PODCAST · health
Thinking In Psychiatry
by The Academy by Psych Scene
Thinking in Psychiatry is an Academy by Psych Scene podcast featuring short, high-signal audio episodes you can listen to on the go. Each week we break down emerging evidence, evolving clinical frameworks, and complex cases across the lifespan – from psychopharmacology and neurobiology to formulation, systems thinking, and metabolic and sleep psychiatry. Designed for busy clinicians, every episode is grounded in evidence, reviewed by faculty, and focused on one question: how can we practise better psychiatry, starting today?
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Why is Alzheimer’s More Common in Women?
Access the mentioned paper here:Trying to Unravel Why Alzheimer Disease Is More Common in WomenBy Rita Rubin, MAhttps://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2839498# Access mentioned courses here:Women’s Mental Health Course:https://psychscene.co/41RwJx2 Alzheimer’s Disease Course:https://psychscene.co/4vNaeqH In this episode, Dr Sanil Rege examines why Alzheimer’s disease is more common in women and what this means for clinical assessment, prevention, and treatment.The discussion reviews a 2025 JAMA medical news feature (https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/article-abstract/2839498#) on sex differences in Alzheimer’s disease and outlines a life-course model showing how sex-related vulnerability may shape disease onset, progression, and clinical expression.This video provides clinicians with a sex-informed clinical framework for assessing Alzheimer’s risk in women through the lens of hormonal transitions, cognitive reserve, and later-life neurodegenerative expression.Chapters:00:21 Alzheimer’s Disease in Women02:59 Beyond Longevity03:40 Survival Differences After Dementia Diagnosis04:34 Tau Pathology and Steeper Later Decline06:00 Menopause and Hormonal Vulnerability08:11 Modifiable Midlife Risk Factors in Women13:18 A Sex-Informed Life-Course Formulation1#Alzheimer's #Psychiatry #Dementia
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8
Why the Brain Is Never Really “At Rest”
Here are the links to the papers mentioned:Parkinson’s disease as a somato-cognitive action network disorderRen et. al.https://psychscene.co/4vQKgmc The brain’s action-mode networkDosenbach et. al.https://psychscene.co/4ts1pRr Access mentioned courses here:Advanced Psychiatric Formulation and Strategic Management:https://psychscene.co/4sG214L ADHD Masterclass:https://psychscene.co/4sJ1GOS In this video, Dr Sanil Rege examines the Action Mode Network as a unifying clinical framework for understanding how the brain regulates action, arousal, body state, and cognition.He explores the counterbalance between action mode and default mode, showing how impaired initiation, hyperarousal, poor state shifting, and social withdrawal may be better understood as disturbances of mode regulation rather than isolated symptom categories.This session provides clinicians with a neurobiological framework for refining psychiatric formulation through the lens of state regulation, brain–body integration, and network-based clinical reasoning.Chapters:01:32 – Introducing the Action Mode Network03:17 – The Brain as an Organ Organised for Action05:48 – Action Mode vs Default Mode07:18 – Psychiatric Syndromes as Mode-Switching Disorders09:48– Overcoming the False Dichotomy of Mind and Body12:25 – The PACES Model in Clinical Formulation14:48 – Translating State Regulation into Clinical Practice#ActionModeNetwork #Psychiatry #Brain
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Thinking in Psychiatry is an Academy by Psych Scene podcast featuring short, high-signal audio episodes you can listen to on the go. Each week we break down emerging evidence, evolving clinical frameworks, and complex cases across the lifespan – from psychopharmacology and neurobiology to formulation, systems thinking, and metabolic and sleep psychiatry. Designed for busy clinicians, every episode is grounded in evidence, reviewed by faculty, and focused on one question: how can we practise better psychiatry, starting today?
HOSTED BY
The Academy by Psych Scene
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