Hannah McLane

Hannah McLane  new_releases

About

Detail

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

Contact Hannah regarding: 
person_search
Finding candidates

Timeline


work
Job
school
Education
folder
Project
flag
Award
auto_stories
Publication

Résumé


Jobs verified_user 0% verified
  • C
    Founder and Director
    Cadence Retreats LLC
    May 2022 - Current (4 years 1 month)
  • SoundMind Wellness PLLC
    Founder and Director
    SoundMind Wellness PLLC
    May 2020 - Current (6 years 1 month)
  • SoundMind Institute
    Founder and Director
    SoundMind Institute
    Jan 2019 - Current (7 years 5 months)
  • P
    Physician Research Fellow (Patient Safety Fellowship)
    PHILADELPHIA VA MEDICAL CENTER
    Jul 2018 - Current (7 years 11 months)
  • University of Pennsylvania
    Physician - Occupational and Environmental Medicine (American Board of Preventive Medicine)
    University of Pennsylvania
    Jul 2016 - Jul 2018 (2 years 1 month)
  • University of Pennsylvania
    Physician - Neurology
    University of Pennsylvania
    May 2014 - Jun 2016 (2 years 2 months)
  • UCity Philly Rentals
    Founder and Director
    UCity Philly Rentals
    May 2010 - Current (16 years 1 month)
  • M
    Speech-Language Pathologist
    Main Line Speech Consultants
    Jan 2008 - Jun 2008 (6 months)
  • D
    Mandarin translator
    Drexel Medical School, Diabetes Clinic, Philadelphia
    Sep 2006 - Jul 2008 (1 year 11 months)
  • Temple University
    Teaching Assistant / Researcher
    Temple University
    Sep 2005 - May 2007 (1 year 9 months)
    • Teaching Assistant for Human Neuroscience and Speech Science. • Participated in research regarding bilingual children and diagnosis of language disorders.
Education verified_user 0% verified
  • P
    Psychoanaytic Training (Psychodynamic Psychotherapy)
    Psychoanalytic Center of Philadelphia (PCOP)
    Sep 2017 - May 2022 (4 years 9 months)
  • H
    Master of Public Health (MPH), Global Health and Bioethics
    Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
    Jan 2012 - Dec 2013 (2 years)
  • M
    M.D., Medicine, Brown University
    Jan 2008 - Dec 2012 (5 years)
  • P
    Postbac, Premed Postbac program
    Jan 2007 - Dec 2008 (2 years)
  • M
    M.A., Speech-Language Pathology
    Jan 2005 - Dec 2007 (3 years)
  • McGill University
    BA, International Development Studies (Economics focus), minor in Mandarin Language
    McGill University
    Sep 2000 - May 2004 (3 years 9 months)
  • McGill University
    BA, International Development and Mandarin
    McGill University
  • Temple University
    MA, Communication Sciences
    Temple University
Projects (professional or personal) verified_user 0% verified
  • H
    Harvard School of Public Health Project: Ethical Reasoning in Health Priority Setting: Animated Teaching Tools
    Jan 2014 - Sep 2014 (9 months)
    Needs almost always exceed resources in health systems, and those who allocation these resources must set priorities. In many cases, these decisions require ethical judgments, and decision-makers have a responsibility to think these through as carefully as possible. This series of animations present a small number of dilemmas that are components of health priority-setting decisions in a wide variety of contexts. Just as a well-controlled laboratory experiment seeks to identify the effect of an intervention by keeping all other factors constant, our animations present highly simplified (and therefore unrealistic) dilemmas that isolate and focus attention on a single ethical choice. The presentations are non-directive and audience responses
  • S
    Stigma of Epilepsy in Jamaica: Video Project
    Jan 2012 - Sep 2012 (9 months)
    This is the first in a series of videos exploring the stigma of epilepsy and the international conceptions of neurologic disease – attitudes, perceptions, and understanding of these disorders worldwide.
  • U
    Using Illustrations to Improve Health Literacy and Diabetes Management in an Portuguese-Speaking Community
    Sep 2011 - Dec 2011 (4 months)
    The primary objective of this project is to address concerns of diabetes management by using a low-cost, reproducible & sustainable approach to delivering health information to marginalized communities; our approach brings educational messages directly into the home and the community, is not limited to insured patients, and presents manageable amounts of information given over a long period of time. This abstract is an interim report of this project, focusing on the feasibility and development of imagery/text.
  • T
    The Bhutan Epilepsy Project
    In this project, I worked with neurologists at Mass General Hospital and healthcare practitioners in Bhutan to help develop innovative and cost-effective technology for epilepsy diagnosis in remote areas of the world.
Awards verified_user 0% verified
  • A
    American Academy of Neurology Resident Research Travel Scholarship Award (2015)
    Jan 2015
  • A
    American Academy of Neurology Resident Research Travel Scholarship Award
