• Episode 10.11 Smarter Cancer Screening, Safer Obstetrics
    Nov 27 2025

    We share a practical, clinic‑tested system for hereditary cancer screening that standardizes intake and education, then confront how malpractice pressures distort obstetric decision‑making, fetal monitoring, and access to care. Former ACOG president Dr. Richard Waldman offers data, history, and solutions we can use now.

    • digital workflow that screens every patient annually from age 18
    • video education improving informed consent and test completion
    • one in four patients meeting hereditary testing criteria
    • management changes after testing including MRI, meds, referrals
    • addressing cost and genetic discrimination concerns
    • OBGYNs as leaders in genetics amid counselor shortages
    • malpractice landscape, rising verdicts, and physician burnout
    • neonatal encephalopathy criteria grounding courtroom science
    • fetal monitoring limits, category II overreaction, cesarean pressure
    • VBAC safety tied to selection, readiness, and team systems
    • safety culture, simulation, and checklists reducing risk

    Be sure to check out thinkingaboutobgyn.com for more information and be sure to follow us on Instagram


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    57 mins
  • Episode 10.10 Habits That Help Doctors Thrive
    Nov 13 2025

    Antonia and special guest Kristi Angevine explore how physicians can rethink habits beyond routines to include default thoughts, feelings, and reactions, and how that shift relieves burnout and restores purpose. Practical micro-habits, internal validation, and redefining productivity help us lead better and live better.

    • habits as automatic thoughts, feelings, reactions
    • perfectionism, people pleasing, catastrophizing as learned solutions
    • survival seasons and low‑friction wins
    • two micro‑habits: emotional check‑ins and box breathing
    • escaping all‑or‑nothing with iterative learning
    • redefining productivity around alignment, not to‑do lists
    • internal validation and making yourself make sense
    • training culture, criticism, and choosing supportive mentors
    • identity beyond “doctor first” to include rest and health
    • coaching options: group community and private work

    Be sure to check out Thinking about obgyn.com for more information, and be sure to follow us on Instagram


    0:01 Setting The Stage: Habits In Medicine

    0:32 Introducing Dr. Kristi Angevine

    2:05 Redefining What A Habit Really Is

    4:20 Perfectionism, People Pleasing, Catastrophizing

    7:12 Coping Gone Sideways And Burnout Risk

    11:21 Unrealistic Standards And The Inner Critic

    15:54 When Work Ethic Becomes Self-Neglect

    19:30 Why Simple Routines Aren’t Easy

    23:12 Survival Seasons And Low-Hanging Fruit

    26:12 Two Five-Minute Habits That Stick

    30:45 Escaping All-Or-Nothing Thinking

    36:05 Internal Validation As A Mental Habit

    41:05 Success Beyond The To-Do List

    48:39 Burnout’s Roots And Moral Injury

    52:42 Training Culture, Criticism, And Resilience

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    1 hr
  • Episode 10:9 Fibroids, Facts, False Beliefs, and More!
    Oct 30 2025

    We challenge long-held beliefs about fibroids, highlight new ectopic pregnancy nuances, and dig into real-world dermoid cyst outcomes. We also unpack the evidence and ethics of 39-week induction after IVF and ICSI, balancing small absolute risks with maternal tradeoffs.

    • Evidence overturning links between fibroids and miscarriage, PROM and abruption
    • Distinguishing spontaneous versus iatrogenic preterm birth in fibroid pregnancies
    • Why myomectomy can raise early delivery and cesarean rates in some patients
    • Ectopic care updates: tube-sparing choices, HCG thresholds, two-dose methotrexate
    • Experimental adjuncts to methotrexate remain unproven
    • Dermoid data supporting laparoscopy, irrigation, and specimen bags over open surgery
    • Surgical decision making during pregnancy and avoiding uterine manipulators
    • IVF and ICSI timing: late stillbirth risk signals, limits of testing, 39-week logic
    • Shared decision making when absolute risks are low but values differ

    Be sure to check out thinkingaboutobgyn.com for more information and be sure to follow us on Instagram

