Beyond the Prescription

Lucy McBride MD

Join Dr. Lucy McBride for honest conversations about what it really takes to be healthy. Each episode goes beyond quick fixes and conflicting health advice to explore the questions that matter: How do we navigate a healthcare system that's often too rushed to see us as whole people? Who can we trust when everyone seems to be selling something? And how do we reclaim agency over our own health? Drawing from 25 years of clinical experience, Dr. McBride brings evidence-based clarity to complex health topics—from mental health and preventive care to the future of medicine itself. Whether interviewing leading healthcare innovators, answering listener questions, or sharing insights from her own practice, her mission is the same: helping you reclaim agency over your health. For listeners who want more than a prescription—who want to understand their bodies, advocate for themselves, and cut through the noise of modern wellness culture—this is your guide to getting the care you actually need. To sign up for her weekly newsletter, visit www.lucymcbride.substack.com/welcome lucymcbride.substack.com

  1. Rethinking GLP-1s & Metabolic Health with Ashley Koff, RD

    FEB 6

    Rethinking GLP-1s & Metabolic Health with Ashley Koff, RD

    Episode Summary Dr. Lucy McBride sits down with registered dietitian Ashley Koff, best-selling author of "Your Best Shot," to discuss metabolic health, GLP-1 medications, and why the medical profession needs to shift from weight loss to weight health. They explore why BMI is just one data point, debunk the myth of the non-compliant patient, and examine how GLP-1s teach us about hunger and fullness. The conversation addresses why personalized healthcare that addresses trauma, family dynamics, and individual biology matters more than any single medication or diet approach when tackling America's metabolic health crisis. Shifting From Weight Loss to Weight Health Weight is a symptom, not a diagnosis, and the goal should be weight health—making the hormones and biological systems that regulate weight—rather than pursuing weight loss through willpower. The Myth of the Non-Compliant Patient Patients who struggle with weight aren't lazy or noncompliant—they've been dismissed and shamed by a medical system that lacks time to address the complex factors driving metabolic health. Understanding Metabolic Health Beyond BMI BMI is just one metric and doesn't indicate metabolic health—body composition, genetics, hormones, and social determinants all matter more than a number on the scale. GLP-1 Medications as Teachers About Health GLP-1s teach people to recognize actual hunger versus emotional eating, helping them establish sustainable eating patterns they can maintain even after tapering off the medication. The Non-Linear Journey of Metabolic Health Taking GLP-1s often means unpacking childhood trauma, navigating family disapproval, and gaining agency over your body—it's not just about losing weight. Ending Judgment Around Bodies and Medication Choices Society readily judges others' bodies and medication choices, but acceptance of what you can't control frees up mental energy for genuine empowerment. Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    46 min
  2. JAN 27

