There's several other hundred blogs, videos, and podcasts that hosts researchers and doctors for their own significant panel discussions. Still, there lacks a diversity in voices, experiences, and backgrounds within these panels. I wanted to challenge that.
A few years back, I met with world-renowned clinicians across North America and asked them: What should patients know about most?
From their diverse backgrounds, international experiences, and distinctive voices, viewers and listeners can finally feel seen and hear from physicians/researchers that better reflect them.
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Tune in to learn more about what you need to know about your Parkinson's journey. Read more for information about the our panelists below!
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Dr. Paulina Gonzalez-Latapi, MD
A leading advocate for the Latino community, Dr. Gonzalez-Latapi from the Parkinson’s Disease and Movement Disorders Center at Northwestern Memorial Hospital reminds viewers how they can stay connected to and take charge of their medical care.
https://www.feinberg.northwestern.edu/faculty-profiles/az/profile.html?xid=50712
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Dr. Daniel G. Di Luca , MD, MSc
Heavily engrossed in Parkinson's research, Dr. Di Luca is now an Assistant Professor of Neurology and Movement Disorders at Washington University in St. Louis. He leads the conversation on what he recalls as patients remembering "the first person to tell them about their PD diagnosis" and sympathizes with their plight.
https://physicians.wustl.edu/people/daniel-g-di-luca-md-msc/
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Dr. Ece Bayram, MD, PhD
Candid and conversational, Dr. Bayram, originally born and raised in Turkey, speaks on her time conducting clinical research trials with PD patients and what she's learned from respecting patient's own comfort zones along the way. Now a Assistant Professor of Neurology at University of Colorado's Alzheimer's and Cognition Center, Dr. Bayram remains hopeful that viewers will takeaway the clinician's perspective from this panel.
https://medschool.cuanschutz.edu/alzheimer/about/directory/faculty/ece-bayram
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Dr. Johanna O'Day, PhD
Focused on biomechanics and how they can help relieve Parkinson's patients in the very near future, Dr. O'Day of Stanford's Wu Tsai Human Performance Alliance, elaborates on her past work and how she sees bioengineering becoming a larger pillar in future PD research.
https://profiles.stanford.edu/johanna-oday
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Special thanks to Dr. Paulina Gonzalez-Latapi, Dr. Daniel G. Di Luca, Dr. Ece Bayram, and Dr. Johanna O'Day for their insights and their marvelous contributions to the Parkinsonism and Movement Disorder field. Thank you!