PODCAST · health
Dokkcast
by Udokk
Udokk is a platform for discovering and following verified health and wellbeing professionals. It allows users to access educational content, follow creators they trust, and support them through subscriptions.
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6
Dr Laura Wood - The Menopause Conversation Your Doctor Should Be Having With You
Most women expect menopause to mean hot flushes and the end of their periods. The reality is far more complex — and far more consequential — than that.In this episode, Professor Nara Daubeney is joined by Dr Laura Wood, specialist GP at Muse Medical and menopause expert, for a comprehensive and myth-busting conversation about what menopause actually is, what it does to your body, and what you can do about it.They cover the difference between perimenopause and menopause, why symptoms like anxiety, poor sleep and weight gain are often missed or misattributed, why blood tests alone aren't reliable for diagnosis, and what a proper holistic workup actually looks like.Dr Laura also explains the real risks and benefits of HRT — including why a 25-year-old study still shapes how millions of women think about it today, the truth about breast cancer risk in context, and why women are 30 times more likely to die of a heart attack or stroke than breast cancer. Plus: vaginal estrogen, testosterone, bone health, cardiovascular risk, and why there are no prizes for suffering in silence.
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5
NHS vs Private Health Screening | Dr Sophie Ladbrooke on What's Free, What's Worth It & What Could Save Your Life
Dr Sophie Ladbrooke joins Dokkcast to break down everything you need to know about health screening — from the free tests you might be skipping to the private add-ons that can genuinely change outcomes.Bowel cancer. Breast density. Prostate MRI. Ovarian cancer. The future of blood-based cancer detection. It's all here.Find more verified health voices at udokk.com or on the Udokk app — Apple App Store and Google Play.
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4
From Injury to Holistic Health Leadership with Brad Clifford
Brad went from nearly dying of sepsis as a collegiate football player to building one of the most comprehensive preventative health companies around. In this episode of the Dokk Cast, Nara sits down with Brad to trace his remarkable journey — from athlete to med-tech leader to founder of Elevation Health — and unpack his bold vision for what healthcare should have been doing for the last 30 years.They dive deep into epigenetics, whole genome sequencing, mitochondrial health, pharmacogenomics, and why a single yearly blood test gives you almost none of the picture you actually need. Brad also shares his unfiltered take on how the US insurance system is failing patients, why strength training is non-negotiable (especially for women), and what the UK gets right about movement that America has completely forgotten.Whether you're curious about longevity, frustrated with conventional medicine, or just want to understand your own biology better — this conversation is packed with insight.🔗 Learn more about Elevation Health: https://www.elevetion.com/Timecodes:00:00 – Introduction & Brad's background01:00 – From athlete to injury: a near-sepsis experience at college03:00 – Emergency surgery & a nine-month recovery05:30 – Discovering the med-tech world through orthopedic surgery07:30 – Seven and a half years at Stryker in sports medicine10:00 – Moving into interventional radiology at Merit Medical13:00 – Brad's personal health crisis: panic attacks & metabolic decline14:30 – Working in genomic-based breast cancer diagnostics16:30 – Why the US insurance system is failing patients18:00 – Using pharmacogenomics to resolve his own anxiety21:00 – Building the Elevation Health model from scratch26:00 – Why quarterly biomarker snapshots beat the annual physical27:00 – Epigenetics explained: day trading vs. futures on your health33:00 – The five pillars of health span: social connection, sleep, nutrition, movement & CNS36:00 – Whole genome sequencing & building your personal "health moat"38:00 – Mitochondrial health and its links to cancer, Alzheimer's & autism39:30 – The expert team behind Elevation: PhDs, dieticians & clinical leads41:00 – Using data to drive real daily habit change42:00 – Strength training for longevity — especially for women47:00 – Walking culture: UK vs. US and what it means for lifespan51:00 – Finding the cardio sweet spot without overdoing it52:30 – Wearables, HRV, and what we actually know about heart rate variability55:00 – Sleep quality vs. quantity — and why Brad changed his mind57:30 – Melatonin mega-dosing as a brain reset (and the caveats)01:00:30 – Psychedelics, trauma healing & emerging brain health research01:03:00 – Building a personalised nutrition pantry through genomics01:08:30 – Elevation's global vision and new partnerships (Ezra, full-body MRI)01:10:30 – Leadership through curiosity: staying adaptive in a fast-moving field01:12:00 – Closing thoughts
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3
Can You Be a Surgeon and Have a Family? Orthopaedic Surgeon Cat Malik Explains
Cat Malik is a post-CCT trauma and orthopaedics fellow specialising in foot, ankle, and lower limb surgery. In this episode of Dokkcast, host Professor Nara Daubeney speaks with her about what it genuinely takes to build a surgical career — and how to sustain one alongside family life.Cat traces her journey from medical school through surgical training, sharing candid insights into orthopaedic culture, the stereotypes that still surround the specialty, and the very real challenges women continue to face in surgery. A particularly compelling thread is her experience raising three children while progressing through a demanding training pathway, with practical advice for doctors navigating the same tension between career and family.The conversation also looks outward at broader shifts in healthcare — the role of social media in spreading both useful information and misinformation, how doctors engage with these platforms professionally, and what AI means for the future of medical knowledge and patient trust.A frank and wide-ranging episode for anyone considering a surgical career, or interested in the evolving culture of medicine.
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2
Innovations in Endoscopic Surgery with Professor Hesham Saleh
Professor Hesham Saleh is a leading London-based consultant rhinologist and facial plastic surgeon, practising at Charing Cross Hospital and the Harley ENT Practice. He specialises in rhinoplasty, sinus surgery, rhinology, skull-base surgery, and orbital/lacrimal surgery.He holds FRCS (ENT) and FRCS (ORL-HNS) qualifications, has been named in The Times' top 140 doctors and top 50 surgeons lists, and serves as Professor of Practice in Rhinology at Imperial College. He is past president of the Laryngology and Rhinology section of the Royal Society of Medicine.His research focuses on rhinitis, chronic rhinosinusitis, skull-base pathology, and nasal deformities, including leading multicentre trials on olfactory damage and antibiotic-resistant sinus bacteria.The podcast episode covers his career journey, the evolution of ENT training, the complexity of sinus and endoscopic surgery, and — as its central theme — the influence of social media on cosmetic surgery, particularly how platforms like Instagram and TikTok spread unrealistic beauty standards and misinformation among young patients, and the need for better medical education to counter this.
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1
Professor Mike Rigby: A Lifetime Advancing Paediatric Cardiology
Professor Mike Rigby is one of the most influential figures in paediatric cardiology, with a career spanning over four decades. In this conversation with Nara, he reflects on the sweeping transformation of children's heart care — from an era of limited diagnostics and high-risk surgery to today's advanced imaging, interventional techniques, and dramatically improved survival rates.Drawing on his experience at the Royal Brompton Hospital, he discusses pioneering procedures, the rise of echocardiography, and the ongoing debate between intervention and surgery in congenital heart disease. He also speaks to the deeply human side of medicine: communicating with anxious families, the passion behind teaching, and the privilege of mentoring cardiologists from around the world.The episode closes with reflections on legacy, the role of genetics in the field's future, and what a life in medicine ultimately means.Aimed at clinicians, trainees, and students, it serves as both a history of paediatric cardiology and a guide to its future.
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