    How to Protect your Health When the World Feels Like It's Falling Apart

    EPISODE SUMMARY: In this week's episode, Dr. Lucy McBride reads from her newsletter addressing how witnessing collective trauma affects our physical and mental health. Through patient stories, she introduces her "3 A's" framework (Awareness, Acceptance, Agency) for navigating anxiety during turbulent times and offers practical guidance for knowing when distress signals a need for help. KEY CONCEPTS: 1. EVERYONE HAS MENTAL HEALTH—NOT JUST "THE MENTALLY ILL" Mental health is not a diagnosis for a small percentage of people; it's a universal aspect of being human. Mental health has been treated as the "stepchild of physical health"—when in reality, it's ground zero of health. Physical symptoms (racing heart, jaw tension, abnormal bloodwork) often reflect underlying mental health struggles. Your genetic predispositions, personal history, and past traumas shape how you respond to crisis. 2. THE 3 A'S: A FRAMEWORK FOR MENTAL HEALTH Mental health is a lifelong process built on three steps: Awareness → Acceptance → Agency. Awareness: Understanding the facts of your story and recognizing your mental health patterns. Acceptance: Making peace with what you cannot control—genetic vulnerabilities, past trauma, current crises. Agency: Taking action over the thoughts, feelings, habits, and relationships you can change. 3. KNOW YOUR PATTERN: CATASTROPHIZING, INTELLECTUALIZING, OR NUMBING Catastrophizers imagine worst-case scenarios; they need reality checks. Intellectualizers can explain every policy failure but can't sleep; they need to feel their feelings. Numbifiers stop watching entirely because it's overwhelming; they need to stay connected. Self-awareness about your pattern is more important than having the most resources. 4. WHY WELLNESS AND TRADITIONAL MEDICINE BOTH FALL SHORT The wellness industry offers oversimplified solutions: meditation apps, "limit news consumption," "practice self-care." Traditional medicine screens for anxiety disorders and offers prescriptions without addressing complexity. Both approaches miss what's actually happening and are disempowering to patients. Medication can quiet anxious thoughts, but there's no pill for insight; therapy builds awareness but can't alone reverse anxiety spirals. 5. PRACTICAL STEPS FOR PROTECTING YOUR MENTAL HEALTH NOW Get honest about your baseline: Are you eating, sleeping, taking medications? Disruption signals something important. Notice your pattern: Identify whether you catastrophize, intellectualize, or go numb—then compensate accordingly. Set boundaries: Check news twice daily, call friends instead of doom-scrolling, turn off phones at 9pm, allow yourself to cry. Awareness of your limits is not weakness—it's wisdom. 6. WHEN TO ASK FOR HELP The signal: difficulty functioning—not sleeping, not eating, not taking medications, not showing up for work or family. This isn't about being "mentally ill"; it's recognizing when your mental health needs support right now. The real questions: How aware are you of your patterns? Where do you live on the continuum of anxiety and resilience? Call your doctor not because something is "wrong with you," but because mental health sometimes needs professional support. - For weekly insights on taking charge of your health—beyond the prescription—subscribe to Are You Okay? at https://lucymcbride.substack.com/ Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    11 min
  3. The New USDA Food Pyramid: Wacky or Well Done?

    JAN 10

    The New USDA Food Pyramid: Wacky or Well Done?

    Episode Summary Dr. Lucy McBride sits down with behavioral economist Emily Oster, PhD, to discuss the newly released USDA dietary guidelines. They explore what the guidelines actually say, debunk common misconceptions, and examine the problematic framing that suggests individual dietary choices alone can solve America’s health crisis. The conversation addresses the USDA’s appropriate emphasis on whole foods, but why access to quality healthcare and nutritional guidance matters more than specific recommendations when tackling America’s chronic disease epidemic. The Guidelines Are Mostly Unchanged * The new USDA guidelines are largely similar to previous versions, contrary to fears or hopes that they