Episodios

  • Screening Before Symptoms: Dr. Travell Ellis on Early Cancer Detection, Equity & Innovation
    Mar 9 2026

    In this powerful episode of For Your Health News, Dr. Travell Ellis of Exact Sciences joins the podcast to discuss how presymptomatic cancer detection is transforming the future of cancer care—especially for communities that have long faced environmental burdens, barriers to care, and delayed diagnoses.

    A physician, biomedical engineer, and national leader in health equity, Dr. Ellis explains what it means to detect cancer before symptoms appear and why that shift can dramatically improve survival, reduce treatment burden, and give patients more options and peace of mind.

    The conversation also explores the importance of stage shifting, the urgent need to build trust in communities like Flint, and how advocacy, policy, and innovation must work together to ensure equitable access to life-saving screening tools.

    Dr. Ellis also shares insights on Exact Sciences’ multicancer early detection blood test, Cancer Guard, and why emerging technologies like this could help identify cancers that currently have no routine screening options.

    This episode is a timely and hopeful look at the future of cancer prevention—one rooted in science, community, and the belief that early detection should be accessible to everyone.

    For more health news where equity meets science and community, visit fyh.news.

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn:
    • What presymptomatic cancer detection means and why it matters
    • How early screening can improve outcomes and reduce treatment burden
    • Why stage shifting is so important in cancer care
    • How trust and community partnership drive better health outcomes
    • What Cancer Guard is and how multicancer early detection could change the future

    Here are 3 alternate title options in the same style:

    1. Catching Cancer Earlier: Dr. Travell Ellis on Innovation, Trust & Health Equity
    2. Before Symptoms Start: Dr. Travell Ellis on Cancer Detection and Community Impact
    3. The Power of Early Detection: Dr. Travell Ellis on Cancer Screening, Flint & Equity

    I can also turn this into a shorter web blurb and a fuller episode page version.

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    26 m
  • Why Is This a Critical Time for Cancer Care Equity?
    Feb 12 2026

    In this powerful episode of For Your Health News, Dr. Gary A. Puckrein—CEO and President of the National Minority Quality Forum (NMQF)—joins the podcast to discuss why this moment is pivotal for advancing cancer care equity.

    Dr. Puckrein outlines the current state of cancer care in underserved communities and explains why expanding access to emerging technologies—especially early detection tools—is essential to closing long-standing health disparities.

    The conversation also highlights January’s Cancer Care Equity Summit, which brought together policymakers, oncologists, AI specialists, patient advocates, and industry leaders under one shared mission: to eliminate disparities in cancer outcomes across minoritized communities.

    From public-private partnerships to policy innovation, Dr. Puckrein emphasizes that collaboration—not silos—is the key to sustainable progress. He also reflects on the historical roots of American health disparities and what must happen next to ensure the momentum continues.

    If you’re committed to advancing health equity in oncology, this is a conversation you won’t want to miss.

    In This Episode:

    00:00 – Introductions
    00:32 – The Current State of Cancer Care
    04:04 – New Early Detection Technologies
    07:34 – Cancer Moonshot, Public Policy & Underserved Communities
    10:54 – The Value of Public and Private Partnerships
    12:54 – How to Keep the Momentum Going
    16:31 – The History of American Disparities
    18:04 – A Look into the Future

    Visit fyh.news for more health care information that empowers minoritized communities.

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    19 m
  • What Are the Latest Innovations in Cancer Diagnostics?
    Feb 12 2026

    In this insightful episode of For Your Health News, Darrol Roberts, CEO of Hessian Labs, joins the podcast to explore the cutting edge of cancer diagnostics—and why early, accurate detection can change everything.

    Roberts shares his personal health journey and how it shaped his commitment to improving diagnostic technologies. He discusses the financial burden of cancer, the challenges patients face navigating treatment, and why smarter, more precise diagnostics are essential to better outcomes and lower costs.

    From non-invasive monitoring tools to advances in molecular diagnostics, this conversation highlights how innovation in detection and therapy tracking can improve the patient experience at every stage of illness.

    If you're interested in how technology is transforming cancer care for all communities, this episode offers both practical insight and forward-looking perspective.

    In This Episode:

    00:00 – Introductions
    00:25 – Why Focus on Diagnostics?
    02:55 – The Financial Burden of Cancer
    04:13 – The Challenges of Cancer Therapies
    06:52 – Molecular Diagnostics & Innovation

    Learn more about Hessian Labs and their work to improve the patient experience with accurate, non-invasive diagnostic and therapy monitoring tools at hessian-labs.com.

    Learn more about NMQF’s Cancer Stage Shifting Initiative (CSSI) at shiftcancer.org.

    For more health care information that empowers minoritized communities, visit fyh.news

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    8 m
  • Sensing the Future: Dr. Paule Joseph on Smell, Taste & Health Equity
    Feb 12 2026

    In this fascinating episode of For Your Health News, Dr. Paule Joseph joins the podcast to explore how our senses—specifically smell and taste—may hold early clues to serious conditions like Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s.

    A nurse-turned-researcher and leading voice in sensory science, Dr. Joseph shares her personal journey into this emerging field and explains why communities of color must be meaningfully included in research that shapes the future of diagnosis and care.

    She highlights how changes in smell and taste can serve as early warning signs of neurological disease, why better screening tools are needed, and how representation in research strengthens both science and trust.

    This conversation blends curiosity, lived experience, and patient-centered innovation—showing how the science of our senses can transform not only early detection, but the systems designed to serve us.

