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Prescription Strength

Subscribe to my weekly newsletter for a light hearted take on what's making the health news. No nonsense, no hacks, just practical common sense.

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High cholesterol is not a disease

6th April 2026 Newsletter Monday Tiny Tablet: Huge Opinions You know when something irks you because you keep seeing it misunderstood? That’s how I feel when I read medical records that list high cholesterol as a medical problem. High cholesterol is not a disease. And yet, I still see it written in patients’ past medical history as if it sits alongside heart attacks, strokes, and cancer, by doctors that should know this. It takes every ounce of restraint not to reach for a red pen and cross...

30th March 2026 Newsletter Monday How did we evolve without this? Hello Reader, I have to talk about what I keep seeing. Not a single headline this week. Just a pattern that keeps repeating until you can’t unsee it. There’s a term for it: audience capture. It’s what happens when someone builds trust by being clear, sensible and evidence-based… and then slowly starts shaping their message around what that audience wants to hear — or what will sell. And it’s not just influencers. I’m seeing it...

Flamingos stand on one leg in shallow water.

23rd March 2026 Newsletter Monday Winner Hello Reader, There’s an article trending this morning that I couldn’t resist clicking on. I suppose that’s exactly why it’s trending 😆 How long should you be able to stand on one leg for your age. I’ve no doubt many of you would struggle to resist that either. It’s so simple. So measurable. And we’re all quietly comparing ourselves to where we should be, even when we wish we wouldn’t. But it reminded me of a real-life test I did a few days ago. A...

16th March 2026 Newsletter Monday A rare sight - an empty bed There were two stories competing for my attention this week. At first they felt unrelated. The more I thought about them, the more they seemed to describe the same problem from two different angles. The first was the moral outrage that has erupted over the prospect of NHS England paying around £330 million to a US tech company for software designed to improve hospital efficiency. The anger seems to have focused largely on the...

9th March 2026 Newsletter Monday Chicken anyone? Hello Reader, This week England’s Chief Medical Officer, Chris Whitty, said something that will probably irritate both sides of the obesity debate. He said that relying on weight-loss injections to solve obesity would represent a societal failure. That comment will annoy people for different reasons. Some will hear it as criticism of GLP-1 drugs. It isn’t. These medications are life-changing for some individuals. I work with people who use them...

2nd March 2026 Newsletter Monday Hello Reader, Last week I was driving along listening to the news announce that GPs will now have to guarantee same-day appointments for “urgent” cases in 90% of instances. I admit to shouting at the radio: “Define urgent!” My daughter asked me to calm down. Then I opened the BBC comments later and discovered half the country was shouting the same thing. So let’s talk about it calmly. Because on the surface, this sounds entirely reasonable. If something is...

A spread of turkish breakfast dishes with olives and eggs.

23rd Feb 2026 Newsletter Monday Hello Reader, This article on the BBC caught my attention this morning. Not because it was outrageous, but because of the language. “Anti-inflammatory foods.” That phrase usually lives quite happily on Instagram next to green powders and discount codes. When the BBC starts using it, you know it has crossed into mainstream thinking. And to my medical brain, that term has always felt… weighty. If we are going to call something anti-inflammatory, I want noticeable...

Anatomical model of a human head with brain

16th Feb 2026 Newsletter Monday Grey matter needs challenge Hello Reader, I read a really interesting article in New Scientist yesterday about a dementia study. Most of these stories blur into one another, but this one stood out immediately because it followed people for 20 years. That’s rare. As usual, I read it with one question in mind: what can we reasonably learn from this that might change how we live? One of the frustrations with dementia research is time. Alzheimer’s disease (just one...

Skeleton resting its head on its hand.

9th Feb 2026 Newsletter Monday Waiting for guidelines to update Hello Reader, Buried among the cancer headlines this week was a genuinely positive piece of research. The sort you’d miss if you blinked. It didn’t come with a scary percentage, a lifestyle villain, or a call to panic, which is probably why it slipped under the radar. A study was published which focused on a specific group of women: those whose periods stop because of low energy availability. That might be due to intense...

2nd Feb 2026 Newsletter Monday How much is enough though? Hello Reader, **“Men need to exercise twice as long as women”? Let’s calm down.** You may have seen the headline because it's not going away and it came up again in BBC Science magazine this month, 3 months after it was in The Guardian. “Men need to exercise twice as long as women to get the same heart benefits.” Which sounds dramatic. Slightly alarming. And, as usual, not quite how science works. So let’s slow it down and look at what...