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Your Gut is Your Second Brain - Here's What's Destroying It and How to Fix It

Most people think the gut is just a digestion tube. Food goes in, waste comes out, job done. That is one of the most outdated ideas in medicine. Your gut is now being called the second brain — and that is not a metaphor. It is a description of a complex, autonomous nervous system that directly shapes your mood, immunity, energy, mental health and inflammatory response. Understanding it might be the single most important thing you do for your long-term health. What is the Gut Microbiome? Your gut contains trillions of bacteria, viruses, fungi and other microorganisms — collectively called the gut microbiome. This ecosystem is unique to you, shaped by everything from your birth method and early diet to the antibiotics you took as a child and the stress you carry as an adult. An estimated 90% of the body's serotonin — the neurotransmitter most associated with mood, happiness and emotional stability — is produced in the gut, where it also plays a critical role in gut immunity. UCLA Hea...

You're Tired, Anxious and Getting Sick Often - It Might Be a Vitamin Deficiency

You're exhausted but sleeping enough. Anxious for no clear reason. Getting every cold that goes around. Your hair is thinning. Brain fog that won't shift no matter how much coffee you drink. You've quietly accepted this as your normal. It's not normal. And it might have a remarkably simple explanation. Here are the four deficiencies I see most frequently — and exactly what to do about each one. 1. Vitamin D — The Silent Epidemic This is the most common deficiency in the world and simultaneously the most under-diagnosed. Over one billion people worldwide are deficient in Vitamin D. But the statistics for specific countries are staggering. Vitamin D deficiency prevails in epidemic proportions all over the Indian subcontinent, with a prevalence of 70% to 100% in the general population. PubMed Central That is not a typo. Up to 100% of some Indian population studies show deficiency — in a country with abundant sunshine year-round. The reason? Skin pigmentation, indo...

Burnout is Not Just Being Tired - A Doctor's Breakdown of What it Actually Does to Your Brain

Everyone thinks burnout means needing a holiday. It doesn't. Burnout is a clinical condition that physically changes the structure of your brain. It affects your decision-making, your emotional control, your immune system, your gut, your heart, and your hair. And the people most likely to get it are not the lazy ones — they are the ones who care the most about what they do. I studied 6 years of medicine and still felt burnout. So let me break down what it actually is — medically, biologically, and honestly. What Burnout Actually Is — The WHO Definition Burnout is not a weakness. It is not a personality flaw. The World Health Organisation classifies it as an occupational phenomenon with three defining dimensions: Exhaustion — emotional and physical depletion that rest alone cannot fix Cynicism — a creeping detachment from work you once cared deeply about Reduced efficacy — the persistent feeling that nothing you do actually matters Notice that tiredness alone is not b...

The Silent Killer Nobody Talks About: How Stress and Money Are Destroying Your Health

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Most people know stress is bad for them. But nobody tells you exactly what it's doing to your body at a biological level - or why your bank balance is directly connected to your blood pressure. I'm an MBBS doctor. Here's the conversation that medicine and finance have been having separately - when they should have been having it together. The Biology of Stress - What Actually Happens When your brain perceives a threat - any threat - it triggers the same biological response whether that threat is a tiger chasing you, a credit card bill you can't pay, or your investment portfolio crashing 30%. Your hypothalamus fires. Adrenaline floods your body. Cortisol follows immediately after.      Your heart rate climbs.      Your blood pressure spikes.      Your digestion shuts down.      Your immune system gets suppressed. This stress response was designed for 30-second emergencies — the kind our ancestors faced on the savannah. Run or fi...

How to Actually Read Your Blood Test Report - A Doctor Explains Every Number

You get your blood test results back. You stare at a page full of numbers, abbreviations and arrows pointing up or down. Your doctor said "everything looks fine" but you have no idea what any of it means. This is for you. A complete breakdown of what your blood report is actually telling you — in plain English, from a doctor. First — Understand the Reference Range Before anything else, look at the column that says "Reference Range" or "Normal Range" on your report. Every number on your report needs to be compared against this range — not against someone else's results, not against what you read online. Reference ranges represent results found in 95% of apparently healthy people — which also means 5% of completely healthy individuals will always have at least one result outside the normal range. This does not automatically mean something is wrong. Wikipedia This is critical. One slightly abnormal result in isolation rarely means disease. Context is ever...

5 Investing Mistakes Doctors Make - And How to Avoid Every Single One

Doctors are intelligent, disciplined, and highly trained. We spend years learning to make complex decisions under pressure. And yet — we are famously terrible with money. I say that as a doctor who has lost money in the market. There's a reason the phrase "a deal only a doctor would buy" exists in financial circles. We are specifically targeted by bad financial products because we earn well, invest late, and ask fewer questions than we should before putting money in. Surprisingly, 28% of doctors have a net worth under $500,000 and nearly half possess less than one million dollars — despite being among the highest earners in any profession. GlobalRPH Here are the 5 most common reasons why — and exactly how to fix each one. Mistake 1: Starting Too Late Doctors spend 6 years in medical school, then years in postgraduate training. By the time most physicians start earning properly, their peers in other careers have been investing for a decade. Most doctors remain una...