would radically shift dietary recommendations * Key advice remains consistent: prioritize protein, fiber, and healthy fats while limiting sugars, alcohol, and processed foods * One notable improvement is that the guidelines are shorter, tighter, and more digestible than previous iterations * The guidelines reflect evidence-based advice that most primary care doctors already give their patients daily The Real Problem: Most Americans Don’t Eat This Way * The biggest issue isn’t whether the guidelines emphasize protein enough or get saturated fat recommendations perfect—it’s that most American diets look nothing like what’s recommended * The average American diet contains a tremendous amount of ultra-processed, high-salt, high-sugar foods that aren’t satiating * Habit change around food is incredibly difficult, making implementation far more important than guideline details * Even previous sensible guidelines didn’t translate into widespread dietary improvements * The gap between recommendations and reality highlights why access to personalized nutrition guidance matters The Problematic Framing of Individual Responsibility * While the content of the guidelines is generally sound, the framing places disproportionate emphasis on personal dietary choices as the solution to health problems * The framing ignores systemic barriers including food deserts, economic constraints, lack of healthcare access, and limited time for meal preparation that are often the biggest barriers to healthy eating * The presentation creates a “blame the victim” mentality that suggests America’s chronic disease epidemic is primarily due to poor food choices when, in reality, obesity and metabolic diseases stem from a combination of genetic, environmental, biological, social-emotional, and behavioral factors * Effective nutrition change requires relationships with healthcare providers, not just information on a poster The Beef Tallow Controversy * The inclusion of beef tallow in the guidelines raised eyebrows and generated confusion among the public * Beef tallow is not a common cooking fat for most Americans and is less accessible and practical than butter, olive oil, or avocado oil * The emphasis on beef tallow appeared to reflect someone’s personal agenda rather than evidence-based nutritional guidance * For most people, traditional cooking fats like olive oil and avocado oil remain better, more practical choices * The controversy highlighted how specific recommendations can sometimes reflect ideological positions rather than public health priorities The Healthcare System Failures Behind Dietary Struggles * Nutrition is a foundational pillar of health, but meaningful dietary change requires supportive relationships with healthcare providers, not just guidelines * The current healthcare system often limits doctors to five-minute visits, making it impossible to address complex nutritional needs (Read my article on our broken primary care system here.) * Health is about relationships, not transactions—yet many Americans lack access to doctors who can spend adequate time with them * People’s relationships with food are deeply ingrained and often begin in childhood, making simple advice to “eat better” ineffective without strategic planning and support * Doctors frequently lecture patients about diet and exercise without addressing barriers like body shame, food access, financial constraints, or fear of change * Until every American has access to quality primary care that addresses nutrition, behavioral health, and whole-person wellness, dietary guidelines will have limited impact Upshot The new USDA dietary guidelines offer sensible, evidence-based nutritional advice that aligns with what most doctors already recommend. However, the real challenge isn’t refining what goes on the food pyramid—it’s ensuring Americans have access to the healthcare relationships and systemic support necessary to make meaningful dietary changes. Without addressing food access, economic barriers, and the broken healthcare system that limits meaningful doctor-patient interactions, even the most well-designed guidelines will remain just a poster on a wall. Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    35 min
  4. Making Sense of Hormone Therapy & the FDA’s Removal of the Black Box Warning ⛔️

