Livelong Media

Livelong Media

Dive into the fascinating world of longevity and health with Livelong Media featuring insights from leading researchers our podcast unravels the science of living longer and healthier. Each episode explores innovative discoveries. Also, we tackle controversies, highlight effective wellness practices, and discuss the surprising advantages of various dietary and exercise regimes.

  1. May 22

    The Evolutionary Secrets of the Female Body

    Why do women experience periods, menopause, and why are sexual relationships so complicated?  The answers may lie deep in our evolutionary past.In this episode of the Livelong Podcast, Rachel Lehmann-Haupt speaks with Dr. Deena Emera, an evolutionary biologist and researcher at the Buck Institute for Research on Aging, about how female biology evolved — and what that means for women’s health today. Drawing on her research in reproductive biology, Dr. Emera explains why certain features of the female body exist, including menstruation, breast development, pregnancy, and menopause — and how evolutionary tradeoffs continue to shape modern health outcomes. We also explore how biology and culture intersect in topics like relationships, gender, and parenting, and why understanding evolution can help us better understand women’s health across the lifespan. If you’ve ever wondered why the female body works the way it does, this conversation offers a fascinating, science-backed perspective What You’ll Learn: ✅ Why humans are one of the only species that menstruate ✅ The evolutionary mystery of breasts and female anatomy  ✅ Why pregnancy involves biological conflict  ✅ The science behind menopause and longevity ✅ How evolution shapes modern women’s health  ✅ The intersection of biology, relationships, and culture

    33 min
  2. Apr 24

    What Traditional Medicine Gets Wrong About Women’s Longevity

    What is traditional medicine missing for women who want proactive longevity care? In this episode of the LiveLong Podcast, host Rachel Lehmann-Haupt talks with Dr. Krista Ramonas, a double board-certified physician and surgeon and founder of LabXMD, a San Francisco concierge practice focused exclusively on female longevity. Together, they unpack the real gaps in women’s healthcare—and what women can do right now inside the traditional system to get better outcomes. In this conversation, you’ll hear:  ✅  Why medicine has historically been built on data from the “70kg white male”—and how that skews everything for women (from vital signs to lab ranges)  ✅  The shift from “evidence-based” to evidence-informed medicine so women can make decisions now  ✅  The biggest barrier in traditional care: time (and why fragmentation hits women hardest)  ✅  The long-term cost of missed care in midlife—and Dr. Ramonas’ headline: dementia  ✅  Why the perimenopause transition can trigger accelerated brain aging, and how estrogen fits into the conversation  ✅  What’s overhyped in longevity right now: biologic age testing (and why it’s “too much too soon” clinically)  ✅  The testing priorities Dr. Ramonas wants women to focus on first—like cancer genetic testing (BRCA) before “inflammaging” scores  ✅  What proactive care looks like without concierge medicine: be your own activist  ✅  Dr. Ramonas’ personal longevity shifts: CGM insights, cutting back alcohol, moving exercise outdoors, reclaiming agency—and why she ditched the white coat for “white leather” to reduce distance in the doctor-patient relationship This episode is a clear-eyed, empowering look at women’s longevity: less hype, more foundations, and a better partnership with your clinicians.

    24 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Dive into the fascinating world of longevity and health with Livelong Media featuring insights from leading researchers our podcast unravels the science of living longer and healthier. Each episode explores innovative discoveries. Also, we tackle controversies, highlight effective wellness practices, and discuss the surprising advantages of various dietary and exercise regimes.

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