Huberman Lab - U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy: Efforts & Challenges in Promoting Public Health

Episode Date: September 25, 2023

In this episode, my guest is Dr. Vivek Murthy, M.D., the acting U.S. Surgeon General who earned his undergraduate degree from Harvard and his M.D. from Yale School of Medicine. We discuss nutrition, f...ood additives, social media and mental health, public health initiatives to combat the crisis of social isolation, the obesity crisis, addiction and other pressing issues in public health. Dr. Murthy explains the role of the U.S. government in promoting specific public health issues and the steps needed to rebuild public trust in scientific and medical information. We also discuss health care accessibility, insurance barriers and individual versus team-based medical care. We also discuss topics gleaned from listener questions, such as the facts and myths about “Big Pharma” and “Big Food” industries, scientific research and public health policies. For show notes, including referenced articles and additional resources, please visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Maui Nui Venison: https://mauinuivenison.com/huberman ROKA: https://roka.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Momentous: https://livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Dr. Vivek Murthy (00:01:53) Sponsors: Maui Nui & ROKA (00:04:35) Surgeon General Roles (00:07:44) Illness Framework, Enhancing Wellbeing (00:12:42) Priorities as Surgeon General (00:19:50) Public Health Message Distribution (00:28:24) Diagnosis vs. Optimizing Health (00:33:04) Sponsor: AG1 (00:34:01) Food Additives, Highly Processed Foods, Food Availability (00:39:11) Difficulties Addressing Health Issues & Highly Processed Foods (00:49:53) Retribution, Integrity & Public Trust (00:54:41) Company Opposition (00:58:32) Sponsor: LMNT (00:59:50) Public Health Communication, Masks & COVID-19, Public Trust (01:07:01) Masks, Humility; Building Public Trust (01:10:45) Rebuilding Relationship to Public, Vaccines (01:17:41) Community Core & Diversity; Federal Funding (01:24:55) Big Pharma, “Pill for Every Problem” Society  (01:31:48) Interdisciplinary Medical Teams, Individualized & Value-Based Medical Models (01:38:44) Insurance Barriers, Mental Health Care, Drug Prices (01:44:40) Isolation Crisis, Social Disconnection, Health Risks  (01:49:15) Community Organizations & Modern Life, Social Media (01:56:36) Youth & Social Media, Parents, Policy Change (02:06:45) Real Life vs. Social Media, Kids & Playtime (02:11:56) Social Media Advice for Parents (02:20:43) Society & Disconnection, Human Connection & Service (02:31:20) Zero-Cost Support, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, YouTube Feedback, Momentous, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today my guest is Dr. Vivek Murthy. Dr. Vivek Murthy is a medical doctor and acting surgeon general of the United States. As surgeon general of the United States, Dr. Murphy oversees more than 6,000 dedicated public health officers whose job is to protect, promote, and advance our nation's public health. Dr. Murphy received his bachelor's degree
Starting point is 00:00:35 from Harvard University and his medical degree from the Yale University School of Medicine. Today's discussion covers some of the most important issues in public health, not just within the United States, but worldwide, including nutrition and the obesity crisis, as well as food additives and why certain food chemicals and additives are allowed in the United States versus in other countries. We also discuss mental health, the youth mental health crisis, the adult mental health
Starting point is 00:01:01 crisis, and the global crisis of loneliness and isolation. We also talk about corporate interests, that is whether or not big food and big pharma industries actually impact the research and or decisions that the US Surgeon General takes in his directives toward public health. And of course we discussed some of the major public health events that occurred over the last five years, and the current and future landscape of how to restore faith both in public health officials, in public health policy, and science more generally. By the end of today's episode, you not only will have learned a tremendous amount about public health and why you hear the particular public health directives that you do,
Starting point is 00:01:40 but also how to better interpret future public health directives. You will also come to learn that as Surgeon General, Dr. Murphy has both an extremely challenging job, but one that he meets with a tremendous amount of both rigor and compassion. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, I'd like to thank
Starting point is 00:02:08 the sponsors of today's podcast. Our first sponsor is Maui Newi Venison. Maui Newi Venison is the most nutrient dense and delicious red meat available. I've spoken before on this podcast in solo episodes and with guests about the need to get approximately one gram of high quality protein per pound of body weight each day for optimal nutrition. There are many different ways that one can do that, but a key thing is to make sure that you're not doing that by ingesting excessive calories. Maui Newi Venison has the highest density of quality protein per calorie, and it achieves that in delicious things like ground meats, venison steaks, jerky, and bone broth.
