エピソード

  • EP446: GLP1 Agonists and Amazing Drugs! Father and Son Part 1
    2026/07/11
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients.
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    21 分
  • EP445: PD: What You Need To Know with Claire Myers
    2026/07/04
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients.
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    32 分
  • EP444: Father and Son Chiropractics - Drs Crean
    2026/06/27
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients. Father-Son Chiropractors on Spinal Health, Mobility, and Whole-Body Wellness Dr. Warrick Bishop, cardiologist and host of the Healthy Heart Network podcast, welcomes Stephen and Sam Crean — a father-and-son chiropractic duo from Hobart and Kingston Chiropractic in Tasmania — in what he describes as his first-ever father-son podcast. The conversation explores the broader scope of chiropractic care beyond back pain, its role in healthy aging, and how it complements other health disciplines. Key Takeaways: Chiropractic care extends well beyond treating back pain — it addresses any issue involving muscles, ligaments, tendons, joints, bones, and nerves throughout the entire body Approximately 60% of the Creans' practice consists of patients over 50, reflecting chiropractic's significant role in supporting healthy aging Improving spinal mobility and neurological function helps older patients maintain independence, manage muscle mass, support cardiovascular health, and reduce fall risk The spine's ability to move and function as designed is central to overall health, as spinal nerves connect to muscles, proprioceptors, and organs throughout the body Chiropractic care works best as part of a complementary healthcare approach, integrating with services like strength training and bone density programs Patient empowerment is a core goal — practitioners send patients home with exercises and ergonomic guidance so they can actively participate in their own recovery Some therapeutic discomfort is a normal and necessary part of chiropractic treatment, distinguishing productive adaptation from harmful pain Preventive and performance-focused chiropractic care — starting early in life — can be more impactful than waiting until pain or dysfunction develops The Creans have worked collaboratively with local football clubs for over a decade, training multidisciplinary sports teams in chiropractic principles within their respective scopes
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    18 分
  • EP443: I don't want to take more tablets - Medication Apprehension
    2026/06/21
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients. Episode Overview Dr. Warrick Bishop, a cardiologist, author, keynote speaker, and CEO of the Healthy Heart Network, hosts this solo episode focused on practical lessons from recent patient consultations. Using two anonymized patient cases, he explores the psychological and emotional dimensions of managing chronic conditions and medication adherence. Key Takeaways: A reframe from frustration to gratitude can transform a patient's relationship with their medications — Dr. Bishop shares his own experience with glaucoma eye drops as a personal example of this mindset shift. Modern medical treatments, whether tablets or eye drops, represent remarkable advances that deserve appreciation rather than resentment. There are only three types of medication side effects: anaphylactic reactions, idiosyncratic reactions, and dose-related intolerances — and only the third is typically negotiable. Anaphylactic and idiosyncratic reactions are absolute contraindications to restarting a medication, while dose-related intolerances can often be managed by adjusting the amount taken. When managing dose-related intolerances, starting at an extremely low dose is a valid and sensible medical strategy, not a compromise. Excessive anxiety about a medication can block productive clinical conversations and prevent patients from receiving beneficial treatment. Patients sometimes invest disproportionate emotional energy into manageable medical decisions, energy better reserved for truly serious life challenges. Doctors should meet patients where they are emotionally before attempting to problem-solve or prescribe. Staying on even partial therapy (such as ezetimibe alone) during a medication dispute is better than stopping treatment entirely. Calm, collaborative problem-solving between doctor and patient leads to better outcomes than fear-driven decision-making.
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    19 分
  • EP442: Best bang for buck in prevention
    2026/06/14
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients. Episode Introduction Dr. Warrick Bishop, a cardiologist, author, keynote speaker, and CEO of the Healthy Heart Network, hosts this solo episode focused on cardiovascular and general health prevention. Drawing on a recent paper from the University of Chicago, Dr. Bishop explores how primary care physicians can best prioritize preventative interventions to save the most lives. The episode aims to help patients and their loved ones understand which preventative strategies deliver the greatest health benefits. Key Takeaways: A University of Chicago study identified 42 different preventative interventions and ranked them by their ability to reduce mortality and morbidity, highlighting the challenge of covering all of them in a single medical consultation. Pre-exposure prevention for HIV in high-risk individuals ranks as the single most impactful intervention for gaining future life-years, yet it remains significantly underused in primary care settings. Breast cancer reduction medication (anti-estrogen and anti-aromatase drugs) for high-risk individuals ranks second in preventative value, a fact that surprises many, including Dr. Bishop himself. Pre-exposure prevention counseling for intravenous drug use ranks third, requiring primary care physicians to engage in sensitive but critically important conversations. Statin therapy for primary prevention ranks fourth overall and is considered underappreciated and underused, despite strong evidence supporting its benefits. Alcohol counseling and weight loss/dietician referral round out the top six patient-centered interventions, reflecting the ongoing importance of lifestyle modification. When ranked by efficient use of doctor's time rather than pure patient benefit, the list shifts slightly, with hepatitis B screening and hypertension screening entering the top six. For a practical real-world example, a 65-year-old overweight woman would be prioritized for statins, weight loss counseling (potentially including GLP-1 medications), and colorectal cancer screening, followed by reassessment. Not all preventative screenings are equally valuable — cervical screening ranks lower than commonly assumed, while breast cancer risk-reduction medication ranks far higher than most patients or doctors expect. Patients are encouraged to arrive at medical appointments informed and prepared, knowing their personal risk factors so they can make the most of limited consultation time.
