『Only Human After All』のカバーアート

Only Human After All

Only Human After All

著者: James Thomas
無料で聴く

今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Step behind the scenes of hospital life with Only Human After All, a heartwarming and insightful podcast that introduces you to the extraordinary people who make healthcare happen. Hosted by Dr. James Thomas, a Deputy Medical Director, and Andrea Clegg, an Associate Director of Nursing, this series uncovers the personal stories of the individuals working tirelessly in our hospitals. Each episode shines a spotlight on a different member of the team, from surgeons and therapists to porters and IT staff. Through candid conversations, James and Andrea delve into their guests’ lives, exploring their childhoods, influences, passions, and the unique journeys that led them to healthcare. Only Human After All offers a fresh perspective on the human side of medicine, breaking down the barriers of uniforms and job titles to reveal the dedication, humor, and heart behind every role. Whether it’s a childhood dream fulfilled, a life-changing event, or an unexpected career path, each story is a reminder that every person has a tale worth telling. Engaging, inspiring, and often surprising, this podcast celebrates the diversity of experiences and the shared humanity that unites us all. Tune in weekly and discover the remarkable people who keep hospitals running—because, at the end of the day, we’re all only human after all.Copyright 2025 All rights reserved. 衛生・健康的な生活 身体的病い・疾患
エピソード
  • Maxwell Rousell: Finding Your Niche - From Apprentice to Digital Champion
    2026/04/19

    Maxwell Rousell is 20. He's a Digital and Social Inclusion Coordinator. And he's spent three and a half years finding out exactly where he belongs in the NHS.

    His job is to help patients navigate the NHS app and digital services. He goes to libraries, community events, welfare centres - anywhere people might need help but be afraid to ask. And what he's discovered challenges everything we think we know about digital exclusion.

    The older generation can't use smartphones? Wrong. Maxwell works with a 92-year-old who knew more about the NHS app than he did when he started. The real barrier isn't age - it's economics. It's access. It's confidence.

    Maxwell's own journey is a story of finding your place. An apprenticeship gave him his break into the NHS. Andrea became his "work grandma" (his real grandma is a nurse too, and incredibly proud). He tried different roles. He discovered he prefers project work to operations. He learned that sometimes it takes time to find your niche.

    Outside work, he's a petrol head - German performance cars, race events, talking his grandma's ear off about brake horsepower.

    But inside work, he's found his purpose: supporting people directly while working on the systems that make care easier for patients.

    Because that's why we're all here.

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    23 分
  • Colin Dunkley: The Quiet Revolutionary - Epilepsy, Emotion and Working Upstream
    2026/03/22

    In this episode, we meet Colin Dunkley, a paediatrician who specialises in epilepsy. Colin didn’t choose epilepsy because he loved it - he chose it because it was being done badly and families were arriving in his clinic traumatized with nowhere to turn.

    Twenty years before the NHS 10-year plan talked about prevention over treatment, Colin realised he couldn’t fix epilepsy care from a clinic. He had to change the entire landscape. That meant creating national tariffs so children could be seen in specialist clinics. Building a network of paediatricians across the country. Writing training curricula. Developing courses that now run in countries around the world. And learning that sometimes leadership means making way for others - especially young people whose voices are more compelling than any professional case.

    We explore why kids keep you authentic, why you have to be emotionally involved to make a diagnosis in epilepsy, how stigma still haunts a condition that affects identity and control, and what it means to give your life to work that blurs into everything else. Colin also shares why he cooks without recipes, lives in fear of repeating himself, and finds refuge in the work when being on microphones terrifies him.

    For the quietly spoken introvert who comes alive when talking about his specialist subject, this is what revolution looks like.

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    34 分
  • Aaron Smith: From RAF to the Recovery Room - Bringing Structure to Chaos
    2026/03/08

    In this episode, we meet Aaron Smith, Specialty General Manager for Theatres, Anaesthetics and Critical Care. Aaron came to the NHS just over two years ago from the RAF - with zero clinical background and everything to learn.

    We explore the two sliding doors moments that shaped his path: being rejected by the police and marines but accepted by the Air Force, and losing his father a year before leaving the military. The care his dad received from Dr Dennis and the ward nurses showed Aaron the human side of the NHS - and inspired him to give back.

    Aaron shares what surprised him most about working in healthcare (the iceberg of work patients never see), how military leadership has evolved from command and control to followship, why the best pilots aren't necessarily the best leaders (and what that means for medical leadership), and what it's like trying to bring structure to an organization where you can't pause to fix things - you're fixing the aeroplane while it's flying.

    From chairing a local sports charity to traveling the country watching Middlesbrough, Aaron reminds us that rejection can lead you exactly where you need to be.

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    29 分
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