Starting point is 00:02:47 I particularly like the ground venison. I make those into venison burgers probably five times a week or more. I also like the jerky for its convenience, especially when I'm traveling or especially busy with work, and know that I'm getting an extremely nutrient dense high quality source of protein. If you'd like to try Maui Newi venison, you can go to MauiNewEvenison.com slash Huberman and get 20% off your first order. Again, that's MauiNewEvenison.com slash Huberman to get 20% off.
Starting point is 00:03:16 Today's episode is also brought to us by Roca. Roca makes eye glasses and sunglasses that are the absolute highest quality. I've spent a lifetime working on the biology, the visual system, and I can tell you that your visual system has to contend with an enormous number of challenges in order for you to be able to see clearly in different environments. Roka understands the biology, the visual system, and has designed their eye glasses and sunglasses so that you always see with crystal clarity. Originally, their glasses were designed for performance, that is, for running and cycling
Starting point is 00:03:43 and for sport, and indeed, they can still be used for performance. They won't slip off your face if you get sweaty. They're extremely lightweight. But I should mention that Roka eye glasses and sunglasses come in some of the aesthetics more typically associated with performance glasses, like those cyborg style glasses. But they also have a number of styles that you would be perfectly comfortable wearing out to dinner or to work. I wear readers at night or when I drive.
Starting point is 00:04:07 And I wear sunglasses during the day if I happen to be driving into bright light or outside and it's just overwhelmingly bright. I do not wear sunglasses when I do my morning sunlight viewing to set my circadian rhythm and I suggest that you do the same. If you'd like to try Roka eyeglasses or sunglasses, you can go to rokaroka.ca.com and enter the code huberman to save 20% off your first order. try Roka eyeglasses or sunglasses, you can go to rokaroka.com and enter the code Huberman to save 20% off your first order. Again, that's rokaroka.com and enter the code Huberman at checkout. And now for my discussion with Dr. Vivek Murthy. Dr. Vivek Murthy, welcome.
Starting point is 00:04:37 Thanks so much Andrew and please call me Vivek. I'm informal. Okay, Vivek. My understanding based on my internet search is that the role of the US Surgeon General is to provide scientific information on how to improve health and reduce risk of illness and injury. Do I have that correct? That is correct. What are some other roles that you play that perhaps would not come up in a top hit Google search that I ought to be aware of and that our audience ought to be aware of. Here's how I generally explain to people, there are two primary roles the Surgeon General has. One is to engage with the public and make sure that people know about critical
Starting point is 00:05:23 public health issues, so they know what they are, how to protect themselves and their families. The second role of the surgeon general is lesser known, but it's equally as important, which is to oversee one of the eight uniformed services in the U.S. government, and that is the United States Public Health Service. Many people are familiar with the Army, the Navy, the Air Force. We also have the U.S. Public Health Service, which is 6,000 officers, they include doctors, nurses, physical therapists, pharmacists, public health engineers, a whole range of health care folks. And their job is to protect our nation from public health threats. So when Ebola came on the scene in 2014 in a major way in West Africa,
Starting point is 00:06:06 we sent hundreds of officers to West Africa to set up the Monrovia Medical Unit in Liberia to treat people with Ebola domestically when there are hurricanes or tornadoes we dispatch officers and deploy them to go help strengthen the public health infrastructure but also to provide direct care. We deployed thousands of officers during COVID. So these officers, I'm incredibly proud of them. They could be doing lots of stuff, you know, outside government in the private sector,
Starting point is 00:06:34 probably making a whole lot more money and getting a, you know, working all less hard, but they're really committed to protecting the public health of the nation. So I have the privilege of overseeing that services, surgeon general and those, those are the jobs that I've signed up for in this role. Got it. I was not aware of that role. And if I understood correctly, these people, these public health officers that presumably are made up of physicians and licensed psychologists and nurses and so forth, you said they could be making substantially higher incomes in the private sector, but the work that they're doing with you is their sole career at this point. They're completely devoted to that or they're doing this as a side hustle.
