Episoder
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We've got physicist/author/Wikipedia nerd Dr Jess Wade in the studio to find out how putting your hands on top of one other could hold the key to understanding more about what happens to very very very very small molecules.
Plus we learn what it's like to write a coffee table science book for children (who mostly lack disposable income/coffee tables) and why creating Wikipedia pages to highlight underrepresented figures in science can get messy.
You can find Jess at @jesswade on Twitter.
Stay In Touch:
Use the hashtag #whynotadoc on Twitter & IG
Follow us on Twitter:
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@thermoflynamics
@HanaAyoob
@ozy_ismail
@newshound1337
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For more than 18 months, the global COVID-19 pandemic has affected almost every part of society. And with more and more data being shared by the minute, we've become swamped with information - and that's not a good thing right now.
So to learn more about the "infodemic", we're joined by Samantha Yammine (Canada's favourite science communicator/neuroscientist/podcast fan) to chat about how compassion leads the way in the fight against disinformation, super secret blacklists, and why hot-takes & clout-chasing can screw things up for everyone.
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You can find Sam at @heysciencesam on TwitterYou can check out @science.sam on TikTokFollow her on Instagram @sciencesamGoing viral: how to boost the spread of coronavirus science on social media - Natureβββββββββββββββββββββ
Stay In Touch:
Use the hashtag #whynotadoc on Twitter & IG
Follow us on Twitter:
@whynotadoc
@thermoflynamics
@HanaAyoob
@ozy_ismail
@newshound1337
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Manglende episoder?
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We're back for Episode 50!
Break ups can be hard for everyone but eventually, you get over them. Right?
This week, we take a deep dive into the world of relationships, neuroscience and medicine as we try to find out if science can answer the question: "can heartbreak actually break your heart?"
We jump into:
Coming to America (4:03)
Lockdown love lives (10:17)
Heartbreak heart damage & Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (18:25)
Is love is a drug? (25:55)
Can seeing your ex cause actually hurt you? (41:09)
Is there a rejection gene? (46:23)
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Extra reading:
https://www.cardiomyopathy.org/takotsubo-cardiomyopathy/intro
https://journals.physiology.org/doi/full/10.1152/jn.00784.2009
https://news.umich.edu/study-illuminates-the-pain-of-social-rejection/
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Stay In Touch:
Use the hashtag #whynotadoc on Twitter & IG
https://twitter.com/whynotadoc
www.twitter.com/thermoflynamics
www.twitter.com/HanaAyoob
www.twitter.com/ozy_ismail
www.twitter.com/newshound1337
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This week, we find out what Suhail has been doing for all the months he's spent in lockdown.
From navigating work and sex during a global health crisis to lockdown vices and Discord vaccine conspiracies, we chat about how his life has changed over the last year.
A quick note: this episode talks about death, mental health issues and intensive care.
Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
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This week, Dr Suzi Gage takes us on a deep dive into the misconceptions, myths, and misinformation surrounding drugs.
Plus, we find out about jealous Buddhists, Suhail exposing hypocritical government officials, and re-wiring the brain.
(Just a quick note: this episode was recorded in March and contains some references to ketamine)
You can get Suzi on Twitter (@soozaphone)
Get Suzi's new book Say Why To Drugs on Amazon.
Check out her podcast (also called Say Why To Drugs)
Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
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This is the final episode in our mini-series exploring health conditions.
Oz sat down with Shaheen to find out about her expierences with her mum's rare form of dememntia and the journey to diagnosis. We chat about stigma, care responsibilities and gender roles in the Bangladeshi community, and what it's like to be isolated as a carer.
He also hears from Nadine Mirza, a researcher at the University of Manchester, who's exploring how her work revamping dementia testing services could make sure fewer PoC fall through the cracks and get the help they need.
You can find Shaheen on Twitter at @Shaheensloan98
You can find Nadine on Twitter at @thealmostpsych
For information relating to a specific dementia diagnosis, you can contact Rare Dementia support on [email protected] or on their website contact page.
If you or someone you know is in the Greater Manchester area, over the the age of 65, are South Asian and speak Urdu - you could help with Nadine's research!
You can get in touch with her at [email protected]
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We're on the third episode of our mini-series looking at health conditions.