    1:33 Fibroids And Miscarriage Myths

    5:53 Preterm Birth, PROM, And Hemorrhage

    9:31 Myomectomy: Risks, Scars, And Outcomes

    13:25 Ectopic Pregnancy: What’s New

    18:37 Surgery Versus Methotrexate Nuances

    22:05 Experimental Add-Ons To Medical Therapy

    27:47 Dermoid Cysts: Real-World Data

    32:48 Laparoscopy, Spillage, And Pregnancy

    36:06 When Open Surgery Makes Things Worse

    40:34 IVF, ICSI, And 39-Week Induction

    48:05 Stillbirth Risk: What The Data Shows

    55:20 Testing, Timing, And Shared Decisions

    1:04:10 Practical Counseling And Tradeoffs

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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Episode 10.8 Speed in Surgery (+Circs & Autism)
    Oct 16 2025

    In this episode, Howard and Maddie White challenge shaky claims linking autism to circumcision and Tylenol, then zero in on speed as the byproduct of essential, evidence-based surgery. We show how essentialism, confidence, and efficiency reduce complications, lower costs, and improve outcomes in the OR.

    • correlation vs causation in autism narratives and bias in research
    • why operative time predicts complications across procedures
    • surgeon volume, variability, and outcome differences
    • evidence-based cesarean steps that cut time and bleeding
    • tool and method choices that are safer and faster
    • confidence as self-efficacy, not arrogance
    • practical efficiency: setup, flow, visualization, debrief
    • lean thinking, standardization, and reducing variation

    Be sure to check out thinkingaboutobgyn.com for more information and be sure to follow us on Instagram

    00:00:00 Opening Banter & Autism Claims

    00:02:35 Circumcision, Bias, and Correlation vs Causation

    00:09:54 Why Speed in Surgery Matters

    00:15:35 Surgeon Variability and Outcomes

    00:19:35 Evidence-Based Cesarean: Essential Steps

    00:27:20 Less Bleeding Through Minimal Dissection

    00:31:20 Choosing Methods and Tools that Save Time

    00:35:05 Confidence vs Arrogance in the OR

    00:40:05 Practical Efficiency: Filming, Flow, and Setup

    00:45:05 Visualization, Assisting, and Debriefing

    00:50:00 Tools, Tech, and Mastering Basics

    00:55:00 Standardization, Lean Thinking, and Takeaways



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    55 mins
  • 10.7 Tylenol and Autism
    Oct 2 2025

    We push back on claims that Tylenol or vaccines cause autism and explain how weak methods, conflicts of interest, and cherry-picked data fuel public panic. We also unpack why diagnoses have risen—broad criteria, screening, and access—not because of a new environmental villain.

    • Summary of claims made at the press event and why they fail
    • What the cited acetaminophen paper did and didn’t show
    • Conflicts of interest, pay-to-publish venues, and bias
    • Why correlation isn’t causation; confounding by indication
    • Bradford Hill criteria applied to acetaminophen and autism
    • Sibling-controlled studies as the strongest current evidence
    • Amish and Cuba myths; diagnosis versus true prevalence
    • DSM-5 changes driving higher autism diagnoses
    • State-by-state variation explained by services and funding
    • Vaccine safety evidence contrasted with myths
    • Practical counseling: treat fever; use clear, strong evidence

    Be sure to check out thinking about obgyn.com for more information and be sure to follow us on Instagram

    0:00 Setting The Record Straight

    2:30 The Press Conference Claims

    5:30 Tylenol, Vaccines, And Autism

    9:30 The Study Behind The Hype

    14:30 Conflicts, Bias, And Bad Methods

    19:30 Correlation Isn’t Causation

    23:00 Bradford Hill 101

    28:30 Amish, Cuba, And Diagnosis Rates

    33:30 Screening Tools And Subjectivity

    37:30 Sibling Studies: The Strongest Signal

    42:00 Why Meta-Analyses Can Mislead

    46:00 What The “Navigation Guide” Misses

    51:00 Vaccine Myths In Perspective

    54:00 Why Autism Diagnoses Rise

    59:00 DSM-5 And Access To Services

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Episode 10.6 Natural Birth Claims
    Sep 17 2025

    Dr. Howard Harrell explores common questions about birth alternatives posed by Anna, a mom-to-be with questions, examining scientific evidence behind claims often found online that challenge evidence-based obstetric practices. The discussion separates facts from philosophy by analyzing actual research data on interventions like epidurals, oxytocin, and birthing positions.