Starting point is 00:07:16 Now, they're a full-time government employees and members of the public health service. Their day job is often in public health agencies where they're embedding communities, helping day-to-day to advance public health. And during times of emergency, we deploy them. And they're extraordinarily well trained. They're experienced, dealing with adversity. But they bring a combination of skill and heart to their work.
Starting point is 00:07:41 And you really need both to be effective at public health. I'm glad that you mentioned the word emergency, because in preparing for our discussion today, it occurred to me that in this list of roles that your title assumes, that scientific information on how to improve health comes first, then you mentioned emergency. So what I'd like to talk about first is health, not lack of health, but health. So often we hear about the mental health crisis, but what we're really talking about is the lack of mental health crisis, aka mental illness. And rarely do we hear, for instance, what constitutes mental health. We hear what constitutes mental illness. Whereas in the domain of physical health, there's a lot of information out there about how to be more physically healthy, cardiovascular
Starting point is 00:08:28 exercise, resistance exercise, yoga type exercise, mobility, etc. And of course, some people have physical health ailments and there's a lot of information in terms of how to deal with that as well. But what I would like to know before we get into the long list of issues that our nation confronts, everything from obesity to food additives to mental health issues, what is going well? In other words, in the last, let's say, five to ten years, have there been any areas of physical health and mental health improvement in the US at large that we can attribute to some of the public health initiatives directly? So that's a really good question and let me just also say about the very first point you raised
Starting point is 00:09:17 that you're absolutely right that we have operated primarily through an illness frame when we look at health. In my mind, that's only one half of the equation. We are talking about physical illness, for example. As a doctor, I learned how to diagnose and treat some with diabetes or with high blood pressure or with coronary heart disease. We also know that even if I don't have diabetes or coronary heart disease or high blood pressure, even if I don't have any diagnosable medical condition, I may not be at an optimal level of physical health, right? I may not be able to, for example, walk around the block without getting short of breath.
Starting point is 00:09:55 I may not be able to play with my kids because my physical fitness and stamina is insufficient. I may not be able to lift my luggage when I go to the airport because I don't have enough strength in my body. Yet I wouldn't have a diagnosable mental illness. So I think it's easier to understand there with physical health that we're not just aiming for lack of illness. We're aiming to optimize our physical health. The same is true with mental health. And I think when we talk about mental health, people think we're just the sole goal here is to prevent mental health people think we're just the sole goal here is to prevent diagnosable mental illness. That is one goal to both prevent and to manage mental illness when it arises. But we also need to recognize as a whole other half of the spectrum where there are people who may not have diagnosable mental illness but are not operating optimally in their lives and that's detracting
Starting point is 00:10:40 from their fulfillment, from their functionality like in not not just at work, but also in their communities and in their families. And so I think part of the conversation that I want us to have as a country is about how to optimize mental health and well-being, and that is includes preventing mental illness, but it is much broader and bigger than that alone. Great. Yeah, I think it's so important that we recognize that treating diseases critical, obviously, Great. Yeah, I think it's so important that we recognize that
Starting point is 00:11:11 treating disease is critical, obviously, but that there's a lot that can be done to improve one's health, even in the absence of any known disease. And you've got all these officers, these incredible physicians and nurses and people at your disposal, my hope is that they would also be accessible for and currently carrying out efforts to transmit information to people about, hey, here are the things that you can do every day, every week, every month in order to make your life as healthy as possible, as well as rushing in under conditions of, you know, public health crisis. Yeah, it's a good point. And it's certainly, you know, many of our officers do focus on this broader rubric around wellbeing.
Starting point is 00:11:52 But it's part of how we need, I think, the broader health system and public health system to operate even outside of government. And this, I think, will require significant change and shift in how we think about our jobs. Like, when I went to medical school, the vast majority of the focus was on diagnosing and treating illness. It was much, much less focused on thinking about
Starting point is 00:12:14 how to enhance well-being. And when we can talk to people in their lives, it becomes clear that they want to do more than just prevent diagnosis of illness. They want to be able to walk their child down the aisle. They want to have the endurance to do that. They want to be able to be independent often and carry their groceries or carry their luggage. This is why I think we've got a broadener focus in public health.
Starting point is 00:12:42 When I came into this role, by the way, I was not expecting to serve in government. This is not part of some 5, 10, 30-year plan. When I was a kid, I was interested in medicine, but I always thought I was going to practice medicine, you know, like my dad did, and like the clinic, my mom ran, you know, set up, put up a single C-patients and be a primary care doctor and feel good about the work I was doing. But what happened to me along the way is I trained in medicine. I got interested in technology. He spent seven years building a technology company that was focused on health. I was, I became increasingly worried about the way we were delivering health care.