    11/12/2025

    Making Sense of Hormone Therapy & the FDA’s Removal of the Black Box Warning ⛔️

    Episode Summary Dr. Lucy McBride discusses hormone replacement therapy (HRT) and menopause, breaking through the noise of conflicting medical information. She explains the science behind menopause, addresses common misconceptions about HRT risks, and examines the recent FDA announcement about removing black box warnings on estrogen products. Throughout the episode, she advocates for evidence-based, individualized decision-making that considers a woman’s complete health profile rather than fear-based restrictions. Key Concepts Understanding Menopause and Perimenopause * Menopause occurs when the ovaries stop producing consistent, robust amounts of estrogen and progesterone * Perimenopause is the 7-10 year lead-up to menopause, characterized by irregular periods, hot flashes, night sweats, mood instability, sleep interruption, and vaginal dryness * The average age of menopause in the United States is 51, but symptoms and experiences vary dramatically among women * Testosterone decline in women is age-related rather than menopause-related, beginning in a woman’s 20s and 30s (Listen to Dr. McBride’s conversation on testosterone for women with New York Times journalist Susan Dominus here.) * Every woman who lives long enough will experience menopause, affecting 50% of the population The WHI Study and Its Lasting Impact * The Women’s Health Initiative (WHI) study was the largest-ever randomized controlled trial studying menopause and hormone therapy. It was halted abruptly in 2002 and created widespread fear about HRT by linking it to increased breast cancer and cardiovascular disease risks * The study had significant design flaws: participants were older (average age 63), used synthetic hormones (Premarin and Provera), and the timing hypothesis wasn’t considered * McBride argues the study measured “harm of late initiation” rather than harm of HRT itself * The study led to black box warnings on estrogen products that persisted for over two decades * These warnings resulted in generations of women being denied information and treatment options for menopausal symptoms Health Implications of Estrogen Deficiency * Estrogen deficiency increases cardiovascular disease risk, with women losing their protective advantage over men after menopause * Bone density loss accelerates during perimenopause and menopause, increasing osteoporosis and fracture risk * Genitourinary syndrome of menopause causes vaginal dryness, painful intercourse, and increased urinary tract infection risk (Listen to Dr. McBride’s conversation on sexual health with Dr. Rachel Rubin here.) * Cognitive changes and dementia risk may be associated with long-term estrogen deficiency * Quality of life impacts include disrupted sleep, mood changes, and diminished sexual function that shouldn’t be dismissed as “just part of aging” The Science of HRT Benefits * Transdermal estrogen (patches, creams, gels) carries lower risks than oral estrogen by avoiding first-pass liver metabolism * Micronized progesterone is preferred over synthetic progestins for women with a uterus to protect the uterine lining * Early initiation of HRT (within 10 years of menopause onset) shows cardiovascular benefits rather than risks * HRT can reduce fracture risk, improve genitourinary health, and potentially offer cognitive protection * Local vaginal estrogen is topical (i.e, not the same as systemic hormone therapy) and is highly effective for genitourinary symptoms with minimal absorption into the bloodstream Breast Cancer Risk in Perspective * One in eight women will develop breast cancer over the course of their life; most breast cancers are sporadic (i.e., not hereditary or due to an inherited genetic mutation) * The absolute risk increase of breast cancer from HRT is approximately 1 additional case per 1,000 women per year; data from the WHI showed that women who took estrogen-only HRT had a reduced risk for breast cancer * Alcohol consumption (one drink per day) carries comparable or higher breast cancer risk than HRT * Obesity presents a significantly higher breast cancer risk than HRT * Having a family history of breast cancer doesn’t preclude HRT use * Dr. McBride emphasizes viewing women’s health holistically rather than solely through the lens of breast cancer risk Reframing Medical Decision-Making * The question to ask your doctors isn’t “Can I take HRT?”; it’s “What are the potential risks and benefits of taking hormone therapy given my unique health profile?” * Doctors should provide evidence-based information and guidance that honors patients’ unique health issues, tolerance for risk, and ability to understand tradeoffs inherent in any medical decision * Risk exists on a continuum; it’s not monolithic. Risk cannot be reduced to zero—it’s about weighing competing risks and benefits which will very person to person * Fear is real and valid, but shouldn’t be the sole driver of medical decisions * Women deserve comprehensive information about their bodies and treatment options, regardless of age or time since menopause onset * Read more of Dr. McBride’s article on vaginal hormone therapy and importance of empowering women to make informed decisions about their own health here. Upshot The conversation challenges decades of gatekeeping around hormone replacement therapy by emphasizing evidence-based, individualized care. Dr. McBride advocates for removing the stigma and fear surrounding HRT, encouraging women to ask better questions and doctors to provide evidence-based guidance that considers the whole person. Her central message: HRT isn’t right for every woman, but every woman deserves comprehensive information about her body and the right to make informed decisions. Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 5m
  5. Testosterone for Women: What You Need to Know with NYT Journalist Susan Dominus

