Omslagafbeelding van de show The Health Curve

The Health Curve

Podcast door Dr. Jason Arora

Engels

Gezondheid & Persoonlijke Ontwikkeling

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Over The Health Curve

The Health Curve simplifies complex health topics, explores impactful ideas shaping the future of human health, and raises awareness of critical issues affecting underserved communities. By making science-backed health information accessible, we empower individuals and communities with credible insights and practical tools. On the podcast, I speak with a wide range of voices - from public health scientists, clinicians, and entrepreneurs to advocates, artists, and coaches. Together, we unpack the science, challenge assumptions, and tackle the growing gaps left by misinformation and failing healthcare systems.The Health Curve Podcast is hosted by Dr. Jason Arora - Oxford- and Harvard-trained physician, public health scientist, yoga and mindfulness instructor, and award-winning health innovator - Forbes 30u30, Fulbright Scholar, Harvard Public Health Innovator Award-Winner, and Aspen Health Fellow. Find us on YouTube (@TheHealthCurve) or listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and other popular podcast platforms.Have questions, comments, or feedback? Email us at jason@thehealthcurve.com.Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult your doctor or a qualified healthcare provider regarding any medical concerns.

Alle afleveringen

37 afleveringen

aflevering Skin Cancer - How To Reduce Your Risk | Dr. Thomas Dobbs - NHS (Melanoma & Skin Cancer Awareness Month) artwork

Skin Cancer - How To Reduce Your Risk | Dr. Thomas Dobbs - NHS (Melanoma & Skin Cancer Awareness Month)

Skin cancer is the most common cancer in the world. In this episode of The Health Curve, we explore how to actually reduce your risk - what matters, what doesn’t, and what most people get wrong. Host Dr. Jason Arora is joined by Dr. Thomas Dobbs, NHS plastic surgeon and skin cancer specialist, to break down the basics: what skin cancer is, why it’s so common, and how it develops. Together, we unpack the key risk factors (sun exposure, burns, tanning beds, skin type, age, and more), the main types of skin cancer, and what to look for on your own skin. We also get practical about prevention. When should you use sunscreen? What does SPF actually mean? Do you need it on cloudy days? And how should you apply it properly? Finally, we cut through the noise on some of the biggest myths online - does sunscreen actually cause cancer? Does it block vitamin D? Are certain ingredients unsafe? - and bring it back to what the evidence actually says. If you care about your long-term health, this is one of the simplest areas where small habits can make a big difference. Follow The Health Curve  @thehealthcurve [https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCQqXmV-9UHvdd-BRnQkw1VQ]for evidence-based conversations that help you navigate your health with clarity.

12 mei 2026 - 25 min
aflevering How Close Are We To Slowing Aging? | Dr. Eric Verdin, President and CEO of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging artwork

How Close Are We To Slowing Aging? | Dr. Eric Verdin, President and CEO of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging

What if aging itself becomes something we can measure, slow, and eventually treat? In this episode of The Health Curve Podcast, host Dr. Jason Arora sits down with Dr. Eric Verdin, President and CEO of the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, to explore one of the biggest questions in science today: how close are we really to slowing human aging? Dr. Verdin has spent decades at the forefront of aging biology, from early discoveries in epigenetics to leading one of the world’s premier longevity research institutes. In this conversation, he explains what fundamentally changed the field of aging research, why scientists are now more optimistic than ever, and what still stands in the way of translating these breakthroughs into real-world impact. They discuss how aging shifted from being seen as a passive, inevitable process to something that can be actively influenced at the molecular level. They unpack the scientific bottlenecks that have slowed progress in humans, including long timelines, safety requirements, and the lack of a clear regulatory pathway for targeting aging itself. The conversation also dives into emerging tools like epigenetic clocks and biomarkers of aging, which may allow us to measure biological age and track interventions in real time. They explore how AI and “digital twins” could accelerate research, and why funding, regulation, and existing healthcare incentives remain major constraints. Beyond the science, this episode asks a deeper question: if we do succeed in extending human healthspan and lifespan, are we ready for the consequences? From inequality and access to environmental pressures and system design, Dr. Verdin shares a grounded, realistic perspective on what the future might look like. They also discuss what actually matters today. From exercise, sleep, and social connection to the realities of supplements and longevity clinics, this episode separates what is actionable now from what remains experimental or overhyped. If you’re trying to understand where longevity science really stands, and what it means for your life, your health, and society, this is a conversation you don’t want to miss. Follow The Health Curve on YouTube for evidence-based conversations that cut through hype and help you navigate your health with clarity. Chapters: 00:00 Intro  00:04 Welcome and Dr. Eric Verdin’s background  02:12 The discoveries that changed aging research  05:55 Why translating aging science to humans is so hard  07:31 AI, simulation, and digital twins in aging research  10:19 Aging as a scientific and cultural inflection point  12:26 How close are we to slowing aging in humans?  15:21 What we can do now vs future anti-aging drugs  15:44 Funding, regulation, and system barriers  19:58 Biomarkers, epigenetic clocks, and biological age  23:21 Subscribe and share  24:06 Dr. Verdin’s personal longevity habits  27:34 Supplements, hype, and regulation gaps  28:11 Zip code health and social determinants  32:30 Can drugs replace lifestyle?  35:57 The rise of longevity medicine  39:46 What’s real vs fluff in longevity today  41:05 Are we ready for longer lives?  44:13 AI, aging, and the future  44:50 Closing thoughts

