4.8 • 648 Ratings
🗓️ 7 April 2025
⏱️ 66 minutes
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Brandon Franklin returns to the podcast after a very long hiatus. You'll have to go back to Session 36 to hear his first appearance as a matter of fact.
It turns out that he's been doing a lot of innovative clinical work in that time. Currently, he is the Chief Behavior Analyst for the Lee Specialty Clinic and a Behavioral Consultant at Kramer Behavioral Health. In these roles, Brandon has implemented various interventions to help individuals with intellectual disabilities access routine medical and dental care.
If you're not familiar with this topic, it might sound pretty mundane, but as you'll hear, these populations really struggle to attend and participate in routine medical appointments, which, not surprisingly, has downstream negative health consequences. As such, interventions that improve on the current statistics can truly be considered life-saving.
In this podcast, we get into the following:
Brandon has generously compiled a list of references, which you can find here. He's passionate about this topic and is willing to talk with anyone about it, so feel free to hit him up on LinkedIn.
This podcast is brought to you by:
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0:28.6 | the behavioral toolbox.com. Hey, everyone. Thanks for joining me in session 296 of the behavioral |
0:36.8 | observations podcast. |
0:39.0 | My good friend Brandon Franklin returns to the show after a very long hiatus. |
0:43.3 | In fact, you'll have to go back to session 36 to hear his first appearance on the podcast, as a matter of fact. |
0:50.8 | It turns out that he's been doing a lot of innovative clinical work in that time. Currently, he is the |
0:56.2 | chief behavior analyst for the Lee Specialty Clinic and a behavioral consultant at Kramer Behavioral Health. |
1:02.5 | In these roles, Brandon has implemented various interventions to help individuals with intellectual |
1:07.3 | disabilities access routine medical and dental care more successfully. |
1:12.6 | If you're not familiar with this topic, it may sound pretty mundane at first glance. |
1:17.9 | But as you learn from Brandon, these populations really struggle to attend and participate in routine |
1:22.9 | medical appointments, which not surprisingly has downstream negative health consequences. As such, |
1:30.1 | interventions that improve on the current statistics can truly be considered life-saving in nature. |
1:36.5 | So all that to say that in this podcast, we get into the following. We talk about common phobias |
1:41.9 | associated with medical treatments. We talk about Brandon's personal experience with the fear of flying or aerophobia, as it's known as, and what he did to improve it. |
1:50.4 | We go over the basics of desensitization strategies, and we do a little history on it as well. |
1:57.1 | We talk about how he and his team members use these strategies to improve the rate of successful medical appointment visits. |
2:04.3 | And finally, he's doing dissertation research on this, so we get into what he's doing for his study and where he is in that process. |
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