Healthier Ever After

The Insidious Testosterone Crisis

32 min · 3 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Insidious Testosterone Crisis

Descripción

In this episode, Rick and Greg turn their focus to men's health — specifically the quiet, decades-long decline in testosterone levels and why so many men are being told they're "fine" when they're anything but. They walk through the classic patient story that Greg hears constantly in the clinic: a man in his forties or fifties, gaining weight in the midsection, losing muscle despite working out, mentally foggy, low energy, increasingly irritable — and sent home with a normal lab result and a shrug. Rick and Greg explain why total testosterone alone is an incomplete picture, how the standard advice of "just be more active" can actually work against men with low T, and why this is a cyclical, compounding problem that gets harder to escape the longer it goes unaddressed. They also get into the broader science: how testosterone connects to visceral fat, insulin sensitivity, metabolic function, and overall quality of life — and why framing it as just a "sex hormone" or a bodybuilder drug has led to years of under-diagnosis and dismissal. This is part one of a multi-episode series on hormones. Next episode: symptoms to watch for, what age to start checking, and the full range of treatment options beyond injectable testosterone. Rick and Greg are medical providers, but not your medical provider. Consult your personal provider before starting any medication, hormone therapy, or health program.

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28 episodios

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What to do About Women's Hormones

Rick, Greg, and nurse practitioner Caitlin wrap up their women's hormonal health series with a practical episode focused on what to actually do. They start with the lifestyle foundation — resistance training, protein, sleep, and stress — and then move into the full menu of hormone therapy options: estrogen (why the patch is often the safest bet), progesterone, testosterone for women, and vaginal estrogen. They also discuss GLP-1 medications and how they fit into a whole-patient approach. If you've been listening to this series and wondering "okay, but what do I do?" — this is the episode. For informational and educational purposes only. Consult your personal medical provider before starting any hormone replacement, supplement, or medication.

1 de jul de 202645 min
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Hormones Throughout a Female Lifespan

Hormones don't just affect reproduction — they shape nearly every system in your body across your entire lifetime. In this episode, Rick and Greg continue their conversation with women's hormone specialist Caitlin, covering the full hormonal timeline of a woman's life: what estrogen is actually doing from your twenties through perimenopause, how to recognize when symptoms cross from "normal fluctuation" into "something's off," and why the same habits that kept you healthy in your thirties suddenly stop working in your forties. They also discuss the May 2026 renaming of PCOS to Polyendocrine Metabolic Ovarian Syndrome — and why that shift in language matters for how the condition gets treated. Plus: why sleep is usually the first place to start, how cortisol quietly undermines everything, and the stepwise approach Caitlin uses to restore hormonal balance without overwhelming the system all at once. Nothing in this episode is medical advice. Please consult your healthcare provider before starting any hormone, medication, or treatment protocol.

24 de jun de 202641 min
episode History of Female Hormone Replacement artwork

History of Female Hormone Replacement

What if the study that scared an entire generation of women away from hormone replacement therapy was fundamentally flawed — and the fallout lasted twenty years? Rick and Greg sit down with Caitlin Robinson, NP, to trace the full arc of female HRT: from the optimism of the 1960s through the 2002 Women's Health Initiative study that brought it to a hard stop, to the slow, ongoing rehabilitation of the science. Caitlin breaks down the three core problems with the WHI — wrong patients (mostly women over 60, a decade past menopause), wrong medications (synthetic hormones instead of bioidenticals), and a misreading of risk that got amplified by media coverage into something close to panic. She explains what bioidentical hormones actually are, why women's hormonal balance is more complex than a single testosterone number, and what the current consensus looks like for timing, candidacy, and individualized care. They also get honest about the downstream cost: women who lost years of quality of life, a generation of older women with fragile bones and metabolic disease, and primary care providers still practicing off guidelines written in the shadow of a flawed study. This is Part 1 of a multi-episode series on women's hormonal health. For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Talk to your provider.

17 de jun de 202635 min
episode Treating the Testosterone Lows artwork

Treating the Testosterone Lows

Most guys know something's off — they just can't name it. In this episode, Rick and Greg break down what to actually do about low testosterone: the lifestyle foundation that has to come first, the supplements worth considering (including why boron is getting more attention than it used to), and the three medication-based options your provider might discuss — SERMs, HCG, and full testosterone replacement therapy. They also walk through the difference between total and free testosterone, why you can have a "normal" number and still feel terrible, and why medication without the foundation is a losing game. If you've been dragging, or you know someone who has, this is the episode. Ladies, this one's for your husbands too. Topics covered: sleep, resistance training, HIIT, nutrition, vitamin D, zinc, boron, sex hormone binding globulin, clomiphene, enclomiphene, HCG/Pregnyl, testosterone replacement therapy (injections and creams), LH/FSH signaling, cortisol and stress, and how to structure the conversation with your medical provider. For informational and educational purposes only. Consult your licensed medical provider before beginning any hormone therapy, supplement, medication, or lifestyle program.

10 de jun de 202642 min
episode The Insidious Testosterone Crisis artwork

The Insidious Testosterone Crisis

In this episode, Rick and Greg turn their focus to men's health — specifically the quiet, decades-long decline in testosterone levels and why so many men are being told they're "fine" when they're anything but. They walk through the classic patient story that Greg hears constantly in the clinic: a man in his forties or fifties, gaining weight in the midsection, losing muscle despite working out, mentally foggy, low energy, increasingly irritable — and sent home with a normal lab result and a shrug. Rick and Greg explain why total testosterone alone is an incomplete picture, how the standard advice of "just be more active" can actually work against men with low T, and why this is a cyclical, compounding problem that gets harder to escape the longer it goes unaddressed. They also get into the broader science: how testosterone connects to visceral fat, insulin sensitivity, metabolic function, and overall quality of life — and why framing it as just a "sex hormone" or a bodybuilder drug has led to years of under-diagnosis and dismissal. This is part one of a multi-episode series on hormones. Next episode: symptoms to watch for, what age to start checking, and the full range of treatment options beyond injectable testosterone. Rick and Greg are medical providers, but not your medical provider. Consult your personal provider before starting any medication, hormone therapy, or health program.

3 de jun de 202632 min