Starting point is 00:13:19 It felt like our health care system was broken. People in needed care couldn't get it. It was often too expensive to get care. We were focusing on treatment solely and not enough on a prevention. So I started getting involved in advocating for a better healthcare system with doctors around the country.
Starting point is 00:13:34 When despite all that, I still never thought I would work in government. But in 2013, is when President Obama's team had reached out to me and asked if I'd be interested in considering the position of surgeon general. And what reached out to me and asked if I'd be interested in considering the position of Surgeon General. And what was interesting to me about this position is it's actually very different from most positions
Starting point is 00:13:52 that are appointed by President and government in that it's supposed to be an independent position. So my agenda, the issues I choose to take on are not determined by a president or a party, they're determined by science and the public interest. And that's what guides me. And that's what guided me in that first term when I served and when President Biden asked me
Starting point is 00:14:14 to come back and serve as surgeon general, second time, that's what guided me here too. So Biden is not sending you notes saying, hey, could you put some effort into getting messages out about COVID, or could you put more effort into getting your team over to Maui to deal with the tragedy there, which is a long arc tragedy, right? We get the news in a blast of this happened, and then the next blast comes in about something else and we forget that there are physical and mental health crises that are ongoing.
Starting point is 00:14:52 And then I have to imagine then start to overlap with one another. So is it your decision where and how to deploy the financial and human resources? Like, okay, we're gonna put 10 people on Maui. Yeah. We're going to put five people in the central states, going around talking to major organizations about what they need to do to prepare for this winter. Is that how it works? Or are you getting memos? And in other words, who's your boss?
Starting point is 00:15:21 Everyone has a boss at some level. Miner is the listeners of this podcast at some level. I work for them. It used to be also be my Bulldog Costello. But my wife and my two kids were five and seven. I do what they tell me to. Got it. Got it.
Starting point is 00:15:35 So, but how we make our decisions in the office, actually, it's a bit different with those two roles. So, with the second one, with overseeing the commission core, our 6,000 officers, they are the decisions about how and when we deploy officers are collaborative, right? So you know we work with other colleagues throughout the department of Health and Human Services, we work with people in FEMA, across the administration, but we also work with states. So sometimes states often often states will put in a request and say, hey, we need support here.
Starting point is 00:16:06 Can you help? So we'll work with colleagues across our department to say, okay, we'll we can mobilize our commission core officers. What assets can you mobilize? And then collectively, we will send a team out there. So for example, we have officers helping in Maui right now, particularly with mental health needs, which are I worry, only getting continued to grow over the weeks and months ahead. On the other side of the house, when it comes to deciding which issues we engage with the public on, like, in this case, mental health has been a big focus area for me. On that front, while we certainly are open to suggestions from the public, members of Congress, sometimes say, hey, can you help the public understand
Starting point is 00:16:43 about this issue? You know, a lot of people have ideas and opinions, but the decision about which issues to focus on, those are our offices. And to me, that's important because part of the reason over time, I believe the public came to have some degree of faith and trust in the offices, because they hope that the office was functioning, the way you hope your doctor is functioning,
Starting point is 00:17:03 which is being an independent source of information for you and a source that has your best interests at heart that's not being pulled aside by political interests or by other agendas, but the primary agenda is, how can I help your health? And so for me, like we have to make an independent assessment there and say, okay, where is the need the greatest here?
Starting point is 00:17:22 Where can we make the biggest difference? Sometimes we may not build an initiative on an issue, and that doesn't mean that that issue's unimportant or that it's affecting a lot of people, but we have to make hard decisions about where to pull limited resources. And so when I was a surgeon general, the first time one of the big areas I focused on
Starting point is 00:17:39 was the opioid crisis and that we're dealing with, as well as the e-sigurate use among youth, because we were seeing a dramatic increase among kids the e-sigurate use among youth because we were seeing a dramatic increase among kids in e-sigurate use. Can I just ask you, sorry to interrupt but I think it's relevant here, has that increased continued or e-sigurate use? Okay, vaping. Yeah, so we still see unfortunate, there's been some improvements, but we still see way too many kids who are using vaping devices early on. And part of what we did from our office is recognizing that we actually issued the first federal report on e-cigarettes in youth.
