Open Mics With Doctor Stites 5-1-24

Media Resources

Jill Chadwick

News Director

Office: (913) 588-5013

Cell: (913) 223-3974

Email

jchadwick@kumc.edu

Key points from today’s guests:

Morning Rounds – Updates on Current News

Dr. Sean Kumer, associate chief medical officer, VP, Perioperative and Procedural Services, The University of Kansas Health System

  • The transplant program set a new record with 45 total organ transplants in April, including 37 kidneys, 5 livers, and 3 hearts.
  • It is important to emphasize organ donation – there is a transplant waitlist that is 10 times the number of transplants performed in the past month.
  • To register to donate, go to your DMV or DonateLife.net.
  • And if you want to be a living donor, please don't hesitate to contact any of your local transplant centers.

Focus Topic

Dr. Steve Stites, chief medical officer, The University of Kansas Health System

  • This morning program was born out of necessity in March 2020 to provide accurate information about COVID.
  • There are so many people behind the scenes who have made this program so successful, especially as we were getting essential, accurate information out to the public about COVID.
  • There is a tremendous need for science-based guidance during times of uncertainty.
  • We must be honest and transparent in our medical advice.

Dr. Dana Hawkinson, medical director of Infection Prevention and Control, The University of Kansas Health System

  • CMS has halted COVID reporting requirements for hospitals.
  • So here is what we hope is our final COVID hospitalizations report: we have four COVID inpatients this week.
  • COVID is still a significant disease, as it still affects a significant group of populations that we have in our community.
  • Better understanding COVID vaccines will help protect you against hospitalization and severe disease.

Dr. Gregory Poland, director, Vaccine Research Group, Mayo Clinic; editor-in-chief, “Vaccine”

  • He praised the Morning Medical Update as an important informational program that has been viewed nationally and internationally.
  • COVID is moving from a pandemic to an endemic, but that means that we will likely need regular COVID vaccinations to protect us.
  • Just last week, 5,600 Americans got sick enough with COVID that they had to be hospitalized. And 230 of them died.
  • With masking, we had almost no RSV and almost no influenza. In fact, one of the four strains of influenza disappeared. So masking did work.
  • Vaccine misinformation has cost people their lives and their well-being. Why listen to politicians or celebrities about science instead of the ones actually studying science?
  • One in 269 Americans lost their lives to COVID and how many of them could have been prevented?
  • Lack of transparency and honesty in public health messaging can lead to unnecessary deaths and a lack of trust in the medical community.
  • The dynamic of COVID has changed due to high levels of population immunity, which makes it difficult to navigate the various variants and keep up with the changing landscape.
  • Vaccines that help prevent severe disease and death is important, despite the fact that some people may still get sick after being vaccinated.
  • mRNA vaccines show promise for broad applications, including flu and cancer vaccines.


Thursday, May 2 at 8 a.m. is the next All Things Heart.
One man's skin cancer traveled to his heart. Find out how that happened, how it was treated, and how he's doing today.

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