This week, we're chatting to Roma Agrawal (engineer/author/build-er of The Shard) about her experience with infertility and her journey through IVF. We hear about engineering a baby, overbearing aunties, and her very real fear of embryo mix-ups.
You can find Roma on Twitter (@RomaTheEngineer) and check out her podcast "Building Stories" wherever you got this one.
Thanks to British Podcast Awards, Wellcome Trust, and everyone that took the time out to chat to us about this.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The second episode in our new series where we explore various aspects of health!
This episode, we're joined by Tyla Grant - an autism advocate behind the YouTube channel "Adulting Autistic." She talks us through what it's like being a Black woman diagnosed at 17, mental health, and why people need to stop talking about "curing" autism. Also there's chat about a terrible golden jumper.
We get to chat to neurodevelopmental psychologist Mary Agyapong. Based out of King's College London, her work looks at early signs and symptoms of Autism. We hear about the scientific advancements in diagnosis techniques and ask whether culture and language plays a role in how we perceive autism
You can find Tyla on Twitter (@tylgrnt) and on YouTube at Adulting Autistic.
You can get Mary on twitter (@_MaryAgyapong).
Thanks to British Podcast Awards, Wellcome Trust, and everyone that took the time out to chat to us
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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We're embarking on a new series where we explore various aspects of health!
To wave goodbye to its awareness month in March, we're looking into endometriosis, a chronic condition affecting 1 in 10 women in the UK.
Suhail had a chance to sit down with journalist Anita Jones (@AnitaNnekaJones) to find out more about her journey with endometriosis - discussing everything from her first experiences of it to her reliance on fluffy water bottles.
We hear from Dr Annabel Sowemimo (@SoSowemimo) - a sexual and reproductive health doctor, writer, and founder of Decolonising Contraception (@DecoloniseContr) - a not for profit, community interest group formed by people of colour working within sexual and reproductive health who are devoted to improving the outcomes for marginalised groups.
You can find out more about DC on their website.
You can read all of the articles written by Annabel on gal-dem
Thanks to British Podcast Awards, Wellcome Trust, and everyone that took the time out to chat to us about this.
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This week, Suhail chats to George Anderson about his life.
The 2008 Financial Crisis left George homeless and wandering the streets of London. No longer having his job working within the NHS, he began selling the Big Issue magazine outside of the BBC building in the centre of the city. With a background in psychiatry, he talks to Suhail about how mental health issues can affect people who deal with rejection on a daily basis.
With the support of the Wellcome Trust, he's been gradually building up his own business - CRC Scotland & London - drawing on his previous experience working in biomedical research. It hopes to help researchers publish their work when English isn't their first language.
If you want to find out more about George, you can check him out at @andersongeorg15 on Twitter or on his website
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We're joined in the studio by journalist Shivani Dave to discuss the current Coronavirus outbreak that has spread internationally from Wuhan, China. We break down the science of the virus (termed 2019-nCoV or 2019 novel coronavirus) and find out what steps the World Health Organisation has taken to limit the spread of it across the globe.
And in a situation where researchers are working rapidly to fight the virus, what role does social media have in providing the latest information on the outbreak? What happens when misinterpreted results go viral?
Plus, we take a look at how the disease has become a vessel for racism - both online and in the real world - and Hana explains what it was like living in Singapore during the 2002 SARS outbreak.
Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
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This week, we're talking about the male contraceptive injection. RISUG (Reversible Inhibition of Sperm Under Guidance) has passed clinical trials and is being touted as the first consumer available male contraceptive (capable of being effective up to 13 years).
From the pill to the coil, we look at the history of contraception and discuss what this new injection could this mean for contraception and healthcare in general. Would you trust someone who said they had the injection? Could it be misused to promote enforced sterilisation in certain places around the world?
Also everyone bullies Alex. A lot.
Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
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For the last episode of 2019, we're talking about T.I taking his daughter for an annual "virginity check", the sociology of sex, and how white feminism has put people around the world at risk
Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
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This week, we're back in the studio to discuss all things political. Now that the UK is gearing up to a General Election, we've got voting on the mind.
Mark Zuckerberg recently said that Facebook wouldn't be rejecting political adverts that were deemed to contain false information, with Twitter deciding to ban political adverts altogether. However, during the Leaders' Debate for the UK General Election, the Conservative Party press Twitter account (@CCHQ) rebranded itself - aiming to discredit Labour by pretending to be a fact-checking account. We discuss the role of social media platforms in political campaigns.