Starting point is 00:18:15 We call the country's attention to the fact that this is a crisis. We worked with members of Congress to talk about the kind of action we needed from a legislative and regulatory perspective and work with colleagues at the FDA and in government as well. But there are two things that are really most important in guiding our choice about priorities. One is data. We look at what the number of numbers actually tell us about the impact these issues are having on the population as well as the trajectory of rise if something is getting dramatically worse and people don't realize that might be an area for us to focus.
Starting point is 00:18:44 But the other critical factor is what I hear from people on the road. So I try to spend as much time as I can visiting communities across the country doing town halls, meeting with community members, and just trying to frankly just listen to what's on their mind. And that's where I actually get a lot of information as well. That's actually how I came to focus on the issue of loneliness and isolation. It wasn't because it popped up in a report as being the leading public health issue in the country. It was because everywhere I was going in 2014, 2015, whether I was talking to college students, I'm talking to retired Americans, talking to parents,
Starting point is 00:19:23 and rural areas and urban areas, I kept hearing these stories about people who felt like they were all on their own, or they felt invisible, or they felt if they disappeared tomorrow and no one would even care, or they felt like they just didn't belong. And it's heartbreaking to hear that from anyone. It's particularly heartbreaking to hear it from kids
Starting point is 00:19:41 who you hope are entering life and looking forward to what comes, but many kids weren't feeling that way. That is very useful context. We will get back to the isolation crisis, such an important initiative that I just will thank you now for having put out the message on social media and elsewhere about that. Because I think one of the questions I have in light of what you just said is it's clear that you've got your ear to the ground, you're talking to different people. It's also critically important that people hear from you and know not just what's happening, but that you perhaps want to know what, you know, where the issues lie
Starting point is 00:20:28 and what the actionable steps are that people can take. Right, and I think that we now live in a hyper-connected world. So, you know, in fact, I'll just say that one of the reasons I launched this podcast is in 2020, I was going on podcast, talking about things like maintaining sleep and circadian rhythm and stuff from my lab related to trying to adjust anxiety
Starting point is 00:20:51 under conditions where I think everyone was anxious and sleep rhythms were disrupted, et cetera. And I was somewhat surprised that I didn't get a warning on my phone, hey, make sure you're getting warning sunlight. You know, like I'll get a flood warning. Uh-huh. You know, I'll get a warning that I might get a warning, but it's only a test warning. Uh-huh. I'll get three of those yesterday living here near the coast.
Starting point is 00:21:12 But I don't think once during the pandemic, did I get an email or a public service announcement saying, you know, if you are going to be indoors a lot, you're going to have to be mindful of maintaining your circadian rhythm. Because if you're not, I mean, we know based on hundreds of studies now that Drifts in circadian rhythmicity are a precursor to mental health issues. I mean, in fact, there's a new idea that many not all suicides are preceded by a period of disrupted sleep, which is, you know, kind of makes sense and it's not a causal, of course. But how come during the pandemic, we each and all as US citizens did not get an email
Starting point is 00:21:59 or a text message saying, hey, these are five things that you need to do every day to try and stay as stable as possible in this very uncertain landscape that we're in. Well, it's a really good question. And I think it's a reasonable, and a very good suggestion to say that, hey, look, there should be a clear and comprehensive way that we can get messages out to everyone. Like if we were working in a hospital system and there was a safety issue that came up, they would be an email sent to all the hospital staff members saying, hey, this is something you need to be aware of.
Starting point is 00:22:34 So I think it's a reasonable expectation. Practically, if you go back, hello, of the last 20, 30 years, from on health issues, there hasn't been an agency or an entity that has sent emails out to everyone. First of all, how to send an email out to everyone in America is not a simple proposition either. Technically, it's challenging. There are some legal issues you'd have to deal with as well. But you could do a night where you go CNN, Fox, NBC, ABC, New York times, Wall Street.
