『Oncology Unscripted With John Marshall: Episode 21: Watching Vaccine Access Collapse in Real Time』のカバーアート

Oncology Unscripted With John Marshall: Episode 21: Watching Vaccine Access Collapse in Real Time

Oncology Unscripted With John Marshall: Episode 21: Watching Vaccine Access Collapse in Real Time

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[00:00:05] MedBuzz: Back to Being ‘Just a Doctor’John Marshall, MD: John Marshall for Oncology Unscripted, coming to you live from this big office. This is the biggest office because, you know, I've been the Chief of the Division here at Georgetown for 20 years. I didn't want the job when I was first offered it a long time ago. I ended up saying yes. Of course, that's a dramatic change in one's academic career—taking on administrative roles like this. You do get the big office, which is nice, but you also get a lot of other stuff. You know too much. You know who's mad at whom, you know who you need to recruit, and who you need to un-recruit—all of those things. You have the business side of a cancer business going on, and you're a doctor, and you're doing clinical research, and you're trying to educate everybody around you.About a year or so ago, I decided in my own head that 20 years is enough. And so, as of this summer, I have officially stepped down as the Chief of the Division here at Georgetown. My colleague and much smarter friend, Dr. Steven Liu—lung cancer expert, world expert—is stepping in to be the Chief of our Division, and he's already hit the ground running. The fresh voice is honestly already a positive. You can just hear the freshness of his voice and his attitude and his energy. You know, the Mayo Clinic actually has a structure where you can only be in a leadership position for so many years, and it has to turn over. And I really like that. It's sort of like what we hope our presidential terms will be. But who knows—that may change. But there's a limit: you do the job for a certain period of time, and then someone else steps in and gives you that fresh voice and fresh perspective. But that's not the traditional way of doing it. Most of the time, people hold on to their position as long as they can hold on to it, until they can't do it anymore or they decide to go to some other institution.But the reason I'm sharing this is that I'm now in this sort of weird new place. I'm an ordinary staff physician. All of a sudden—yep. I have my patients, I'm doing my thing, I'm putting people on clinical trials, I'm educating the brand-new fellows who just showed up here about a month ago. Great fun having brand-new fellows 'cause they don't even know how to spell 5-FU, much less how well it works, how it works, and the side effects, etc. So, I love the first few months 'cause you're teaching people a lot of new things that they need to know. But anyway, that part's very exciting. So, I'm still doing all of that.But what I'm gonna have to get used to is not knowing everything—also not feeling responsible for everything. And that's gonna be a change for me. So, any of you out there who've either been through that transition or who maybe wanna offer me some therapy—I'm in line for some therapy as I transition, as I begin to slow down my academic career, withdrawing as the Chief of the Division, but still doing my day-to-day job and still trying to cure cancer.Take care of each other out there. Take care of your bosses and those leaders. It's not a great, fun job. But also, remember: those of us who are now back in the trenches—we need to take care of each other as well. John Marshall for Oncology Unscripted.[00:03:35] Editorial: Watching Vaccine Access Collapse In Real TimeJohn Marshall, MD: John Marshall Oncology Unscripted. First piece of advice: don’t read the newspaper. Second piece of advice: don’t watch C-SPAN, for sure. Just yesterday on C-SPAN was the big congressional hearings. I did read the summary of it in The Washington Post, where RFK Jr. was interviewed—cross-examined for three hours by both sides of the aisle—about what he has been doing with the CDC. And I think we all, as medical professionals, need to take a big step back and a pause and sort of ask: what the hell is going on?You know, the specifics first. He fired everybody at the CDC. He has hired new people at the CDC. They have not come forward with any formal vaccine recommendations. This is all about vaccines and the like.Yesterday in clinic, a patient of mine—who would be a candidate for both flu and COVID vaccines, who could have, a month ago, walked into CVS and gotten both of those injections—now, in the state of Virginia (and I think there are about 14 other states where this is true), has to have a prescription. This came out from CVS and Walgreens—that you have to write a prescription. Physicians have to write a prescription so that patients can take it to the CVS and Walgreens to get their vaccines. Some states are not providing them at all. Some states have gone the other way, where they’ve formed collaborations—and this is those cool West Coast states: Washington, Oregon, Hawaii, California. They’ve formed a consortium to say, “We are gonna set our own policy,” because the government’s policy right now is up in the air about whether you can get access to them, whether...
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