    If you're interested in where neuroscience, equity, and community intersect, this episode is a must-listen.

    For more health news where equity meets science and community, visit fyh.news

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

    • How smell and taste changes may signal early neurological disease
    • Why sensory science is an emerging frontier in preventive care
    • The importance of representation in research and clinical discovery
    • How advocacy and innovation can improve diagnostic tools
    • Why patient-centered science leads to stronger health systems

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    10 m
  • Stay Covered & Stay Loud: Rep. Troy Carter’s Health Equity Playbook
    Feb 12 2026

    Recorded live at ESSENCE Festival, FYH.News sits down with Congressman Troy Carter (LA) for a clear-eyed, straight-talk conversation on the future of health equity—and what families need to do now to stay protected.

    Rep. Carter breaks down the impact of recent federal policy changes, including Medicaid cuts slated to begin in 2027, and explains how individuals and families can prepare. From redetermination requirements to work or volunteer hour rules, he outlines the steps people can take to protect their coverage.

    The conversation also tackles environmental justice in Louisiana’s “Cancer Alley,” strategies for combating health misinformation, protections against emerging COVID variants, and a practical explanation of reconciliation vs. appropriations—what sets the budget versus what actually funds programs.

    At its core, this episode is about civic engagement, prevention, and why community advocacy still moves the needle.

    What You’ll Learn:

    • How to protect your Medicaid coverage, including reapplying every six months
    • How 80 hours per month of work or volunteering can help meet requirements
    • The “3 Cs” strategy: Congress, Courts, and Community—and how you can engage
    • Why environmental justice and preventive screenings matter in high-risk areas
    • The difference between reconciliation and appropriations in federal budgeting
    • Practical public-health habits during respiratory virus surges
    • Why becoming a “health voter” is key to long-term equity

    This is a must-listen for advocates, families, and community leaders determined to stay informed—and stay loud.

    Resources:

    More equity-focused coverage and updates: fyh.news
    Programs and tools from the National Minority Quality Forum: nmqf.org

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    23 m
  • What Is the Importance of Representation in Clinical Trials?
    Feb 12 2026

    In this insightful episode of For Your Health News, Dr. Friedson, Director of Health Economics in the Milken Institute’s Research Department, joins the podcast to explore why representation and demographic balance in clinical trials are essential to better health outcomes.

    Dr. Friedson explains how gaps in participation can lead directly to gaps in treatment—when research populations don’t reflect real-world communities, the data guiding care may miss critical differences in response, risk, and effectiveness.

    The conversation dives into the economic and public health implications of underrepresentation, why diversity in trials strengthens science, and how more inclusive research design can help close persistent health disparities.

    If you care about equitable access to innovation and evidence-based care that works for everyone, this episode is a must-listen.

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

    • Why demographic balance in clinical trials improves treatment accuracy
    • How knowledge gaps in research lead to treatment gaps in care
    • The economic and policy implications of underrepresentation
    • What institutions can do to improve diversity in enrollment
    • Why representation strengthens both science and trust

    Join us for this important conversation on advancing equity through better research.

    For more health news that empowers communities, visit fyh.news

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    10 m
  • How Can Emerging Technologies Improve Health Care?
    Feb 12 2026

    In this forward-looking episode of For Your Health News, Dr. Sebastian Garcia-Saiso, Director of Evidence and Intelligence for Action in Health at PAHO/WHO, joins the podcast to explore how emerging technologies are transforming healthcare across the Americas.

    From artificial intelligence to telehealth and digital innovation, Dr. Garcia-Saiso breaks down how these tools are reshaping health systems—improving access, strengthening decision-making, and helping providers deliver more efficient, data-driven care.

    But innovation comes with responsibility. This conversation also addresses the ethical considerations, equity implications, and safeguards needed to ensure that technology reduces disparities rather than widening them.

    If you’re curious about the future of healthcare—and how global leaders are navigating the digital shift—this episode offers insight, clarity, and perspective.

    Learn more about PAHO/WHO and its work to improve and protect health across the Americas at paho.org.

    For more healthcare news that empowers minoritized communities, visit fyh.news

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    13 m
  • Staying the Course: Dr. Tony Awojoodu on Kidney Health, Purpose, and Preventive Action
    Feb 12 2026

    In this impactful episode of FYH News, **Dr. Tony Awojoodu—2025 40 Under 40 honoree and leader at DaVita—**shares a deeply personal and practical perspective on kidney health, equity, and living with purpose.

    Dr. Awojoodu explains why kidney disease disproportionately affects communities of color and unpacks the systemic barriers that delay prevention, diagnosis, and treatment. Drawing from his work serving patients with end-stage renal disease, he highlights the urgent need for earlier screening, community awareness, and proactive care.

    Beyond medicine, Dr. Awojoodu speaks to purpose-driven leadership and the power of time management—not just for productivity, but for protecting your health. From managing chronic conditions to prioritizing prevention, he makes the case that how we structure our time can literally save lives.

    Whether you're an advocate, caregiver, healthcare professional, or community leader, this conversation will leave you informed, motivated, and ready to act.

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn:

    • Why kidney disease disproportionately impacts communities of color
    • The systemic barriers that affect prevention and treatment
    • The importance of early screening and proactive health management
    • How purpose-driven living strengthens health outcomes
    • Why time management is a public health strategy

    This episode challenges us to normalize conversations about wellness, prevention, and community strength—and to turn awareness into action.

    For more equity-focused health coverage, visit fyh.news

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    14 m