Starting point is 00:23:06 Like you could hit the right, the right wing, the left wing and every need. So that's, yeah, that's really interesting. So just like one, but one, one video, just where they all agree, like, hey, this is important information. So eight, a political, like no. Yeah, so I would say that that kind of messaging, I would say through traditional media, certainly has happened, you know. And it happened during COVID. It happened, for example, when, you know,
Starting point is 00:23:28 in the first year of COVID, I was a private citizen, you know, in the private administration. But I watched both then and at the beginning of the Biden administration, many officials would go out in front of cameras and say, here are three things you need to do to keep yourself safe, you know, from COVID as, and that was a big question people had. How do I keep myself safe? Okay, here are three things you need to do to keep yourself safe from COVID. And that was a big question people had. How do I keep myself safe?
Starting point is 00:23:47 Okay, here are three things you can do. A couple of challenges I would say here is that number one, even if you hit all the major network and cable news shows, you're still not reaching everyone, right? Because we're living in a society where increasingly people are not watching TV, right? They're getting their news from other sources The other thing that's important to know is that attention shifts quickly, you know in traditional media also from issue to issue and so You might get a clip, you know out at a certain day or you might you get on all this Sunday shows for example
Starting point is 00:24:21 But the next day, you know that message isn't necessarily there, you know, it's it's gone. And people's attention has also switched off too. So they were, I mean, I can count. And, you know, we've logged probably thousands of interviews at this point that we've done with mainstream media with sort of, you know, concise messages about three things you can do to protect yourself, et cetera. And, you know, I'm glad we did those. We got to do. But I think one of the things we don't have right now in the country, and this is, I think, a bit of a health infrastructure challenge, is we actually don't have a quick, efficient way
Starting point is 00:24:54 to reach everyone in the country with a health message. Just like what you said, you know, he wanted to get that message about three things to protect yourself from, let's say, COVID or three things to do to support your health and well being support your health and well-being during a time of crisis. Or during a time of health. I mean, again, like, not just the flood warning, but the daily, because I do think that most of mental and physical health is the result of daily practices that are, you know, the build on themselves sort of like compounded investments.
Starting point is 00:25:22 And then, of course, there are acute challenges and chronic challenges that you face. But there are things that that sort too. I think those kind of messages in time of health are absolutely important as well. And I think in the sort of, I think, fast paced, crisis-driven environment that we live in, unfortunately, people are paying less attention to those maintenance or an improvement messages
Starting point is 00:25:45 and they are managing the crisis messages. But I think that their equally is important. But I do think that what you're pointing out is an infrastructure piece that needs to be built, which is a way for health authorities to reach people with information quickly and comprehensively, to tell you that in the 1980s when Sea Ever Coop was Surgeon General, one thing that he had done, which was interesting, is he had actually sent a letter, a physical letter, to all households in America about HIV.
Starting point is 00:26:15 A physical letter. A physical letter. Some of our listeners won't know what that is. Yeah. So, you read about the history books, there's only shows up in your mailbox, and you open it, and hopefully something you want to read. But this case, he was worried about HIV, but the fact that people didn't know about it. So, he worked through, and as I understand it, with a member of Congress, found a way to do this from a funding perspective, but it was a very unusual move.
Starting point is 00:26:44 And one that was never replicated since and there was never infrastructure funding to do that again. When I was surged at a last, you know, some years ago and then this time around, one of the things I did do is I was able to send a physical letter to the medical community. The first time I was about the opioid use crisis and about changing our prescribing practices in medicine so that we expose fewer patients to the harm of opioids while making sure people who needed them actually got them. And the second time it was about COVID therapeutics. It was about making sure that when we had data about medicines that actually worked like
Starting point is 00:27:19 Paxlevid that we may actually offered them to patients, made them available to patients because we were realizing that many people weren't getting offered, life-saving medications, even though they were in high-risk groups. So we were able to find, you know, and we had to, again, there too, it was sort of creatively cobbled together, resources funding. This is all sort of, you know, sort of behind the scenes, government stuff. But the bottom line is that you want in an emergency, But the bottom line is that you want an emergency and what you want, I think, in the long term, is a simple, clear, comprehensive way that public health messages can get out to people. And to this day, what we still have to rely on are one traditional channels, like, you know, traditional media to cover the initiatives we put out,
Starting point is 00:27:59 whether it's on social media, and youth mental health, or on loneliness, or on youth mental health more broadly, we rely on online channels, which we do as well. Or we have to look to creative partnerships that we build with people who reach different audiences, and then together, we try to get our messages. Our office does all three of these, but it's a patchwork, and it's not always ideal, but it's what we do now. I think part of what this reflects is a broader challenge, like in government, but also in society more broadly, which is that we have valued historically prevention and health communication very little.