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    19 分
  • EP441: I know V02, but what's lactate?
    2026/06/06
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients. Episode Summary Dr. Warrick Bishop, a cardiologist, author, and CEO of the Healthy Heart Network, hosts this solo episode focused on fitness and longevity. He explores the differences between two key performance and health metrics — VO2max and lactate threshold — and explains why both matter for long-term health and aging. Key Takeaways: VO2max measures the maximum amount of oxygen your body can use during intense exercise, essentially reflecting the strength and efficiency of your cardiovascular delivery system. A useful analogy is comparing VO2max to engine size — a high VO2max is like having a V8 engine that delivers plenty of fuel to the muscles. Two athletes can have identical VO2max scores yet perform very differently, which is what led elite coaches to investigate lactate as an additional metric decades ago. Lactate threshold reflects mitochondrial efficiency — how well the body's cells actually use the oxygen delivered to them, not just how much oxygen arrives. When lactate levels begin to rise during exercise, it signals that the mitochondria are being overwhelmed and the body is switching to a less efficient energy pathway. Lactate threshold is considered the most powerful predictor of endurance performance and long-term metabolic health. VO2max and lactate threshold measure different things: cardiovascular fitness versus cellular and mitochondrial fitness, respectively. Elite athletes and their coaches have long used both metrics together to design more targeted and effective training protocols. Knowing your lactate threshold allows you to tailor training to raise that threshold, improving cellular efficiency at higher exercise intensities. Lactate testing is beginning to enter the longevity science space, complementing the already well-established use of VO2max as a marker for healthy aging.
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    13 分
  • EP440: How Long Will You Live? Check Your VO2 Max!
    2026/05/30
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients. Introduction Dr. Warrick Bishop, a cardiologist, author, keynote speaker, and CEO of the Healthy Heart Network, hosts this solo episode focused on VO2max and its critical role in longevity and overall health. He explains the science behind VO2max in accessible terms, drawing on clinical data and his own plans to undergo VO2max testing and training at his new wellness centre in Hobart, Australia. Key Takeaways: VO2max measures the maximum rate at which your body can deliver oxygen to muscles during intense exercise, functioning like an engine's ability to deliver fuel to its pistons. VO2max is considered the single best predictor of longevity, surpassing traditional risk factors like smoking, blood pressure, and cholesterol. Moving from a low to a below-average VO2max can reduce mortality risk by over 50%, and each incremental improvement (one MET increase) is associated with approximately a 15% reduction in mortality risk. VO2max naturally declines roughly 10% per decade starting around age 30, meaning sedentary individuals could face a 60–70% decline by their 80s or 90s. Key contributors to age-related VO2max decline include reduced cardiac stroke volume (up to 40% of decline), decreased hemoglobin levels, and loss of muscle mass and mitochondrial density (up to 30% of decline). The gold standard for measuring VO2max is metabolic cart assessment, which directly measures inspired and expired gases, though validated field tests and wearables like Apple Watch and Garmin offer useful estimates for tracking trends. VO2max scores below the teens correlate with an inability to live independently, highlighting the real-world functional stakes of maintaining a healthy score. Improving VO2max involves a structured exercise pyramid: a foundation of Zone 2 aerobic exercise (70–80% of training), followed by lactate threshold work, and high-intensity interval training (HIIT) at up to 90% of maximum heart rate. HIIT is one of the most effective methods for boosting VO2max, with one to two sessions per week sufficient to begin seeing measurable improvements. Wearable devices can serve as practical tracking tools for VO2max trends, especially when initially calibrated against a formal gold-standard test.
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    25 分
  • EP439: Does Stress Cause Cancer?
    2026/05/23
    Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. I’m a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients. Episode Introduction Dr. Warrick Bishop, a cardiologist, author, keynote speaker, and CEO of the Healthy Heart Network, hosts this solo episode focused on the relationship between stress and cancer. Drawing on a large-scale meta-analysis, Dr. Bishop explores the widely held belief that chronic stress directly causes cancer and what the science actually reveals. The episode aims to both inform and reassure listeners who may be carrying unnecessary guilt around a cancer diagnosis. Key Takeaways: Approximately 50% of people believe chronic stress directly causes cancer, a belief reinforced by powerful anecdotes and the fact that cancer and major life stressors often peak at similar life stages. A large meta-analysis pooling data from 22 cohorts across over 400,000 people and 35,000+ cancer cases found no direct link between stress and cancer. Five stress domains were studied — relationship status, perceived social support, bereavement, general distress, and neuroticism — and none showed a clear connection to any cancer type. Even high levels of anxiety and neuroticism showed no measurable link to increased cancer risk across any cancer type. Some associations between stress factors (e.g., bereavement, social isolation) and lung cancer largely disappeared once smoking was accounted for, suggesting stress-driven behaviors — not stress itself — were the real risk factor. Stress can indirectly raise cancer risk by driving unhealthy coping behaviors such as smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, poor sleep, and poor diet. People who have experienced cancer should not blame themselves for past stress, as the evidence does not support stress as a direct cause. Social connection is a powerful protective factor, while isolation is a meaningful risk factor across multiple health outcomes, including cancer. Stress management remains important not because stress causes cancer, but because it affects quality of life and can lead to harmful behavioral choices. Cardiovascular health is a separate concern — depression and anxiety are still associated with increased cardiovascular disease risk, even if the cancer link is unsupported.
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    11 分