Healthcare system

14 episodes about this topic

Saving lives with fewer dollars

The episode follows ALIMA's healthcare program in conflict-affected northern Cameroon after it abruptly loses $1.9 million in funding from USAID, forcing cuts to lifesaving services. It contrasts ALIMA's on-the-ground medical work with GiveWell's data-driven philanthropy, showing how GiveWell evaluates whether to fund the program despite limited and imperfect data. Ultimately, GiveWell decides to fully replace the lost USAID funding for one year, while the story highlights broader global cuts to aid and the resulting loss of both services and information about needs.

Nov 27, 2025 Business

BTC255: Bitcoin Is For Everyone w/ Natalie Brunell (Bitcoin Podcast)

Host Preston Pysh interviews journalist and educator Natalie Brunel about her book "Bitcoin Is for Everyone" and how her immigrant family's experience with the American dream and the 2008 financial crisis shaped her worldview. They discuss why the current fiat-based financial system feels broken, how inflation and debt erode savings and opportunity, and why Natalie believes Bitcoin is a hopeful, apolitical form of money that can restore property rights, enable low time preference, and counter systemic wealth concentration. The conversation also covers the challenge of explaining Bitcoin simply, its relationship to energy and human rights, and broader geopolitical and industrial vulnerabilities in the US.

Nov 26, 2025 Business

Bezos's AI Start-up, Thiel's Nvidia Sell-off, and Trump-MTG Breakup

Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway recap their recent live tour and Scott's appearance on Bill Maher's show before diving into U.S. politics, including Donald Trump's push to release the Epstein files and his public break with Marjorie Taylor Greene. They analyze Greene's apparent pivot and apology, debate a new Republican health care proposal and broader healthcare reform, and then turn to concerns about an AI-driven market bubble, Peter Thiel's NVIDIA sell-off, OpenAI's economics, Jeff Bezos's new AI startup, the recent bond rally, and the fragility created by extreme stock market concentration. The episode closes with wins and fails focused on Seth Meyers vs. Trump, Tom Cruise's honorary Oscar, and worries about systemic financial risk.

Nov 18, 2025 News

Tech Stock Troubles, Epstein Fallout, and SF Mayor Daniel Lurie

Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway host a live show in San Francisco featuring an interview with Mayor Daniel Lurie about housing affordability, crime, tech's role in the city's recovery, and autonomous vehicles. After the interview, they analyze the latest tech and AI stock selloff and systemic risks around market concentration, then discuss the new Jeffrey Epstein document release and how it exposes corruption in clemency and pardons as well as potential political fallout for Donald Trump. They close with segments on restrictive health-based visa rules, cannabis legalization obstacles, and audience questions on AI's labor impact and youth substance use.

Nov 17, 2025 News

Epstein Emails, Kennedy for Congress, and Guest Gov. JB Pritzker

At a live Pivot show in Chicago, Kara Swisher and Scott Galloway interview Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker about federal immigration enforcement operations in Chicago, Donald Trump's attacks on the city, crime trends, redistricting, the government shutdown fight, quantum computing, and his positions on issues like minimum wage, health care, Ukraine, and social media regulation. After the interview, Kara and Scott analyze newly released Jeffrey Epstein documents and what they could mean for Donald Trump, discuss Jack Schlossberg's run for Congress and the role of looks and sexism in politics, and break down Kim Kardashian's Skims valuation and celebrity entrepreneurship. They close with an extended audience Q&A on topics including the Fed and economic data, dating and life advice, housing and NIMBYism, and whether Scott would run for president.

Nov 14, 2025 News

Are You Willing To Trade Your Comfort Today For Peace Tomorrow?

Hosts Ken Coleman and Jade Warshaw take live calls about career and money decisions, debt payoff, housing, cars, healthcare costs, and complicated family and relationship dynamics around finances. They emphasize trading short-term comfort for long-term peace, prioritizing debt freedom over investing or lifestyle upgrades, and facing the emotional and relational roots of money problems. The episode also covers broader themes like the affordability crisis in America, spending addictions, and how to structure money in second marriages.

Nov 10, 2025 Business

Why your blood should flow like ketchup | Sean Farrington

Host Elise Hu introduces a TEDx talk by chemical engineer Sean Farrington about rheology, the study of how materials flow and deform, and why it matters far beyond consumer products. Farrington explains how rheology is used to control the texture and performance of everyday items like peanut butter, shampoo, and ketchup, then connects these principles to the non-Newtonian, shear-thinning behavior of blood and its link to cardiovascular disease. He argues that measuring blood's viscosity more routinely could improve early detection of heart conditions, describes his work on a portable microfluidic device to make such measurements accessible, and calls for greater awareness and collaboration between engineers, physicians, and the public.