    11/04/2025

    Testosterone for Women: What You Need to Know with NYT Journalist Susan Dominus

    In this conversation, Dr. Lucy McBride sits down with New York Times journalist Susan Dominus to discuss her recent article “‘I’m on Fire’: Testosterone Is Giving Women Back Their Sex Drive—and Then Some” on testosterone supplementation in women. With testosterone use surging among midlife women, they explore the gap between recommendations from the medical establishment and the wellness industry, examining why women are turning to testosterone for sexual health, energy, and vitality—and what the limited evidence really tells us about risks and benefits. Key Concepts Women Actually Make Testosterone (And More Than Estrogen) * The common misconception is that testosterone is purely a male hormone * Most women don’t realize they naturally produce testosterone—and in higher quantities than estrogen * Women’s bodies produce testosterone from three sources: 25% from ovaries, 25% from adrenal glands, and 50% from peripheral tissues * Testosterone plays a role in libido, energy, metabolic health, and muscle tone throughout women’s lives, however the role of supplemental testosterone for issues other than low sexual desire remains unclear The Decline in Testosterone Levels Starts Earlier Than You Think * Testosterone levels in women begin declining around age 30, dropping to approximately 50% by age 60 * This is a gradual, age-related process, not a sudden menopausal crash * Menopause doesn’t cause testosterone to plummet; it coincides with the end of a depletion that’s been happening all along * Women in their mid-40s can feel the effects of low testosterone long before they’re perimenopausal * Understanding this timeline challenges the narrative that testosterone issues are specifically about menopause The Testosterone Surge: From UK Trend to US Phenomenon * Just a few years ago, testosterone therapy for women was primarily a UK conversation; the US medical establishment was dismissive * In the past six to eight months, testosterone use has exploded across the US * Women are discussing it on streaming feeds, social networks, and with their friends, indicating a cultural moment * The treatment has moved from relative obscurity to mainstream conversation at remarkable speed, and the wellness industry is seizing the moment The Evidence Gap: What We Know and What We Don’t * The medical establishment has been cautious about testosterone in women due to limited research and because supplemental testosterone is not currently approved by the FDA * Existing studies support the use of supplemental testosterone in women only for libido and sexual function (i.e., hypoactive sexual desire disorder) * Anecdotal evidence suggest that testosterone can help women with energy, muscle mass, metabolic health, cognitive “clarity,” and overall wellbeing; however more research is needed to understand where these are true effects versus placebo * The potential downsides are real (especially if given at high doses): voice changes, irritability, hair loss, hyper-arousal * Long-term effects remain unknown, particularly regarding cardiovascular health, metabolic changes, and other systemic impacts * Doctors face the challenge of counseling patients when definitive evidence is lacking, creating tension between patient demand and evidence-based medicine * This uncertainty leaves both physicians and patients navigating uncharted territory Navigating the Gray Zone Between Medicine and Wellness * Women find themselves caught between traditional medical systems that historically have not made space to discuss sexual health and wellness practitioners who proselytize products without adequate evidence * This dynamic mirrors other areas of women’s health where quality-of-life concerns have been historically undervalued compared to longevity metrics * The conversation reflects a broader cultural shift toward prioritizing women’s subjective experiences as legitimate healthcare goals * There’s a growing concern about polypharmacy: using multiple pharmaceutical interventions to address interconnected symptoms, then needing additional treatments for side effects * The question remains whether people are reaching for pharmaceutical solutions too quickly instead of evidence-based lifestyle interventions like exercise, sleep, and stress management * Both Dr. McBride and Ms. Dominus stress the importance of seeking care from practitioners who are well versed in medical evidence—for example those who are certified by the Menopause Society—and addressing testosterone levels in context, ruling out other causes for issues like fatigue and brain fog before jumping to testosterone as a quick fix, while acknowledging the lack of access to evidence-based care to address the nuances of patients’ health Upshot The conversation about supplemental testosterone represents a pivotal moment in women’s health—where patient demand for quality-of-life improvements collides with limited evidence. This moment underscores the need for nuanced, individualized discussions between patients and providers that honor women’s subjective experiences while acknowledging medical uncertainties, a challenge that extends far beyond testosterone to many aspects of midlife women’s healthcare. Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    47 min
  6. How to Manage Anxiety When It Feels Like the World is Falling Apart with Dr. Jessi Gold

    09/17/2025

    How to Manage Anxiety When It Feels Like the World is Falling Apart with Dr. Jessi Gold

