The Bone Health Basement Tapes Podcast Por Bone Health Media arte de portada

The Bone Health Basement Tapes

The Bone Health Basement Tapes

De: Bone Health Media
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A Conversation About The Future of Bone Health

Bone health is the foundation of movement, longevity, and quality of life—but are we doing enough to protect it? The Bone Health Basement Tapes explores cutting-edge osteoporosis prevention, AI-driven diagnostics, and breakthrough bone health technologies. Hosted by experts, each episode features researchers, clinicians, and tech pioneers reshaping how we assess, monitor, and deliver bone health care.

Join us as we decode the future of bone health—one conversation at a time.

Welcome to The Basement.

Bone Health Media 2026
Enfermedades Físicas Higiene y Vida Saludable
Episodios
  • the Biology of Aging Bone - A Conversation with Sundeep Khosla, MD
    Mar 25 2026

    In this episode of The Bone Health Basement Tapes, we sit down with Dr. Sundeep Khosla — endocrinologist, researcher, and one of the central scientific figures in modern bone health. Dr. Khosla has spent his career at the Mayo Clinic asking foundational questions about why the skeleton ages and fails, and his answers helped change how the field thinks about bone loss in both women and men. His research on sex steroids and skeletal aging revealed that estrogen is not just a female story — it plays a quiet but decisive role in male bone health as well, a finding that reshaped clinical thinking and opened new lines of research.

    In this conversation, we trace the arc of that scientific journey: how skeletal biology evolved from descriptive observation into molecular and cellular precision, what the field got wrong along the way, and how decades of careful research eventually produced drugs capable of reducing fracture risk by as much as 70%. We also examine the troubling gap between what science achieved and what medicine delivered — including Dr. Khosla's 2016 paper documenting a dramatic collapse in osteoporosis treatment rates at exactly the moment the tools to prevent fractures had never been better.

    It is a conversation about discovery, about the institutions and mentors that make science possible, and about what happens when a field wins the scientific battle but struggles to translate it into care.

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    45 m
  • Bringing Bone Health Care Back to the Center of Women’s Health
    Mar 10 2026

    In this episode of The Bone Health Basement Tapes, we welcome Dr. Kristi Tough DeSapri, founder of Bone & Body Women’s Health, a practice built around a simple but powerful idea: bone health should be central to women’s healthcare—not an afterthought addressed only after risk becomes severe.

    Dr. DeSapri’s work sits at the intersection of menopause medicine, endocrinology, metabolic health, and skeletal health. Through her practice, she focuses on helping women understand and manage bone health earlier in life—particularly during the midlife hormonal transitions when bone loss often accelerates but remains largely invisible within traditional care pathways.

    During our conversation, we explore why bone health has historically been fragmented across specialties and how that fragmentation affects patient care. Dr. DeSapri shares her perspective on the importance of addressing skeletal health as part of a broader conversation about longevity, strength, and healthy aging.

    We also discuss what led her to establish Bone & Body Women’s Health, the kinds of patients she serves, and how an integrated semi-concierge practice model can better connect menopause care, metabolic health, muscle health, and bone density into a single clinical framework.

    At a time when awareness around menopause and proactive health is rapidly expanding, this conversation highlights why bone health may be entering a new phase of visibility. Practices like Dr. DeSapri’s suggest that skeletal health is beginning to move upstream—becoming part of earlier conversations about prevention, risk, and long-term vitality.

    For clinicians, this episode offers insight into how bone health can be more thoughtfully integrated into women’s care. For patients, it’s a reminder that understanding bone health earlier in life can play a critical role in maintaining strength, mobility, and independence in the decades ahead.

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  • From Movement to Infrastructure: ASOP’s Evolution and the Bone Health's “Big Bang”
    Mar 2 2026

    Episode Summary — Basement Tapes Recording (Feb 27, 2026)

    Speakers: Peter Bianco, Matt Bruns (DNP), Dudley Phipps Core themes: certification, infrastructure, risk visibility, workforce training, collaboration, ecosystem maturation, tech + capital readiness

    In this episode, Peter, Matt, and Dudley step back from day-to-day tactics to explain what’s changing in the bone health ecosystem—and why the change matters right now. The conversation is framed as a pivot toward maturity, not contraction: after a year-plus of “mapping the ocean floor” (a detailed look at the real-world barriers to scalable osteoporosis care), the team concludes that the work must now split into three distinct but complementary lanes so each can execute with focus.

    Dudley outlines ASOP’s primary lane: standardized training and subspecialty certification to build a credible, scalable workforce infrastructure for bone health. The group argues that guidelines alone aren’t enough—without a recognized certification pathway and competence standard, bone health remains “the Wild West,” limiting policy leverage, reimbursement clarity, and repeatable clinic operations. Matt emphasizes certification as a practical signal to both patients and referring providers: in a space where “no one owns” osteoporosis across the lifespan, certification helps identify true subject-matter expertise and improves referral accuracy.

    Peter connects this organizational maturation to the broader “Big Bang” thesis for the season: the field is moving from disease visibility (reacting after fracture) toward risk visibility (identifying and managing fracture risk across the lifespan). They discuss how current care remains too event-driven—“conception to death” prevention requires a wider lens that also elevates adjacent “orphan” domains like fall risk and nutrition, which demand training and workflow ownership.

    A second lane emerging from their work is the role of The Bone Health Basement Tapes itself: what started as an experiment to “shout into the canyon” has become a surprisingly strong signal of demand, with growing downloads and inbound interest. The team positions the show as more than a podcast—an ecosystem convening channel that supports the cultural and informational infrastructure needed for change.

    The third lane is the “outside-the-society” execution layer: Peter describes the move toward Bone Health Media and a more analytic platform approach—including the developing Bone Health Index—to provide the “speedometer and temperature gauge” the sector lacks. The idea is to make bone health legible not only to clinicians, but to investors, employers, and technology builders who currently don’t have a clear entry point into the vertical. The episode closes with a direct call for collaboration across societies and stakeholders, arguing that clearly defined lanes make collaboration easier—and that without greater cooperation and serious infrastructure investment, the field won’t move the numbers that have been stagnant for decades.

    Bottom line: This episode is a “state of the mission” reset—positioning certification, media/convening, and execution infrastructure as coordinated pillars for scaling fracture prevention, attracting investment, and shifting the field from reactive care to lifecycle risk management.

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    39 m
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