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Tom Bilyeu's Impact Theory

This Doctor Shows You How to Bravely Face Death | Dr. Jennifer Haythe on Health Theory

Tom Bilyeu's Impact Theory

Impact Theory

Business, News Commentary, News

4.75.2K Ratings

🗓️ 13 August 2020

⏱️ 46 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Dr. Jennifer Haythe has worked through the center of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City, and dealt with all of the medical, emotional and psychological consequences of that crisis. On this episode of Health Theory with Tom Bilyeu, Jennifer Haythe discusses the immediate situation regarding the coronavirus, and also the long-term effects of the disease. Then, she and Tom get into a discussion about a topic that is on a lot of people’s minds as a result of COVID-19. They talk about death itself, how our culture doesn’t deal with it well, and what we need to do to make the dying process more humane. This episode is brought to you by: Athletic Greens: Go to athleticgreens.com/impact and receive the FREE D3/K2 wellness bundle with your first purchase! KiwiCo: Get your FIRST MONTH FREE on select crates at kiwico.com/IMPACT SHOW NOTES: [0:00] Intro: Tom explains why this is going to be a great episode and introduces Jennifer. [1:09] COVID-19 Isn’t Over: Jennifer describes the experience of dealing with COVID-19 in New York City hospitals, and talks about what will be required to achieve herd immunity. [8:39] COVID-19 Long Term: Jennifer explains why COVID-19 is so scary, how it damages so many different organs, and also why she is hopeful for those who recover. [13:37] Protect Your Health: Jennifer details the steps people can take to keep themselves healthy, reduce their preexisting conditions, and improve their immune systems. [21:39] Face Death: Jennifer discusses American’s unwillingness to face the reality of death, and why sometimes extraordinary measures at the end of life are unnecessary to the point of being unethical. [29:49] Make Death Better: We project too many of our own feelings onto the dying, and if we want the dying process to be more humane we need to really learn to listen to patients. [34:41] Culture & Death: Tom and Jennifer discuss the experience of seeing a dead body and why grief happens in such different ways, even to the same person. FOLLOW JENNIFER: WEBSITE: columbiadoctors.org/jennifer-h-haythe-md INSTAGRAM: instagram.com/drjennhaythe/ TWITTER: twitter.com/drjennhaythe

Transcript

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0:00.0

Dr. Jennifer Hay, thank you so much for joining me.

0:03.6

Super excited to get this chance to talk to you.

0:06.6

Thank you for having me.

0:07.4

I'm excited too.

0:08.8

Awesome.

0:09.6

So this is a pretty weird time to be in the medical field.

0:13.0

I see your scrubs hanging behind you.

0:15.6

Are you more at Columbia University, the school?

0:20.0

Are you more at the actual hospital?

0:23.1

Yeah, so we have a medical center that's

0:24.8

associated with our university, Columbia University

0:27.8

Medical Center.

0:29.1

And that's where I had spent most of my COVID days.

0:33.4

And is it still pretty hardcore?

0:35.4

Is it pretty hardcore COVID there still?

0:37.8

It's actually calmed down a bit a lot.

0:40.1

I would say it was pretty intense there for a while.

0:44.4

I had never seen anything like it.

0:46.1

And frankly, I didn't think that any of my mentors and older

0:49.8

doctors that I have worked with for so many years

0:52.3

had seen anything like it.

0:53.4

It was pretty overwhelming.

...

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