Your iPhone Can Affect Your Pacemaker episode artwork

EPISODE · Jun 17, 2026 · 1H 20M

Your iPhone Can Affect Your Pacemaker

from Next Phase Human · host Dr. Rasham Sandhu

Atrial fibrillation is the most common serious heart rhythm disorder in the world, affecting millions of Americans — many of whom don't know they have it, don't understand what it means, and don't know what modern medicine can actually do about it. In this episode, Dr. Rasham Sandhu sits down with Dr. Gurjit Singh, a cardiac electrophysiologist who trained and taught at Henry Ford Hospital for over a decade before joining California Cardiovascular Institute as Chief Medical Officer and serving as Medical Director of AFib and Electrophysiology at Dignity Health and Adventist Health Bakersfield.Dr. Singh is also the researcher who proved in a landmark 2021 study that iPhone 12 magnets can deactivate implanted cardiac defibrillators — a discovery that went international and triggered an FDA panel that reshaped guidance for both device companies and smartphone manufacturers. He starts there, and then the conversation opens up into one of the most thorough, accessible, and practically useful breakdowns of AFib you'll find in podcast form.They cover how the heart's electrical system works and what actually happens during AFib, why the disease is showing up in younger and younger patients, the full landscape of modifiable risk factors and what the research actually says about each one, how AFib ablation works and why it is now considered a first-line therapy for most patients, what the Watchman device is and who it's appropriate for, how wearables like Apple Watch and Whoop fit into monitoring and early detection, and what the next 10 to 15 years of AFib prevention and treatment might look like — including AI-driven risk prediction from EKG data and nervous system modulation that doesn't require burning any heart tissue at all.Dr. Singh also shares the story of a patient he restored to normal rhythm after 15 years of AFib and heart failure — a case most physicians would have considered untreatable — and gives a practical framework for the 45-year-old who exercises a few times a week, has a drink on the weekends, and wants to know what they can actually do to reduce their risk given a family history of the disease.If you or someone you love has AFib, has been told they might be at risk, or is simply trying to understand what their wearable is telling them about their heart, this is the episode to share.Mentioned in This EpisodeCalifornia Cardiovascular Institute (CCI) — cacvinst.com | 8337 Brimhall Rd Building 1200, Bakersfield CA 93312Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MichiganDignity Health Bakersfield and Adventist Health BakersfieldiPhone 12 magnet / defibrillator study — published in Heart Rhythm Society (2021)AFIRM Trial (rate vs. rhythm control)CASTLE-AF Trial (ablation in heart failure patients)Apple Heart Study (~400,000 patients, AFib detection via Apple Watch)Decaf Trial (200 patients, coffee and AFib risk)GLP-1 / semaglutide meta-analysis (26 studies, 17% AFib risk reduction)Devices mentioned: Apple Watch, Whoop, Garmin, Kardia App, Oura Ring (upcoming episode), Watchman, AmplatzerMedications mentioned: warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban, heparin, antiarrhythmicsConnectDr. Rasham Sandhu — @nextphasehumanDr. Gurjit Singh — @dr_gurjitsinghNext Phase Human Podcast — @nextphasehumanCalifornia Cardiovascular Institute8337 Brimhall Rd Building 1200, Bakersfield, CA 93312cacvinst.comInterested in being a guest on Next Phase Human?Contact: [email protected]