    Episode Summary In this conversation, Dr. Lucy McBride sits down with psychiatrist Dr. Jessi Gold to discuss how to manage emotional wellbeing during times of political upheaval. With the country feeling unsettled by ongoing violence and crisis, they explore practical strategies for emotional regulation, the importance of naming feelings without judgment, and why small daily acts of self-care aren't indulgent—they're essential for functioning in a chaotic world. Key Concepts The Importance of Naming What's Really Happening * Pretending the external world doesn't affect you is both unrealistic and counterproductive * Avoiding the "grief Olympics"—comparing your struggles to others' and dismissing your own feelings * Everyone exists in the same messy world, and acknowledging its impact creates space for authentic connection * Naming feelings reduces the underlying current of stress that affects work performance and relationships * You don't have to fix the world's problems to acknowledge they're affecting you Feelings as Information, Not Pathology * Social media makes it easy to conflate normal human emotions with clinical diagnoses * All emotions serve a purpose and provide valuable information about your needs and circumstances * The continuum approach: you don't need to meet clinical criteria to deserve self-compassion and support * Feelings are temporary and meant to be experienced, not immediately eliminated or "fixed" Acceptance vs. Resignation: Reallocating Your Resources * True acceptance means redirecting energy from things you can't control to areas where you have agency * The serenity prayer framework: identifying what you can and cannot change provides clarity and reduces helplessness * Acceptance isn't giving up—it's strategic resource allocation of time, energy, and mental bandwidth * Small acts of self-efficacy can counter overwhelming feelings of powerlessness * Control-seeking behaviors often increase anxiety rather than providing the relief we're seeking Dialectical Thinking: Holding Two Truths Simultaneously * Both difficult realities and moments of joy can coexist without negating each other * Social media algorithms push people toward emotional extremes * You can care deeply about global suffering while still finding meaning in daily life * Examples like Viktor Frankl demonstrate that hope can survive even in the most dire circumstances * Dialectical thinking protects against all-or-nothing emotional spirals Practical Micro-Strategies for Daily Emotional Regulation * Small, discrete coping tools work better than major lifestyle overhauls for most people * Fidget tools, breathing exercises, and physical grounding techniques provide in-the-moment relief * Gratitude practices counter the brain's evolutionary bias toward remembering negative experiences * Body awareness (like noticing jaw clenching while scrolling) provides early warning signals for stress Digital Boundaries and Media Consumption * "Mindless scrolling" is actually highly stimulating and often traumatic content consumption * Watching repeated footage of traumatic events creates secondary trauma, especially for vulnerable populations * Moving phones out of bedrooms and avoiding immediate morning phone checking reduces anxiety activation * Setting specific times and limits for news consumption prevents information overwhelm * Parallel activities with friends (working quietly together) can provide connection without amplifying distress Upshot Dr. McBride and Dr. Gold emphasize that managing anxiety during chaotic times requires both self-compassion and practical action. Their message: you don't need to be clinically depressed or anxious to deserve support, and tiny daily interventions can make a significant difference in emotional resilience. Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    46 min
  7. Cutting Through the Noise Around COVID Vaccines with Shira Doron MD

