What The Hellth

S1E5 Lost in Translation: How Medicine Talks Past Patients

24 min · 21 de nov de 2025
portada del episodio S1E5 Lost in Translation: How Medicine Talks Past Patients

Descripción

Summary In this episode, Brian and Nessa discuss various aspects of healthcare, including the importance of taking time off, the role of AI in medicine, and the challenges of communication in patient care. They delve into the concept of asymptomatic bacteria and how it can lead to misdiagnosis, as well as the need for better patient-doctor collaboration. The conversation also touches on the significance of being human at the bedside and the importance of safety in nature during outdoor activities.

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10 episodios

episode S2E2: Flatten the Curve (Of Bureaucracy): Reclaiming Medicine, Food, and the Healing Environment artwork

S2E2: Flatten the Curve (Of Bureaucracy): Reclaiming Medicine, Food, and the Healing Environment

EPISODE SUMMARY: In this wide-ranging and deeply human conversation, Dr. Brian Bost and Dr. Nessa Meshkaty reconnect after a busy stretch to unpack what’s really happening in modern medicine — and where they believe healing is headed. From arbitrary insurance downgrades and administrative bloat to direct care models, hospital-at-home programs, and the healing power of food and environment, this episode explores a central question: What if healthcare worked better by becoming more relational and less transactional? Drawing on their shared Med-Peds training, global experiences, and reflections from the Healthy Kitchens, Healthy Lives conference, Brian and Nessa discuss the evolution of medicine as a business, the risk of being hospitalized, the promise of direct care models, and why the design of a hospital room (yes, even the buzzing fluorescent lights) matters more than we think. They also explore food as more than fuel — as ritual, connection, and nervous system regulation — and why small personal shifts (mindful eating, less processed drinks, more nature) may be just as powerful as system reform. This is an episode about systems — but also about sovereignty. About flattening the wrong curve. And about building lives we don’t need to escape from. ---------------------------------------- 🔑 KEY TAKEAWAYS * Healthcare has become overly transactional. The expansion of administrative layers and insurance-driven coding pressures is distancing physicians from patients — and driving burnout. * Direct care models are gaining traction for a reason. Direct primary care, direct specialty care, and even hospital-at-home programs aim to remove middle layers and restore physician autonomy and patient connection. * Hospitals are not inherently healing environments. From fall risk to preventable medical errors to sensory overload (alarms, fluorescent lights), hospitalization carries risk — and environment deeply impacts recovery. * Design matters. Architecture, natural light, greenery, sound, and space influence nervous system regulation, inflammation, and healing. Hospitals should be designed with patients and bedside clinicians at the table. * Food is not just “medicine.” It’s ritual, culture, metabolism, relationship, and nervous system input. How we eat matters as much as what we eat. * Plant-forward doesn’t mean dogmatic. Thoughtful shifts toward less processed food and more whole, plant-based meals can be impactful — without rigid ideology. * Mindful consumption extends beyond food. Coffee? Likely beneficial in moderation. Processed beverages? Maybe less so. Awareness beats absolutism. * Uncertainty is constant — resilience is trainable. Through grounding practices, nature exposure, travel, and conscious living, we can build lives that feel steady even when systems feel unstable. * Build a life you don’t need to escape from. Travel should be exploration, not avoidance. Healing starts at home — in daily rituals and small intentional changes.

2 de mar de 202636 min
episode S2 Special HKHL Day 1 Recap artwork

S2 Special HKHL Day 1 Recap

In this field update from sunny Napa, Brian and Nessa reflect on Day One at a groundbreaking food-and-health conference hosted at the Culinary Institute of America. What began as an expectation-free experience quickly turned into something far more affirming: a realization that the work they’ve been intuitively doing around food, medicine, culture, and community is now being formally validated on a national stage. They explore key themes from the day, including planetary health, medically tailored meals, plant-forward nutrition, and the growing role of teaching kitchens in reimagining healthcare. The conversation dives into the shortcomings of traditional medical education around nutrition, the politicization of dietary guidelines, and why evidence-based recommendations only matter if people can realistically adopt them. Brian and Nessa also discuss the power of cultural food traditions, global dietary models, and meeting patients where they are — economically, culturally, and practically. From simple culinary demos to big-picture policy implications, this episode captures the excitement of being in a room full of clinicians, chefs, and educators who believe food is not an accessory to health, but a core part of it. This is a candid, reflective check-in from the field — and a clear signal that the future of healthcare may look a lot more like a kitchen than a clinic.

