Freakonomics, M.D.

Each week, physician, economist, and author of "Random Acts of Medicine" Dr. Bapu Jena will dig into a fascinating study at the intersection of economics and healthcare. He takes on questions like: Why do kids with summer birthdays get the flu more often? Can surviving a hurricane help you live longer? What do heart surgery and grocery-store pricing have in common?

https://freakonomics.com

Eine durchschnittliche Folge dieses Podcasts dauert 28m. Bisher sind 87 Folge(n) erschienen. Dies ist ein wöchentlich erscheinender Podcast.

Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 1 day 15 hours 48 minutes

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episode 15: 15. The Most “Unique, Excellent, and Promising” Episode


Studies by men published in scientific journals are more likely to include glowing, hyperbolic terms. Bapu talks about this “groundbreaking” research (see what we did there?) in a wide-ranging discussion with physicians and an economist about the gender gap in medicine.


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 December 10, 2021  29m
 
 

episode 14: 14. Is Uber Good (or Bad) for Your Health?


When you need a ride to the hospital, who should you call? Bapu talks with economist David Slusky about how ridesharing services are increasingly replacing ambulances. Plus, an unexpected reason why rideshares may lead some people to unhealthy behaviors.


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 December 3, 2021  25m
 
 

episode 13: 13. When Bapu Met Levitt


Once upon a time, Bapu Jena was a graduate student at the University of Chicago. His most interesting teacher? The economist Steve Levitt. This week on Freakonomics, M.D., a replay of a conversation between Steve and Bapu from Steve’s podcast, People I (Mostly) Admire, where they cover everything from the ethics of human-challenge trials to why Bapu decided to start his own show.


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 November 26, 2021  33m
 
 

episode 12: 12. Where Do All the Bad Ideas Go?


Ideas are currency. This couldn't be more true in academia, where it's the job of researchers to think of questions and, hopefully, find answers. Bapu talks with economists Steve Levitt and Emily Oster about how they come up with ideas for studies, why most never make it off the ground, and what should be done with scrapped projects.


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 November 19, 2021  34m
 
 

episode 11: 11. Why Do So Many Donated Kidneys End Up in the Trash?


Every year, thousands of people in the U.S. die while they’re waiting for a new kidney, yet thousands of available organs get thrown away. Bapu talks to a kidney doctor and an economics Nobel laureate about why this happens and how the system could improve.


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 November 12, 2021  24m
 
 

episode 10: 10. The Mystery of the Man with Confusion and Back Pain


Hear diagnostician Gurpreet Dhaliwal try to solve the case of a patient who came to the emergency room with an unusual combination of symptoms. Plus, we discuss how difficult it is to separate the signal from the noise when treating patients, and how cognitive biases factor into doctors’ decision-making.


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 October 29, 2021  21m
 
 

episode 9: 9. Why Fridays May Be Dangerous for Your Health


When researchers analyzed which day of the week most drug-safety alerts are released — and what it means for public health — they were stunned. So was Bapu Jena. He talks with them and a physician this week about the “Friday Effect,” a common problem with big repercussions for the safety of the medications.


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 October 1, 2021  19m
 
 

episode 8: 8. A Playbook for Beating the Next Pandemic


We dig into why Covid-19 caught us so unprepared and how we can make sure we’re ready for a future public-health crisis with former FDA director Scott Gottlieb.


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 September 24, 2021  31m
 
 

episode 7: 7. What Happens to Patients When Thousands of Cardiologists Leave Town?


This week, Bapu Jena presents some hot-off-the-presses research exploring the relationship between how many patients a doctor sees, and how well those patients do. Plus, the surprising impact of annual cardiology conferences that prompted Bapu’s first conversation with Stephen Dubner on Freakonomics Radio.


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 September 17, 2021  31m
 
 

episode 6: 6. Are Barbershops the Cutting Edge of Healthcare Delivery?


Bapu Jena talks with a barber and a pharmacist whose study brought healthcare to Black men in Los Angeles who were getting haircuts. They discuss its impact on high blood pressure among customers — and how unconventional approaches like this could help build trust.


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 September 10, 2021  24m