    Jan 2015
  • U
    University Fellowship, Temple University
    Jan 2005
  • U
    University Fellowship
Publications verified_user 0% verified
  • R
    Respecting autonomy in altered states: Navigating ethical quandaries in psychedelic therapy
    Dec 2021 - Mar 2022 (4 months)
  • W
    A disturbing medical consensus is growing. Here’s what it could mean for Black patients with coronavirus.
    WHYY PBS NPR
    Apr 2020
    You are a physician on a ward full of COVID-19 patients, and you find yourself faced with a difficult decision: you have two patients who have come in with similar symptoms—shortness of breath, cough, and fever. Both have lungs full of fluid, and both are rapidly deteriorating. Both urgently need ventilators. One is a 56-year-old African American woman, with poorly controlled diabetes. The other is a 56-year-old man, who is white, and has no medical comorbidities. There is only one ventilator. What would you do? The United States is now approaching an unprecedented level of medical resource scarcity. The projected need for ventilators will far outweigh supply, and there will be critical shortages of ICU beds for COVID-19 infected patients a
  • I
    Knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding epilepsy in the Kingdom of Bhutan.
    International Health
    Jul 2016
    OBJECTIVE: To assess the knowledge, attitudes and practices of epilepsy among healthcare workers (HCWs) and people with epilepsy (PWE) living in Bhutan. METHODS: A survey with similar questions was distributed to HCWs and PWE (2014-2015). Responses were compared between the two groups. A Stigma Scale in Epilepsy Score was tested for an independent association with patient age, sex, years of education and presence of seizure freedom using regression models. RESULTS: PWE (n=177), when compared to HCWs (n=75), were more likely to believe that epilepsy is contagious; epilepsy results from karma or past actions; PWE need help in school; and people with epilepsy have spiritual powers (p<0.05 for each comparison). Among people with epilepsy, a hig
  • N
    Availability, Accessibility and Affordability of Neurodiagnostic Tests in 37 Countries.
    Neurology
    Nov 2015
    OBJECTIVE: To determine the availability, accessibility, and affordability of EEG, EMG, CSF analysis, head CT, and brain MRI for neurologic disorders across countries. METHODS: An online, 60-question survey was distributed to neurology practitioners in 2014 to assess the presence, wait time, and cost of each test in private and public health sectors. Data were stratified by World Bank country income group. Affordability was calculated with reference to the World Health Organization's definition of catastrophic health expenditure as health-related out-of-pocket expenditure of >40% of disposable household income, and assessment of providers' perceptions of affordability to the patient. RESULTS: Availability of EEG and EMG is correlated with h
  • N
    Defining the epilepsy management gap in a prospective cohort in Bhutan (P2.326)
    Neurology
    Apr 2015
  • I
    Worldwide reported use of IV tissue plasminogen activator for acute ischemic stroke.
    International Journal of Stroke
    Apr 2014
    BACKGROUND: Intravenous tissue plasminogen activator is the most effective treatment for acute ischemic stroke, and its use may therefore serve as an indicator of the available level of acute stroke care. The greatest burden of stroke is in low- and middle-income countries, but the extent to which intravenous tissue plasminogen activator is used in these countries is unreported. SUMMARY: A systematic review was performed searching each country name AND 'stroke' OR 'tissue plasminogen activator' OR 'thrombolysis' using PubMed, Embase, Global Health, African Index Medicus, and abstracts published in the International Journal of Stroke (Jan. 1, 1996-Oct. 1, 2012). There were 118,780 citations reviewed. Of 214 countries and independent territo
  • D
    Defining the epilepsy management gap in a prospective cohort in Bhutan
  • A
    A disturbing medical consensus is growing. Here's what it could mean for Black patients with coronavirus.
  • B
    Respecting autonomy in altered states: Navigating ethical quandaries in psychedelic therapy
    BMJ Medical Ethics
    The mechanism of change in psychedelic-assisted therapy depends on the individual under the influence being, at times, in better touch with their feelings and needs—perhaps more attuned, more integrated, and more rational than the self mired in mental illness. Thus, requiring their choices during intake (e.g., allowing or barring therapeutic touch) to override those made subsequently during session may not only preclude opportunities for healing, but also fail to respect patient autonomy. Psychedelic-assisted sessions frequently generate intense thoughts and emotions—even regression to childlike states—rendering patients uniquely vulnerable. For clinicians, this may lead to a conflict within their fiduciary responsibilities—honoring their p