6 de feb de 20269 min
episode S2E1: Comfort in a Time of Chaos: A Food-Centered Experiment artwork

S2E1: Comfort in a Time of Chaos: A Food-Centered Experiment

What happens when we pause, gather around food, and ask what actually nourishes us? In this short teaser episode, Brian Bost, MD, MPH and Nessa Meshkaty, MD set the stage for a week-long, food-centered experiment focused on ritual, connection, unlearning, and community. This conversation explores food as more than fuel — as memory, culture, medicine, and grounding in a chaotic world. Together, they reflect on ancestral wisdom, experimentation versus relearning, and why protecting what nourishes us may be one of the most radical acts of 2026. This episode marks the beginning of a live, unfolding experiment. Follow along as the story continues. SHOW NOTES In this teaser episode of What The Hellth, Brian and Nessa explore: * Food as ritual, not just nutrition * Nourishment as community, memory, and medicine * Unlearning inherited beliefs around food and health * Experimentation versus relearning ancestral wisdom * Why rituals help regulate us in times of chaos * Protecting the things that nourish us — personally and collectively This episode introduces a broader experiment that will unfold over the coming days. No conclusions yet — just curiosity, intention, and shared experience.

3 de feb de 20265 min
episode S1E6 When We Don’t Pause, Things Get Through: Viruses, Vaccines, and the Cost of Constant Motion artwork

S1E6 When We Don’t Pause, Things Get Through: Viruses, Vaccines, and the Cost of Constant Motion

EPISODE SUMMARY In this episode of What The Hellth, Brian and Nessa reconnect after a period of relentless schedules to explore what happens—both biologically and socially—when we stop pausing long enough to listen. The conversation begins with the power of silence and intentional retreat, from multi-day silent experiences to smaller, daily practices that reduce cognitive overload and reset the nervous system. They discuss how constant digital and sensory stimulation prevents the body and brain from ever fully returning to baseline, contributing to burnout, poor decision-making, and disconnection from our own internal signals. From there, the episode shifts into the public-health consequences of moving too fast and listening too little. Brian and Nessa unpack the recent removal of the universal newborn hepatitis B vaccine recommendation, grounding the discussion in decades of global data, real-world clinical experience, and the long arc of prevention. They explore how weakened public-health infrastructure and misinformation can quietly undo progress—often with consequences that won’t be fully visible for years. The episode closes with a grounded discussion of norovirus—an often underestimated but highly disruptive illness—highlighting how easily it spreads, why hand sanitizer isn’t enough, and why recovery requires more patience than we tend to allow ourselves. Interwoven throughout is a recurring theme: when we don’t create space to slow down, reflect, and restore, vulnerabilities—whether viral, systemic, or emotional—find their way in. KEY TAKEAWAYS * Silence is not absence—it’s a biological reset. Reducing digital and sensory input allows the brain to stop narrating, judging, and reacting, making space for observation and regulation. * Retreat doesn’t have to mean escape. Even short, device-free periods—hours or a single day—can have measurable benefits when practiced intentionally and consistently. * Our bodies run on a “stimulus battery.” Sleep, sensory input, social interaction, and stress all draw from the same reserve; awareness of this helps guide healthier daily choices. * Phantom urgency is real. Constant alerts and notifications keep the nervous system activated long after the stimulus is gone—similar to the “phantom pager” phenomenon many clinicians recognize. * Public-health progress is fragile. The removal of universal newborn hepatitis B vaccination risks reversing decades of global success in preventing liver disease and cancer. * Hepatitis B prevention works—exceptionally well. Universal newborn vaccination has reduced perinatal transmission from tens of thousands of cases to single-digit numbers in many settings. * Norovirus deserves respect. It spreads easily, survives on surfaces for days, resists alcohol-based sanitizers, and requires rigorous handwashing and environmental cleaning. * Recovery takes longer than symptoms. Just because vomiting and diarrhea stop doesn’t mean the body—or the gut-brain axis—has fully recovered. * Burnout isn’t just personal—it’s systemic. When healthcare, public policy, and daily life prioritize speed over reflection, the costs show up in illness, inequity, and preventable harm. * Pausing is protective. At every level—individual, clinical, and societal—intentional slowing down creates resilience.

23 de dic de 202527 min