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Strange Health

Strange Health

By: The Conversation
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Strange Health from The Conversation dives into the science behind the most bizarre, viral, and sometimes questionable health trends dominating social media. Expect honest, engaging, and sometimes stomach-turning discussions. Hosted by Katie Edwards from The Conversation and Dan Baumgardt, a GP and lecturer at the University of Bristol.Copyright 2026 The Conversation Hygiene & Healthy Living Physical Illness & Disease
Episodes
  • Meet the mites that live on you: from demodex to dust mites and scabies
    Feb 17 2026

    You are not alone in your own skin. Millions of microscopic creatures live there too. Our skin is home to entire ecosystems of microscopic life. Bacteria and fungi get most of the attention, but mites are there too. Among the most common are demodex mites, tiny eight-legged relatives of spiders that live inside hair follicles and pores, especially on the face. Almost all adults carry them.

    In this episode we explore what these microscopic housemates are actually doing on our bodies and why the idea of them can feel so unsettling. While demodex may be harmless, there are plenty of other mites that can cause problems, from dust mites, to scabies.

    Hosts Katie Edwards and Dan Baumgardt turn this week to Alejandra Perotti, professor of invertebrate biology at the University of Reading, who studies the relationship between mites and humans.

    Strange Health is a podcast from The Conversation is an independent, not-for-profit news organisation. Full credits for this episode available here. If you like the show, please consider donating to support our work. You can sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation here.

    Hosts: Katie Edwards from The Conversation and Dan Baumgardt, University of Bristol

    Executive Producer: Gemma Ware

    Editing and mixing: Sikander Khan

    Artwork: Alice Mason

    • Invisible skin mites called Demodex almost certainly live on your face – but what about your mascara?
    • How often should you really be washing your bedding? A microbiologist explains
    • Scabies outbreak in UK and Europe – what you need to know

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    36 mins
  • What is the vagus nerve and can you really reset it?
    Feb 10 2026

    The vagus nerve has become the internet’s favourite body part. On social media, it is everywhere. People hum into their phones, gargle with theatrical enthusiasm, dunk their faces into bowls of ice water and poke at their ears in the hope of “activating” it.

    So in this episode we focus our attention on the body’s longest cranial nerve and ask a simple question: what does the vagus nerve actually do, and can we really hack it?

    Hosts Katie Edwards and Dan Baumgardt turn this week to Arshad Majid, a professor of cerebrovascular neurology at the University of Sheffield and an expert in vagus nerve stimulation.

    Strange Health is a podcast from The Conversation is an independent, not-for-profit news organisation. Full credits for this episode available here. If you like the show, please consider donating to support our work. You can sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation here.

    Hosts: Katie Edwards from The Conversation and Dan Baumgardt, University of Bristol

    Executive Producer: Gemma Ware

    Editing and mixing: Anouk MIllet

    Artwork: Alice Mason

    • From decapitation to positive psychology: how one nerve connects body, brain and mind
    • Stimulating the pathway connecting body and brain may change chronic condition patients’ lives

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    37 mins
  • Is cracking my neck and knuckles bad?
    Feb 3 2026

    Joint cracking is one of those habits most of us acquire without thinking about it. In our third episode, we turn our attention to one of the body’s most common and least understood noises. Knuckles, backs, knees and necks all feature, along with the enduring warning many of us grew up with: “Stop cracking your joints, you’ll get arthritis.” Is there any truth in it? And why can cracking feel so strangely satisfying?

    Hosts Katie Edwards and Dan Baumgardt turn this week to Clodagh Toomey, a specialist in musculoskeletal injury and chronic lifestyle-related diseases such as osteoarthritis, to give you the science behind the myths.

    Strange Health is a podcast from The Conversation is an independent, not-for-profit news organisation. If you like the show, please consider donating to support our work. You can sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation here.

    Hosts: Katie Edwards from The Conversation and Dan Baumgardt, University of Bristol

    Executive Producer: Gemma Ware

    Editing and mixing: Anouk MIllet

    Artwork: Alice Mason

    • Can popping your neck cause a stroke?
    • What makes joints pop and crack and is it a sign of disease?
    • Joint pain or osteoarthritis? Why exercise should be your first line of treatment

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    34 mins
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