How We Talk About "Addicts" MattersTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 741, Segment 1
Feb 6, 2018 • 17m
Guest: Michael Botticelli, Executive Director of the Grayken Center for Addiction, Boston Medical Center, Former Director, Office of National Drug Control Policy An estimated 21 million Americans over the age of 12 are addicted to alcohol or other drugs. But only ten percent of them are getting treatment. Would that number improve if we talked about addiction differently? If, instead of calling someone an addict or a user, we referred to them as “a person with a substance use disorder”?

Religion and the Trump PresidencyFeb 6, 201821mGuest: Shaun Casey, MDiv, ThD, Director, Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs, Georgetown University, and former Special Representative for Religion and Global Affairs at the US State Department US Presidents often talk about God – they end speeches with “God Bless America” and they tout the importance of faith in American life. We’ll see them attending church and sometimes they’ll reference their own religious beliefs when talking about how they came to a certain decision. President Trump offers an interesting paradox in this tradition: he presents himself as a champion of faith, but not as a particularly religious man. Shaun Casey is on campus to speak at BYU’s World Interfaith Harmony Week.
Guest: Shaun Casey, MDiv, ThD, Director, Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs, Georgetown University, and former Special Representative for Religion and Global Affairs at the US State Department US Presidents often talk about God – they end speeches with “God Bless America” and they tout the importance of faith in American life. We’ll see them attending church and sometimes they’ll reference their own religious beliefs when talking about how they came to a certain decision. President Trump offers an interesting paradox in this tradition: he presents himself as a champion of faith, but not as a particularly religious man. Shaun Casey is on campus to speak at BYU’s World Interfaith Harmony Week.
Tech Transfer: Prosthetic Valve to Treat Varicose VeinsFeb 6, 201820mGuest: Brian Jensen, PhD, Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Mike Alder, Director, Technology Transfer Office Have you considered why, when you stand or walk, the blood in your body doesn’t just go with gravity right down to your feet and stay there?  If that’s never occurred to you, it’s because you’re not one of the millions of Americans with a condition called chronic venous insufficiency. It turns out there are valves in our veins that keep blood from rushing to our feet. When those valves fail, the result can be spider veins, varicose veins or a host of painful and serious health problems.  BYU mechanical engineering professor Brian Jensen is developing a prosthetic valve that could be implanted in someone with chronic venous insufficiency.
Guest: Brian Jensen, PhD, Professor of Mechanical Engineering; Mike Alder, Director, Technology Transfer Office Have you considered why, when you stand or walk, the blood in your body doesn’t just go with gravity right down to your feet and stay there?  If that’s never occurred to you, it’s because you’re not one of the millions of Americans with a condition called chronic venous insufficiency. It turns out there are valves in our veins that keep blood from rushing to our feet. When those valves fail, the result can be spider veins, varicose veins or a host of painful and serious health problems.  BYU mechanical engineering professor Brian Jensen is developing a prosthetic valve that could be implanted in someone with chronic venous insufficiency.