Health & Wellness

Medical topics, mental health, and wellbeing

341 episodes · Page 13 of 15

#2560: Can You Actually Measure Happiness?

What does "happiness" really mean — and can you scientifically measure it? A deep dive into the data, flaws, and surprises.

public-healthcultural-biasisrael

#2533: Can Ibogaine Really Reset Addiction?

A deep dive into ibogaine's anti-addictive potential, cardiac risks, and the push for FDA-approved analogs.

addiction-treatmentpharmacologypsychopharmacology

#2529: Depression Subtypes: Is It Cognitive or Biological?

Not all depression is the same. Here's what science says about melancholic, atypical, and biotype-based subtypes.

neurosciencepsychopharmacologyneuroplasticity

#2528: How New Drugs Actually Fix Your Body Clock

Melatonin receptor agonists vs. sedatives — the science of fixing your clock instead of knocking it out.

circadian-rhythmpharmacologyadhd

#2527: Do Brain Changes from Therapy or Pills Actually Last?

Do SSRI brain changes reverse after stopping? Can therapy physically rewire your brain for good? New neuroscience has answers.

neuroscienceneuroplasticitypharmacology

#2524: The Myth of the Inner Monologue

Most people don't have a constant inner monologue. Discover the five surprising ways your mind actually works.

neurodivergencechild-developmentlinguistics

#2513: Are Your Thoughts Lying to You?

The science of automatic thoughts, cognitive distortions, and whether you can actually learn to control your thinking for a happier life.

neurosciencecognitive-therapynegativity-bias

#2509: How Shabbat Reveals a Blind Spot in Air Quality Indexes

Jerusalem's Shabbat cuts traffic pollution 4x more than Western weekends—but standard air quality indexes barely register the change.

air-qualityenvironmental-healthurban-planning

#2491: How Your Stomach Relaxes to Eat (And When It Breaks)

The stomach isn't passive—it actively relaxes to hold food. Here’s what happens when that reflex breaks.

digestive-healthpost-cholecystectomy-syndromepharmacology

#2484: The Alcohol-Depression Paradox: A Neurochemical Bridge

Why depressants worsen depression through rebound effects, not direct action — the real mechanism explained.

pharmacologyneurosciencepsychopharmacology

#2480: Why Wartime Urgency Makes Checklists Stick

How checklists born in wartime shelters can fix everyday chaos — from keys to chores.

productivitymilitary-strategyergonomics

#2457: When Medications Stack: Additive or Synergistic?

How Montelukast, antihistamines, and allergy shots actually work together to stop an asthma attack.

asthma-managementpharmacologyimmunology

#2427: The Art of the Non-Productive Day: A Sloth's Guide

A deliberate, hour-by-hour template for guilt-free laziness, backed by neuroscience and sloth wisdom.

productivityneuroplasticitycircadian-rhythm

#2422: Rare Diseases: Incentives That Work and Backfire

How orphan drug policies created 800 new treatments—and the "orphan paradox" that lets blockbusters game the system.

pharmacologyhealthcare-policypublic-health

#2420: How 4 Countries Actually Destigmatized Mental Health

Australia, New Zealand, Rwanda, and the Netherlands show what structural change looks like — not just awareness campaigns.

public-healthhealthcare-policyinternational-relations

#2419: Methylation vs. IEMs: Untangling the Confusion

Methylation isn't a health dial. Learn how it actually works in the body vs. rare genetic IEMs.

healthneurodivergencemethylation

#2415: Autism Numbers vs. the Noise

What the data actually says about global autism rates, diagnostic history, and why the numbers keep changing.

neurodivergencechild-developmentpublic-health

#2414: Is Love on the Spectrum Helping or Hurting?

A deep dive into the debates around Netflix's dating show: is it warm representation or a deficit lens?

neurodivergencechild-developmentsocial-engineering

#2321: Kratom’s Double-Edged Leaf: Science vs. Marketing

From ancient remedy to modern supplement, Kratom’s story reveals gaps between marketing, science, and global regulation.

pharmacologyaddiction-treatmentpublic-health

#2294: The Side Sleeper’s Edge: Why Most of Us Sleep Curled Up

Why do 74% of people sleep on their side? Explore the science behind sleep positions and their impact on health and comfort.

circadian-rhythmhealthneuroscience

#2290: When the Animal Is the Product

Why does the Sloth Conservation Foundation oppose Sloth World Orlando? Dive into the ethics, welfare, and conservation impacts of a sloth-themed park.

sloth-conservationanimal-welfareconservation

#2277: The Unfalsifiable System of Medieval Medicine

Sneezing in 1500? You might’ve been bled, dried out, or told to pray. Here’s how medieval medicine worked — and why it lasted so long.

medical-historypublic-healthpharmacology

#2265: Parenting's Cultural Operating Systems

Why does "good parenting" look so different around the world? We explore how culture, history, and resources create distinct "operating systems" fo...

parentingchild-developmentcultural-bias

#2258: How Maya, Inuit, and Hadza Parents Sleep at Night

How do Maya, Inuit, and Hadza cultures handle infant night wakings? The answer isn't a single trick, but a complete "sleep ecology" that redefines ...

parentingchild-developmentcultural-bias