    09/03/2025

    Cutting Through the Noise Around COVID Vaccines with Shira Doron MD

    Episode Summary In this episode, Dr. Lucy McBride sits down with Dr. Shira Doron, Chief Infection Control Officer and Hospital Epidemiologist at Tufts Medical Center, to cut through the confusion surrounding COVID vaccines and public health policy. With the CDC in upheaval and patients calling with urgent questions about protecting their families this winter, they tackle the messy reality of vaccine access, institutional breakdown, and what it all means for your health decisions. Dr. Doron explains why getting clear answers feels impossible right now—and offers practical guidance for navigating the chaos. Key Concepts The Regulatory Meltdown * FDA approved new COVID vaccines but only for high-risk groups, creating access barriers at major pharmacies * Entire ACIP advisory committee was gutted—all 17 members replaced at once—leaving no clear decision-making authority * CDC leadership departures and delayed meetings mean the usual vaccine rollout process has completely broken down * Retail pharmacies like CVS can't administer vaccines without ACIP recommendations, forcing patients to get prescriptions * The dust may settle by late September, but institutional trust has been severely damaged The Backstory Nobody's Talking About * A little known fact: the Biden-era ACIP was already planning to shift away from universal annual vaccines toward risk-based recommendations * Internal polling of that committee showed 76% support for targeting high-risk groups rather than everyone over six months old * Current policy direction mirrors what the previous committee intended, but the chaotic process has destroyed confidence * Medical and scientific community feels betrayed by political interference in normal advisory processes * Reform was needed, but "slash and burn" approach leaves the country vulnerable to future health crises Making Sense of Who Should Get Vaccinated * Dr. Doron suggests talking with your doctor but in general she recommends waiting for the new formulation rather than rushing to get the current vaccine during this summer's wave * Dr. Doron notes that “high risk” for COVID is broadly defined—and includes sedentary lifestyle, history of smoking, anxiety, ADHD—such that most Americans will qualify for a shot. Plus, self-attestation of risk is likely to continue (rather than requiring medical documentation at pharmacies), and she predicts it will not be difficult to get a shot if you want one (though cannot be sure, and insurance coverage is up in the air) * Professional medical societies are creating their own guidelines to fill the regulatory void * Individual risk assessment with your doctor beats one-size-fits-all recommendations What Vaccines Actually Do (And Don't Do) * Modest protection against any infection for 2-3 months, more like "wearing a raincoat in a rainstorm" than a force field * Strong, durable protection against severe disease (due to cellular immunity i.e., T cells) is the real benefit for high-risk individuals * Limited impact on transmission, so getting vaccinated to protect others isn't particularly effective * Timing matters: Dr. Doron suggests waiting 6 months to get vaccinated after a COVID infection, 3 months after previous vaccine for most people * Novavax may offer better side effect profile and longer-lasting protection than mRNA options Beyond Vaccines: Testing and Treatment * Paxlovid remains effective for high risk patients when started within 5 days for people at risk of severe disease but is not a standard recommendation for healthy, vaccinated people; we live in a data-free zone on the degree of benefit (if any) for lower risk individuals * Test for COVID or flu only when results would change your management—mainly for those who might benefit from antivirals * Home rapid tests can help gauge contagiousness as you recover * Basic rule: stay home until fever-free for 24 hours without medication * Early testing and treatment of high-risk household members beats trying to prevent transmission through vaccination Trust, Messaging, and Moving Forward * Current chaos represents backlash against heavy-handed pandemic messaging that ignored individual risk differences * Public health authorities lost credibility by overpromising vaccine effectiveness and dismissing legitimate concerns * Acknowledging uncertainty and meeting people where they are builds trust better than blanket mandates * Need institutional reform, not destruction of essential public health infrastructure Upshot Dr. McBride and Dr. Doron emphasize that navigating this regulatory chaos requires working closely with your healthcare provider for individualized risk assessment rather than relying on one-size-fits-all guidance. They stress that while patients must advocate for themselves in the current fragmented system, the real solution lies in rebuilding trustworthy public health institutions that prioritize transparent communication and evidence-based recommendations over political interference. Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    53 min
  8. How to Get What You Need from Our Broken Healthcare System

