Seattle Children’s Hospital. She then completed a research fellowship in pediatric injury at the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center at the University of Washington. She is the medical director at the inpatient rehabilitation unit at the Seattle Children’s Hospital.

 

Part 1

Dr. Fuentes described her life experiences that influenced her choice of a career in the area of pediatric disability. In this presentation, she wanted to: review the injury epidemiology literature for American Indian and Alaska Native children and teens, identify some historical traumas that impact native people, recognize the utility of the injury-equity framework, the international classification of functioning disability and health model, conceptualize rehabilitative care, and describe some barriers to rehabilitation care. A health disparity is just that difference in health status between population groups. A health disparity becomes an inequity when that disparity is due to systematic differences in social, economic, environmental, or health care resources. There is a health care inequity when there is a difference in access to health care utilization or receipt of health care services. Looking specifically at disability and functional difference among American Indian and Alaska Native children, there really is not that much published literature on the prevalence of disability in this population. Dr. Fuentes concluded Part 1 by discussing historical relationships between Native American tribes and the federal government, which have had a significant deleterious impact on individual and community health status of these individuals. For example, boarding schools or residence schools represent another kind of push in the direction of forced assimilation where traditional practices were punished.