    • Maternal mortality has decreased 173-fold since 1850, coinciding with the rise of modern obstetrics
    • The "cascade of interventions" theory isn't supported by scientific evidence
    • Studies show epidurals don't increase cesarean delivery rates, contrary to popular belief
    • Oxytocin augmentation, when properly used, can decrease cesarean rates rather than increase them
    • Upright birthing positions don't show improved outcomes compared to lying on back
    • Hospital/provider cesarean rates matter more than specific interventions in predicting your risk
    • For low-risk pregnancies, intermittent rather than continuous fetal monitoring may reduce unnecessary interventions
    • Best approach combines respecting physiologic birth while using appropriate medical tools when needed

    Visit thinkingaboutobgyn.com for more information and follow us on Instagram. We'll be back in two weeks.


    00:00:02 Introduction to Natural Birth Questions

    00:02:09 Historical Maternal Mortality Statistics

    00:05:54 Nutrition Myths and Modern Food Safety

    00:11:34 Debunking the Cascade of Interventions Theory

    00:21:32 Epidurals: Facts vs. Misconceptions

    00:35:59 Birth Positions and Perineum Protection

    00:44:20 Avoiding Unnecessary Cesareans

    00:48:56 Continuous vs. Intermittent Fetal Monitoring

    00:56:24 Artificial Rupture of Membranes Discussion




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    59 mins
  • Episode 10.5 The Dense Breast Dilemma
    Sep 4 2025

    Howard and Antonia explore the safety of medications during pregnancy and the controversial reporting requirements for breast density on mammograms, examining how science is being overshadowed by fear-mongering in healthcare decision-making.

    • Examining the evidence behind avoiding fluconazole (Diflucan) in first trimester, finding that short courses likely pose minimal risk
    • Discussing the important distinction between possibility and probability when evaluating medication safety in pregnancy
    • Analyzing the wide variation in cesarean delivery rates across US counties, from 5.4% to over 53% for low-risk patients
    • Critiquing politically-motivated FDA actions on SSRIs, food dyes, and other health policies not supported by scientific evidence
    • Explaining why the FDA's requirement to notify women of dense breasts on mammograms may cause more harm than good
    • Demonstrating how supplemental testing for women with dense breasts leads to false positives and unnecessary procedures
    • Reviewing the historical development of prenatal diagnosis from early ultrasound to cell-free DNA testing

    00:00:33 Evidence for Diflucan in Pregnancy

    00:12:12 Cesarean Delivery Rates Across US Counties

    00:16:39 FDA's Position on SSRIs and Food Dyes

    00:28:46 Managing Dense Breasts in Mammography

    00:44:46 History of Prenatal Abnormality Diagnosis



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    58 mins
  • Episode 10.4 Noah
    Aug 21 2025

    Dr. Jacqueline Vidosh shares her powerful journey as both an obstetrician and mother to Noah, who has trisomy 18, challenging traditional medical understanding of this condition and providing insights into compassionate patient care. Her story, recently featured in The New York Times, illustrates how medical perspectives on chromosomal conditions can evolve through lived experience, highlighting the spectrum nature of trisomy 18 and the importance of accurate, unbiased counseling.

    • Receiving the diagnosis during pregnancy and navigating the emotional process when medical training suggested a fatal outcome
    • Discovering that trisomy 18 exists on a spectrum with possibilities beyond what medical textbooks described
    • Managing Noah's complex medical needs including ventilator, tracheostomy, and gastrostomy tube while balancing family life
    • Advocating for appropriate medical interventions by challenging the assumption that care would be "futile"
    • Celebrating Noah's achievements and joys – his love of music, lights, and his unique ways of communication
    • Recent medical literature supporting interventions for trisomy 18/13 on a case-by-case basis
    • Using the SPIKES protocol for delivering difficult news with respect and compassion
    • Implementing trauma-informed care for families experiencing complicated pregnancies and NICU stays

    Read more about Noah's story in The New York Times article, available through the free link provided in our show notes.
    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/31/magazine/trisomy-18-edwards-syndrome-baby-treatment-care.html?unlocked_article_code=1.ak8.JRBu.7-qMQhelsVYx&smid=url-share

    00:00:00 Introduction to Trisomy 18 Discussion

    00:08:40 Receiving the Diagnosis

    00:17:45 Challenging Medical Assumptions

    00:27:30 Noah's Daily Life and Care

    00:38:20 Joy and Connection with Noah

    00:47:10 Navigating the Medical System

    00:54:00 Breaking Difficult News Effectively

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    1 hr