Episode metadata supplied by the publisher feed · Published Jun 17, 2026

Atrial fibrillation is the most common serious heart rhythm disorder in the world, affecting millions of Americans — many of whom don't know they have it, don't understand what it means, and don't know what modern medicine can actually do about it. In this episode, Dr. Rasham Sandhu sits down with Dr. Gurjit Singh, a cardiac electrophysiologist who trained and taught at Henry Ford Hospital for over a decade before joining California Cardiovascular Institute as Chief Medical Officer and serving as Medical Director of AFib and Electrophysiology at Dignity Health and Adventist Health Bakersfield.Dr. Singh is also the researcher who proved in a landmark 2021 study that iPhone 12 magnets can deactivate implanted cardiac defibrillators — a discovery that went international and triggered an FDA panel that reshaped guidance for both device companies and smartphone manufacturers. He starts there, and then the conversation opens up into one of the most thorough, accessible, and practically useful breakdowns of AFib you'll find in podcast form.They cover how the heart's electrical system works and what actually happens during AFib, why the disease is showing up in younger and younger patients, the full landscape of modifiable risk factors and what the research actually says about each one, how AFib ablation works and why it is now considered a first-line therapy for most patients, what the Watchman device is and who it's appropriate for, how wearables like Apple Watch and Whoop fit into monitoring and early detection, and what the next 10 to 15 years of AFib prevention and treatment might look like — including AI-driven risk prediction from EKG data and nervous system modulation that doesn't require burning any heart tissue at all.Dr. Singh also shares the story of a patient he restored to normal rhythm after 15 years of AFib and heart failure — a case most physicians would have considered untreatable — and gives a practical framework for the 45-year-old who exercises a few times a week, has a drink on the weekends, and wants to know what they can actually do to reduce their risk given a family history of the disease.If you or someone you love has AFib, has been told they might be at risk, or is simply trying to understand what their wearable is telling them about their heart, this is the episode to share.Mentioned in This EpisodeCalifornia Cardiovascular Institute (CCI) — cacvinst.com | 8337 Brimhall Rd Building 1200, Bakersfield CA 93312Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, MichiganDignity Health Bakersfield and Adventist Health BakersfieldiPhone 12 magnet / defibrillator study — published in Heart Rhythm Society (2021)AFIRM Trial (rate vs. rhythm control)CASTLE-AF Trial (ablation in heart failure patients)Apple Heart Study (~400,000 patients, AFib detection via Apple Watch)Decaf Trial (200 patients, coffee and AFib risk)GLP-1 / semaglutide meta-analysis (26 studies, 17% AFib risk reduction)Devices mentioned: Apple Watch, Whoop, Garmin, Kardia App, Oura Ring (upcoming episode), Watchman, AmplatzerMedications mentioned: warfarin, apixaban, rivaroxaban, heparin, antiarrhythmicsConnectDr. Rasham Sandhu — @nextphasehumanDr. Gurjit Singh — @dr_gurjitsinghNext Phase Human Podcast — @nextphasehumanCalifornia Cardiovascular Institute8337 Brimhall Rd Building 1200, Bakersfield, CA 93312cacvinst.comInterested in being a guest on Next Phase Human?Contact: [email protected]

PodParley-generated summary based on available episode metadata and transcript content.

NOW PLAYING

Your iPhone Can Affect Your Pacemaker

0:00 1:20:12

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

Breaking News Show | eTurboNews Juergen Thomas Steinmetz News is relevant to the global travel and tourism industry, human rights and global issues.Breaking news when it happens and only from the source. The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene (Full Audiobook) Robert Greene Amoral, cunning, ruthless, and instructive, this multi-million-copy New York Times bestseller is the definitive manual for anyone interested in gaining, observing, or defending against ultimate control – from the author of The Laws of Human Nature.In the book that People magazine proclaimed “beguiling” and “fascinating,” Robert Greene and Joost Elffers have distilled three thousand years of the history of power into 48 essential laws by drawing from the philosophies of Machiavelli, Sun Tzu, and Carl Von Clausewitz and also from the lives of figures ranging from Henry Kissinger to P.T. Barnum.Some laws teach the need for prudence (“Law 1: Never Outshine the Master”), others teach the value of confidence (“Law 28: Enter Action with Boldness”), and many recommend absolute self-preservation (“Law 15: Crush Your Enemy Totally”). Every law, though, has one thing in common: an interest in t NEWMORROW SESSIONS - A PodCast Series on the Future of Hospitality Mario C. Bauer, Florian Schneider, Axel Weber & Dr. Tillman Bardt The Newmorrow PodCast is more than a podcast — it's a platform for open dialog on the future of our business, a platform for those building what doesn’t exist yet. Here, we share and embrace our passion for the hospitality industry, but we won’t romanticize the journey. We ask the tough questions, confront uncomfortable truths, and prepare for a future that resists easy answers. We believe that the tougher and wilder times become, the more openly, honestly and humanely people need to talk to each other and act together. We believe, openness, togetherness, and truthfulness should also be cornerstones of a professional community to develop our utopian idea of „open source“. This is a space where visionaries don’t just imagine the future — they wrestle with the paradoxes that shape it: success vs. happiness, data vs. instinct, stability vs. reinvention. Join leaders, entrepreneurs, and thinkers as they share not what made them — but what’s actively shaping them, now and next. So tune in Hyperfluent Hypio Hyperfluent transmits straight from the heart of Hyperliquid, where culture, creativity, and capital converge. Anchored by the architects of Hypio—the decentralized cultural virus—each episode archives the minds engineering the blockchain built to house all finance. These conversations are traceable artifacts in HyperEVM’s evolution: not just what’s being built, but why it matters, how it mutates, and where it’s taking us next. Listen in for the blueprints, the blind spots, and the narrative weapons shaping tomorrow’s markets.Hyperfluent: learn the language, ride the wave, spread the strain.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long is this episode of Next Phase Human?

This episode is 1 hour and 20 minutes long.

When was this Next Phase Human episode published?

This episode was published on June 17, 2026.

What is this episode about?

Atrial fibrillation is the most common serious heart rhythm disorder in the world, affecting millions of Americans — many of whom don't know they have it, don't understand what it means, and don't know what modern medicine can actually do about it....

Can I download this Next Phase Human episode?

Yes, you can download this episode by clicking the download button on the episode player, or subscribe to the podcast in your preferred podcast app for automatic downloads.
URL copied to clipboard!