28 apr 2026 - 48 min
aflevering Fatty Liver: The Silent Disease at the Heart of the Metabolic Crisis | Mazen Noureddin MD, Houston Liver Institute artwork

Fatty Liver: The Silent Disease at the Heart of the Metabolic Crisis | Mazen Noureddin MD, Houston Liver Institute

🧠 Most people have heard of heart disease, diabetes, and obesity, but far fewer have been told about fatty liver, even though it now affects nearly 1 in 3 adults and sits at the center of all three. In this episode of The Health Curve, Dr. Jason Arora is joined by Dr. Mazen Noureddin MD (Transplant Hepatologist, Professor of Medicine, and Founding Director of the Houston Liver Institute), one of the world’s leading experts in liver and metabolic disease, to unpack why fatty liver disease is not a niche diagnosis, but a defining feature of modern metabolic illness. They explore what fatty liver actually is, why it often progresses silently for years, and how excess fat in the liver fuels inflammation, insulin resistance, cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, and shortened healthspan ⚠️. The conversation reframes fatty liver not as an isolated organ problem, but as a metabolic warning sign that the body’s systems are under strain. Dr. Noureddin explains how fatty liver progresses from early fat accumulation to inflammation, scarring, and cirrhosis, often without obvious symptoms, and why so many people are still diagnosed too late. They also discuss who is most at risk (including people with type 2 diabetes, metabolic risk factors, and even those who are not overweight), how fatty liver is detected, and what simple tests can identify people who need urgent follow-up 🧪. Importantly, this episode also brings hope. When caught early, fatty liver disease can be reversed. Dr. Arora and Dr. Noureddin walk through what actually works, from lifestyle interventions to newer FDA-approved therapies, while debunking common myths, internet misinformation, and false assumptions about alcohol, weight, and supplements 🌱💊. Chapter Markers: 00:00 – Why fatty liver matters more than people realize 00:40 – What the liver actually does in metabolic health 01:45 – Why fatty liver sits at the center of cardiometabolic disease 02:10 – How excess fat builds up in the liver 03:30 – From fatty liver to inflammation, scarring, and cirrhosis 04:25 – What happens to the body as liver damage progresses 05:50 – Why fatty liver often has no early symptoms 06:15 – MAFLD, MASH, and the new terminology explained 07:35 – How fatty liver connects to diabetes, heart disease, and kidney disease 08:15 – Why these diseases “travel together” 09:15 – How people usually discover they have fatty liver 09:40 – Who should be screened — and why many cases are still missed 10:30 – Simple blood tests and the FIB-4 score explained 11:25 – Why early detection changes everything 11:35 – Can fatty liver be reversed? 12:05 – Lifestyle changes that actually work 13:10 – Diet patterns with the strongest evidence 14:00 – Medications for fatty liver: what’s now FDA-approved 15:40 – Common myths about fatty liver debunked 16:50 – Supplements, alcohol, and misinformation 17:15 – Key takeaways and closing reflections

14 apr 2026 - 17 min
aflevering Obesity Isn’t a Willpower Problem - It’s a Chronic Disease | Marc-Andre Cornier MD, The Obesity Society & MUSC artwork

Obesity Isn’t a Willpower Problem - It’s a Chronic Disease | Marc-Andre Cornier MD, The Obesity Society & MUSC