    08/27/2025

    How to Get What You Need from Our Broken Healthcare System

    Episode Summary In this episode, Dr. Lucy McBride tackles the crisis facing American healthcare and provides practical strategies for navigating a broken system. She explores a fundamental disconnect between what patients need and what the current system delivers: while patients require comprehensive, relationship-based healthcare that addresses their whole story, the system provides fragmented, rushed medical care that focuses solely on immediate symptoms. Key Concepts The Systemic Breakdown of Primary Care * Root causes: Pressures from insurance companies and large hospital systems force doctors to see high patient volumes in brief increments, creating unsustainable working conditions and suboptimal care * Consequences: Primary care has evolved from comprehensive problem-solving into rapid referrals and prescription writing, leaving doctors feeling burned out and unable to provide the care they trained to give * Scale of crisis: Millions of Americans currently lack access to a primary care provider, with shortages expected to worsen significantly in coming years * Financial reality: Only 5% of U.S. healthcare spending goes toward primary care, while the vast majority addresses damage control rather than prevention * Professional exodus: Primary care physicians are leaving medicine due to burnout, time constraints, and inability to practice the comprehensive care they were trained to provide Medical Care vs. Healthcare: Understanding the Critical Distinction * Medical care defined: Problem-specific, episodic, transactional treatment focused on immediate symptoms (what urgent care and emergency rooms provide) * Healthcare defined: Patient-centered, relationship-based care involving shared decision-making, understanding of individual health risks and goals, and comprehensive whole-person treatment * The integration challenge: True healthcare requires connecting physical symptoms with biographical data, social determinants of health, and emotional well-being * Relationship foundation: Healthcare depends on trust, rapport, and a provider's understanding of the patient's complete story and context * Access inequality: While medical care is available through urgent care and ERs, comprehensive healthcare is increasingly accessible only to those who can afford it Primary Care Options in the Current System * Insurance-based care: Traditional approach using provider networks, though often limited by short appointment times and restricted access * Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs): Community-based centers providing comprehensive care regardless of ability to pay, often with shorter wait times (findahealthcenter.hrsa.gov) * Direct Primary Care (DPC): Membership-based model allowing doctors smaller patient panels and longer appointment times to provide more comprehensive care, though not universally accessible due to cost * Nurse practitioners and physician assistants: Can provide excellent primary care when well-trained and aware of their knowledge limitations * Telehealth services: Options like One Medical and MD Live meet specific needs but have limitations in providing comprehensive relationship-based care How to Evaluate & Select a Primary Care Provider * Access assessment: Inquire about wait times for routine appointments, same-day sick visits, and between-visit communication methods * Care philosophy evaluation: Understand appointment lengths, approach to preventive and whole-person care, mental health integration, and specialist coordination methods * Logistical considerations: Verify insurance acceptance, understand membership details for DPC practices, and clarify after-hours coverage and prescription refill processes * Red flags to avoid: Providers who lack time for building relationships, demonstrate defensive behavior when questioned, or fail to provide adequate access when needed * Fit assessment: Recognize that doctor-patient relationships require mutual trust and respect; switching providers when the relationship isn't working is acceptable and necessary Self-Advocacy Strategies & Appointment Preparation * Priority setting: Prepare the most urgent issues for each appointment, understanding that comprehensive care may require multiple visits * Rapport building techniques: Acknowledge providers' time constraints, share personal details to establish connection, and express understanding of systemic pressures while maintaining care standards * Documentation responsibility: Keep personal medical records since electronic health records are fragmented across different healthcare systems and make sure they are updated with medications, dosages, allergies, family history, vaccination records, and specialist information * Follow-up planning: Schedule subsequent appointments proactively rather than waiting for problems to arise, ensuring continuity of care The Future of Healthcare Technology and Innovation * Electronic health record limitations: Current systems serve primarily as billing tools rather than patient-centered care coordination platforms, with each healthcare system maintaining separate, incompatible records * Technology's potential: AI and digital innovation (if done well) could create centralized, real-time health records shared across all providers, improving care coordination and reducing redundancy * Innovation priorities: Successful healthcare technology must elevate—not eliminate—the patient-doctor relationship. Tech entrepreneurs who understand this principle are most likely to achieve meaningful reform * Patient empowerment through data: Individuals must maintain their own comprehensive health records until systems improve, including all provider visits, medication changes, and test results * Systemic reform needs: Long-term solutions require centering primary care in the healthcare system, ensuring universal access to medical homes, and prioritizing prevention over damage control The Upshot Dr. McBride encourages everyone to advocate fiercely for comprehensive relationship-based care rather than settling for episodic medical transactions. She emphasizes that while individual self-advocacy is essential for navigating current realities, true reform requires investing in primary care and ensuring universal access to medical homes that address the whole person. Get full access to Are You Okay? at lucymcbride.substack.com/subscribe

    1h 1m
4.7
out of 5
124 Ratings

About

Join Dr. Lucy McBride for honest conversations about what it really takes to be healthy. Each episode goes beyond quick fixes and conflicting health advice to explore the questions that matter: How do we navigate a healthcare system that's often too rushed to see us as whole people? Who can we trust when everyone seems to be selling something? And how do we reclaim agency over our own health? Drawing from 25 years of clinical experience, Dr. McBride brings evidence-based clarity to complex health topics—from mental health and preventive care to the future of medicine itself. Whether interviewing leading healthcare innovators, answering listener questions, or sharing insights from her own practice, her mission is the same: helping you reclaim agency over your health. For listeners who want more than a prescription—who want to understand their bodies, advocate for themselves, and cut through the noise of modern wellness culture—this is your guide to getting the care you actually need. To sign up for her weekly newsletter, visit www.lucymcbride.substack.com/welcome lucymcbride.substack.com

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