Podcast Feedback
- “This is probably the most enjoyable and at the same time the most effective CME program around”
- “Should be required ‘reading’ in medical schools”
- “A great way to learn useful concepts applicable to clinical practice”
- “A MUST LISTEN for all those learners, teachers and anyone practicing medicine”
- “The most entertaining and informative delivery of medical information that I have heard”
- “Great fun and highly informative”
- “Extremely balanced, entertaining and informative”
- “Drs McCormack and Allan provide a critical yet balanced review of the evidence supporting drug therapies”
- “They make me laugh and keep me company on the long drives back and forth to work”
- “I think that this is a very valuable feature. I thoroughly enjoyed it!”
- “Many thanks for the podcast”
- “Great podcasts. They have become an important part of my medical education. And I really appreciate the humour!”
- “I thought you might like to know that I am enjoying them very much. It is reassuring to know that there are other doctors who are uncomfortable with the current trend of blindly following guidelines that seem to swamp patients in increasing quantities of medication.”
- “James, Great topic and presentation. Your side-kick isn’t half bad. I will keep listening. I spend a lot of time taking my old patients off of 80 mg lipitor started by the cardiologists”
- “I loved the podcast on lipid lowering therapy this week. Not only humorous, but informative. I would love to read the reference that was cited at the end of the podcast about quality of life in proportion to number of preventative therapies applied to patients. This article would be very relevant to some work I am doing at the moment.”
- “I am a Nurse Practitioner student…soon to be NP as I graduate in August. I love your podcast. They are very informative and I have learned tons already. I like that you look through all the how to use that evidence to provide better care. I especially like that you make it patient focused. I really like to include my patient and let them make decisions about their care. Sometimes I have fallen in the trap of wanting to tell them what is best. Really they have to decide so your podcasts have helped me learn to do that better.”
- “It’s interesting to me, how much I enjoy the podcasts and how easy it is for me to understand the concepts that are discussed. Thank you.”
- “Like it a lot, is good to hear unbiased non alarmist discussion about risks etc. I work in a FHT in Ontario as a pharmacist consultant and tend to align myself with the thoughts of the presenters quite nicely so it is very reaffirming to hear their discussion. Need to expand the topics a bit but so far very relevant.”
- “Thank you very much for the very good podcasts! I enjoy to listen to them every week; I think they are as good as the weekly podcast from the Johns Hopkins University!
- “Greetings from Germany. Thank you for another excellent eye opening session on type 2 Diabetes. I really appreciate what you guys are doing.”
- “Just want to thank you and the docs for the informative and entertaining TI podcasts. (These guys remind me of a scaled down version of “Car Talk”.) As an RN of 40+ years and a person who likes to assume responsibility for and manage their own health care, I have found the recent programs on dealing with mild essential hypertension excellent and “right up my alley”. It is indeed difficult to find physicians who understand (ie believe) individuals who are both sensitive to the available dosages of medications and unwilling to live with the side effects of many of our pharmaceutical agents. For that reason, I go to a FNP!! To have the opportunity to hear these fellows discuss such aspects of drug therapy is indeed enlightening”
- “A few weeks late getting started in listening to your podcasts, but am now caught up and have heard them all. I look forward to future podcasts. I just want to thank you guys for doing this series. These podcasts are excellent and very useful.”
- “Thanks very much for this – I really appreciate it. I am a traveling doctor. I am appalled by the number of pills some elderly folk are on – Three different sugar pills, three different bp pills, statins plus others, diuretics, sotalol, sleeping pills, pills for parkinsons and other odds and sods. It seems nuts to me. I feel like a drug pusher some days.”
- “I am a Pharmacist in England and must confess to being addicted to your podcasts. I really like the informal, humorous presentation. It makes what would be a chore into something to look forward to. I congratulate everyone involved.
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