He's Still Living With His Ex's Parents and Needs a Way Out

Dave Ramsey and Rachel Cruze take calls on money, careers, housing, medical debt, and family dynamics while emphasizing personal responsibility, peace of mind, and avoiding financial entanglements that create stress. They interview generosity content creator Jimmy Darts about his "Undercover Kindness" book and how small acts of giving transform both givers and receivers, and talk with Ramsey Personality Jade Warshaw about the emotional side of money and her journey out of heavy debt. The episode also features a couple celebrating paying off their home and becoming completely debt-free.

Nov 7, 2025 Business

#2400 - Katee Sackhoff

Joe Rogan talks with actor Katie Sackhoff about her career-defining role as Starbuck in the Battlestar Galactica reboot, how that show reshaped science fiction television, and what it was like to gender-swap a beloved male character amid early internet backlash. They dive into the emotional power of sci‑fi and entertainment as escapism, the rise of AI in art and media, parenting in a social‑media-saturated world, and the profound perspective she gained from her young daughter's rare cancer diagnosis and the broken pediatric healthcare system. The conversation widens into AI as an emerging life form, homelessness and addiction, underfunded education and pediatric medicine, the possibility of extraterrestrial life and strange objects like 31 Atlas, and why strong female characters in sci‑fi mattered so much to her.

Oct 25, 2025 Comedy

650. The Doctor Won't See You Now

Stephen Dubner examines the growing shortage of physicians in the United States, exploring both demand-side pressures like an aging population and supply-side constraints in medical education and training. Former CDC director and infectious disease physician Rochelle Walensky outlines workforce data, training bottlenecks, burnout, debt, and rural access problems, while economic historian Karen Clay explains how the early 20th-century Flexner Report raised medical standards but also sharply reduced the number of medical schools and doctors, with complex long-term consequences. Throughout, practicing and former physicians describe how bureaucracy, insurance rules, changing public attitudes, and alternative career options are reshaping the medical profession.

Oct 24, 2025 Society & Culture

#2395 - Mariana van Zeller

Joe Rogan talks with investigative journalist Mariana van Zeller about her high‑risk reporting on global black and gray markets, the end of her TV series "Trafficked," and the launch of her new podcast "The Hidden Third" exploring the underground economy and people living outside the law. They discuss drug cartels, counterfeit money, rehab and insurance fraud, the fentanyl and "tranq dope" crisis, and systemic failures in U.S. drug policy and healthcare. The conversation also covers immigration raids and asylum, pharmaceutical corruption around OxyContin and fentanyl, the explosion of sophisticated online scams and scam factories in Asia, political polarization, and Mariana's belief that empathy‑driven journalism is essential to understanding crime and fixing broken systems.

Oct 17, 2025 Comedy

How two straight guys bought Grindr and made $2B

The hosts interview two entrepreneurs and operators who led the acquisition of Grindr from its Chinese owner under a forced divestiture and then took it public for a $2 billion valuation. They explain Grindr's origin, why U.S. regulators forced the sale, how homophobia and perceived risks created a buyer's opportunity, and the operational turnaround they executed across talent, tech, product, trust and safety, and monetization. The conversation broadens into how they approach private equity deals vs. startups, the use of leverage and risk reduction, opportunities and disruption in AI, crypto, and healthcare, and reflections on long careers in tech, investing, and choosing the right partners.

Oct 13, 2025 Business

5 App Ideas for ChatGPT's New App Store ft. Greg Isenberg

The host and Greg Isenberg discuss OpenAI's new ChatGPT app store and the significant opportunity it creates for entrepreneurs to build apps that live inside ChatGPT. They explain how in-chat app discovery works, show examples like design and real estate tools, and brainstorm specific app concepts including an AI tax assistant, a healthcare concierge, a meme generator, an "AI Grandma" advisor, and a credit score repair utility.

Oct 10, 2025 Business

Everyone Deserves A Good Death

The hosts explore the concept of a "good death" and how modern hospice care aims to provide comfort, dignity, and holistic support to people who are terminally ill. They trace the history of hospice from its modern origins with Cicely Saunders and Florence Wald through the creation of the Medicare hospice benefit, explain how hospice works today, and discuss its strengths and structural problems, including caregiver burdens and for‑profit abuses. The episode closes with practical end-of-life planning advice and a listener mail segment on Gen Z communication and the "Gen Z stare."