With midwife Clemmie Hooper being unmasked as a troll who attacked other "mum-fluencers" on Instagram, what do the banning of Kelechi Okafor (@kelechnekoff) from the platform and the the erasure of the racist elements of the story when reported the mainstream press tell us about online disinformation tactics ?
Plus - we find out why online voting isn't available in the UK yet, chat the psychology of voting, and discuss how electronic voting could change politics.
You can find Kelechi's podcast "Say Your Mind" on Twitter (@SayYourMindPod) and on all podcast apps.
Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
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We're back in the studio for a flying visit and talking about the amount of cocaine found in London and how it's affecting the local animals.
You can hear Oz on BBC Asian Network Network talking about Dating Disasters with Mobeen Azhar
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Music by Grapes & Evan Schaeffer
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Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This week, we're joined in the studio by Elijah Lawal to discuss his new book - "The Clapback: Your Guide to Calling Out Racist Stereotypes"
From sex and sports to crime and drugs, Black people encounter stereotypes everyday. In his book, Elijah gives out the tools he thinks that people need to shut down racism - bringing together humour, research, and history.
We discuss why people think they can say the N-word, views on interracial dating from outside and within, and why the government seem to think that Black people love chicken so much that it could prevent knife crime.
Plus - what do the billions of dollars sent internationally by immigrants in the UK yearly have to do with Brexit?
You can find Elijah on twitter at @elijah_lawal
You can pick up The Clapback on Amazon
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Music by Grapes & Evan Schaeffer
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Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Follow us on twitter/instagram: @whynotadoc
Email: [email protected]
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This week, we talk rent.
In the UK, the minimum cost of living by yourself is anything from Β£18,000 - Β£27,000 per year. It's of little surprise that 2 out of 3 single twenty-somethings live with their parents.
With multi-generational homes being common in countries around the globe - why do so many British people see it as a bad thing?
We find out why the idea of not moving out has become so demonised and its links to immigration in the UK and the USA.
Plus, we take a look at some of the ways people have been able to live cheaply in London (and find out how companies stop it from working).
Articles:
Half Your Brain Stands Guard When Sleeping In A New Place
The Return Trip Effect
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Music by Grapes & Evan Schaeffer
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Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
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Instagram
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Email: [email protected]
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This week, Oz is joined by Cerys Bradley from The Coming Out Tapes to talk about the history of bad science involving the LGBTQ+ community. We talk about the obsession with the "gay gene", the treatment of Caster Semenya, and how Britain's colonial history is linked to protests in Birmingham today.
Plus we head to UK Black Pride - Europe's largest celebration for people of colour in the LGBTQ+ community. Why do people come each year? Why do some people prefer to other Pride events? And how does stereotyping ethnic minority communities affect how people embrace their identity?
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Music by Grapes & Evan Schaeffer
Clips from Bojack Horseman, Sky News, BBC News, and Channel 4 News.
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Email: [email protected]
#whynotadoc
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This week, we've got Roma Agrawal in the studio to talk about her life in engineering and how she ended up spending 6 years of her life building the Shard - one of the tallest skyscrapers in the world. We talk about beef with the Burj Khalifa, creating something new in the centre of a huge city, and Oz's history on a teleshopping channel (plus Alex gets dragged for being incredibly pedantic for the last 34 episodes).
You can find the first three episodes of Building Stories on the Building Stories website.
You can find BUILT in bookshops and available on Amazon.
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Music by Grapes & Evan Schaeffer
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Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Email: [email protected]
#whynotadoc
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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In a 2018 interview, Akon stated that Black people don't need to be vaccinated in order to go to Africa. This week, we discuss the role of culture in medical misinformation. Plus, we chat to Dr Furaha Asani as to why certain communities might be less likely to accept vaccinations and why labeling them "anti-vax" ignores their legitimate concerns
- Here's a link to Furaha's article in New Scientist - Labelling people "anti-vaxxers" ignores real roots of their concerns
- You can find the full Akon interview here on Revolt TV's Youtube channel
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Music by Grapes & Evan Schaeffer
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Follow us on social media and send us your questions!
Facebook
Instagram
Twitter
Email: [email protected]
#whynotadoc
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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