The Vertue Podcast

Shona Vertue

A psychology-led podcast on health, movement, and behaviour change. Exploring why knowing what to do isn’t enough, and how to build consistency by understanding the mind–body relationship. Honest conversations, occasionally uncomfortable truths.

  1. MAR 25

    #47 - The Wellness Industry Is Using Science to Lie to You

    The wellness industry doesn't need to make things up anymore. They've got something more powerful, real studies, real journals, real credentials. And they know exactly how to use them to get you to open your wallet. In this episode, I'm breaking down how it actually works. How a real study gets twisted into a claim it was never designed to support. How statistical significance gets mistaken for proof. How an animal study becomes "clinically backed." And why your doctor dismissing something that's genuinely helping people is its own kind of problem too. I want to be clear, I'm not standing here as an authority. I'm in my honours year, learning how to read research properly in real time. But that's exactly why I made this episode. Because the more I learn, the more I see how easy it is to manipulate people who haven't been taught this stuff. And that's not your fault. Nobody teaches it. By the end of this episode you'll know: - Why "studies show" is one of the least meaningful phrases in wellness marketing.- The difference between a result that's statistically significant and one that actually matters.- What a control group is and why its absence should be a dealbreaker.- Five questions that will expose a bad claim in under two minutes.- Why academia is just as responsible for this mess as the people exploiting it. Please send this on because this is a PROTECTIVE podcast, really important in this era of information AND manipulation.

    41 min
  2. MAR 3

    #45 - Should You Train When You’re Sleep Deprived? What the Research Actually Says

    What should you actually do when you’re chronically sleep deprived? If you’re a parent, shift worker, insomniac, or coach people who are, you’ve probably asked yourself whether training is helping or harming you. In this episode, I dive into the research on acute and chronic sleep restriction and its effects on: • Cognitive performance• Strength and endurance• Hormonal signalling (testosterone, AMPK, mTOR)• Mood and perceived health• Recovery and long-term adaptation We examine a 2025 systematic review and meta-analysis of 45 experimental studies (from 18,127 initially identified papers) looking at sleep deprivation and performance. We unpack one of the longest chronic sleep restriction protocols to date (6 weeks of restricted weekday sleep with weekend “recovery”), and what that tells us about cumulative sleep debt. We also explore: • Why early waking may impair cognition differently than going to bed late• Whether moderate aerobic exercise can offset some cognitive effects of sleep loss• What experimental data show about testosterone under sleep restriction• Why resistance training under chronic sleep deprivation may require adjustment• The difference between narrative reviews and higher-quality meta-analytic evidence Essentially, we look at how to train intelligently when sleep is broken, short, or unpredictable, and what the science can (and cannot) tell us right now. Main Reference Systematic Review & Performance Effects [2025 Systematic Review & Meta-Analysis on Sleep Deprivation and Performance – 45 Experimental Studies] Chronic Sleep Restriction with Weekend Recovery Smith et al. (2021). Chronic sleep restriction during a 6-week protocol with weekend recovery and cumulative sleep debt analysis.

    40 min
  3. FEB 10

    #44 - What Your Pelvic Floor Is Responding To (It’s Not Just Exercises)

    In this episode, I explore the bidirectional relationship between the pelvic floor and our psychological state. How stress, anxiety, grief, identity shifts, and prolonged effort can shape pelvic floor tone, and how pelvic floor tension can feed back into how safe and settled we feel in our bodies. This is not an episode about blaming stress, over-psychologising symptoms, or replacing pelvic floor physiotherapy. It’s an invitation to widen the lens. We’ll talk about: Why pelvic floor exercises don’t always “work” How anxiety and low mood can influence muscle tone and recovery (without pathologising) What research tells us about pelvic floor outcomes when psychological load is high My own postpartum experience of pelvic floor tension, sexual discomfort, constipation, and grief, and what I didn’t realise at the time A guided exercise for releasing tension and tightness in the PF. If this episode resonates, let it be a prompt to think beyond physiology alone, to seek support, and to work with pelvic floor specialists who understand the whole picture, body, nervous system, and life context. If you’re looking for a practical, anatomy-driven breakdown of the pelvic floor — without much psychology — this is an excellent companion episode to listen to alongside this one:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmlwtsJXrc0 A key paper discussed in this episode, exploring the relationship between pelvic floor dysfunction and symptoms of anxiety and depression, and how psychological state may shape response to pelvic floor physiotherapy:https://doi.org/10.3109/01443615.2013.813913 Helen KeebleHelen’s work is thoughtful, evidence-based, and deeply respectful of the nervous system and lived experience.https://helenkeeble.com/ Sydney Pelvic ClinicIf you’re based in Sydney, this team is exceptional. They are highly skilled, compassionate, and genuinely holistic in their approach.https://www.sydneypelvicclinic.com.au/

    38 min
4.9
out of 5
45 Ratings

About

A psychology-led podcast on health, movement, and behaviour change. Exploring why knowing what to do isn’t enough, and how to build consistency by understanding the mind–body relationship. Honest conversations, occasionally uncomfortable truths.

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