🧠🍽️ Obesity and being overweight are often talked about like personal failures, but the science tells a very different story. In this episode of The Health Curve Podcast, Dr. Jason Arora and Dr. Marc-André Cornier (Past President of The Obesity Society, Professor of Medicine, and Director of the Division of Endocrinology at MUSC) explore obesity as a chronic, progressive disease shaped by biology 🧬 and an “obesogenic” environment. Together, they unpack why obesity rates have risen so dramatically worldwide, how risk and complications vary across populations 🫀, and why low socioeconomic environments and “food deserts” can quietly stack the odds against health 🏙️. They also discuss why childhood obesity is so concerning 🧒📱, and what it means for long-term health systems, productivity, and society. They also explore what evidence-based obesity care actually looks like today, walking through the full toolbox - from lifestyle foundations 🥗🏃 and medications (including GLP-1–based therapies) 💉 to bariatric surgery 🏥 , plus the hard truth that long-term disease often requires long-term treatment ⏳. They also tackle common fears and criticisms: side effects, cost and access 💸, direct-to-consumer “quick fixes” 🧪, and the tension between prevention and treatment. If you’ve ever wondered why weight loss can feel like your body is fighting you - and what a smarter, more compassionate, science-based approach looks like - this episode is for you 💙. Chapters" 00:00 – Introduction and guest background 01:10 – Why obesity is rising: genes × “obesogenic” environments 03:15 – Why obesity risk differs across populations and regions 04:20 – Visceral vs subcutaneous fat: metabolic vs mechanical health impacts 05:50 – The environmental drivers: food deserts, safety, inactivity, marketing 06:55 – Why childhood obesity is accelerating 08:20 – The societal and economic spillovers of obesity 10:50 – Why obesity meets the definition of a chronic disease 13:05 – Patient archetypes: cosmetic vs health vs “not on the radar” 14:30 – The obesity treatment toolbox: lifestyle, meds, surgery, teams 20:00 – Who should get what? BMI limits, waist measures, risk staging 23:35 – Expected weight-loss ranges: lifestyle vs GLP-1s vs surgery 26:10 – Long-term challenges: cost, coverage, adherence, access 29:15 – Side effects and safe prescribing: why supervision matters 31:35 – Direct-to-consumer risks, compounded meds, and regulation 33:45 – Prevention vs treatment: why it’s not either/or 36:30 – “Big food vs big pharma” concerns and stigma 39:50 – The future of obesity care: primary care, centers, virtual models 43:20 – What’s next in meds: multi-agonists, longer-acting options, muscle preservation

31 mrt 2026 - 46 min
aflevering Will AI Help Your Doctor - Or Deny Your Care? | Sanjai Sinha MD, Mount Sinai Health System artwork

Will AI Help Your Doctor - Or Deny Your Care? | Sanjai Sinha MD, Mount Sinai Health System

In this episode of The Health Curve Podcast, Dr. Jason Arora and Dr. Sanjai Sinha (MD at Mount Sinai Health System, New York City) explore what AI is actually doing in healthcare today, especially in primary care, where most people experience the system 🏥. They unpack where AI is already outperforming humans in medicine, where it’s quietly reshaping daily clinical work through AI scribes and message automation, and where real concerns are emerging - including deskilling, over-reliance, and the growing use of AI by insurance companies to automate prior authorizations and denials 📄❌. Rather than asking whether AI will replace doctors, this conversation asks a more urgent question: who is AI really being built for? Patients? Clinicians? Or systems optimized for speed, cost, and control? This episode cuts through both AI hype and fear to offer a grounded, human-centered view of how AI could improve care, if it’s designed thoughtfully, and how it could just as easily make a broken system more efficient at doing the wrong things ⚖️. Chapters 00:00 – Why AI is the right conversation to end the primary care series 00:30 – Where AI is already used in healthcare today 01:30 – AI vs humans in diagnostics: EKGs and heart disease 03:00 – Colonoscopy, cancer detection, and the risk of deskilling 05:30 – Why AI isn’t perfect — and why that matters 05:55 – How patients will encounter AI in primary care 06:00 – AI scribes, charting, and physician burnout 07:40 – Messaging, automation, and clinical decision support 08:55 – AI and insurance: faster decisions, more denials? 10:35 – Automating bad incentives in healthcare 11:40 – Where AI can meaningfully improve care quality 12:55 – Decision support, safety, and reducing redundant testing 14:30 – AI has been around longer than we think 15:50 – What AI means for patients navigating care 16:00 – Will AI replace primary care doctors? 17:20 – The real future: humans and AI working together 18:00 – Closing reflections

17 mrt 2026 - 18 min
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