Starting point is 00:28:39 We've put the mass majority of our resources into treatment strategies, into getting medications to people, into diagnosis. And that's very important. Don't get me wrong. But we are now seeing with mental health, this is one example that if we only focus on expanding treatment and deepening our well of knowledge there, and we don't do anything to help people
Starting point is 00:29:02 stay well, then we just can't keep up. Right? Right. Because one problem feeds the other. Exactly. there and we don't do anything to help people stay well. We just can't keep up, right? Right, because one problem feeds the other. Exactly. The kids that are staying, listen, if I would grown up in today's era, I'd be on my phone and tablet late at night, because I was up reading magazines and talking to friends on the phone late at night, right? So it's not a criticism, but disruptions in sleep, disruptions in circadian rhythm,
Starting point is 00:29:23 disruptions, lack of physical activity, poor nutrition, social isolation. I mean, these are all piling the sand much higher on this, in this other side of what you do in terms of, and here I'm obviously stating the obvious. You know, so it's just going to create a mountain of issues on the other side, which presumably has a larger budget is what I'm sensing, but there's no way that budget is large enough to deal with that. I mean, if somebody's kid, for instance, is trying to address the issue of whether or not to go on prescription medications and or, by the way, folks, and or change their dietary
Starting point is 00:30:00 intake because they feel they might have ADHD, for instance. I mean, what are they gonna do? They're gonna Google, they're gonna listen to podcasts. They should be able to write first to your organization and say, you know, what is the highest level stringency data say about these issues? And AI should be able to tell them accurately. And maybe you have somebody chime in for them.
Starting point is 00:30:24 I mean, we all pay taxes. I pay federal and state taxes. And to some extent, happily so, right? Because it pays for public works and many, many important things, police officers, firefighters, et cetera. But if you don't have a channel to communicate with people about what they and their kids and their relatives can do, then to some extent it feels like it's a cul-de-sac. It's like how in the world can we get healthy again or healthier as a country? The part that keeps me up at night is, and one of the hardest decisions I have to make in the office are putting aside issues that we know deserve a lot more time and attention,
Starting point is 00:31:14 but we just really don't have the resources to deal with. The issues that we have dealt with, I'm certainly proud of my team that we've worked hard to try to raise awareness of the issues we have taken on, whether it's around social media and youth and mental health or whether it's around isolation or clinical clinician burnout or other issues like that. But the truth is that there's more that needs to be done, more issues that need to be tackled. And we have to get to a place where we can talk about what I think of as the core pillars of a healthy life, right, which are sleep, our nutrition, our physical activity, our social relationships.
Starting point is 00:31:49 These are all vital elements to living a healthy life. Right now, we're not teaching kids about this in school, but if you think about education and school as a place and a force that should prep kids for the rest of their lives. It should lay a foundation for a healthy life going forward. These absolutely are important elements for kids to learn about. I think it's as important for kids to learn about how to build and maintain healthy relationships in their life as it is, frankly, for them to learn how to read and write.
Starting point is 00:32:22 And I know that's a strong statement to make, but it is true in terms of its contribution to their happiness or fulfillment, their health, and their success. I could not agree more. We have a series that's out now with a psychiatrist, a Paul Conti, about mental health, not mental illness, about self-inquiry and how to use self-inquiry and practices that do not require a therapist in order to bolster mental health. Of course, therapists can be very useful, but not everyone has access, and not everyone feels comfortable doing that. But we are, but one channel, I mean, you are the governing body for this. You're the army, Navy, and Marines, so to speak, of health. As many of you know, I've been taking AG1 daily since 2012, so I'm delighted that they're
Starting point is 00:33:09 sponsoring the podcast. AG1 is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink that's designed to meet all of your foundational nutrition needs. Now, of course, I try to get enough servings of vitamins and minerals through whole food sources that include vegetables and fruits every day, but oftentimes I simply can't get enough servings. But with AG1, I'm sure to get enough vitamins and minerals and day, but oftentimes I simply can't get enough servings. But with AG1, I'm sure to get enough vitamins and minerals and the probiotics that I
Starting point is 00:33:29 need, and it also contains adaptogens to help buffer stress. Simply put, I always feel better when I take AG1. I have more focus and energy and I sleep better, and it also happens to taste great. For all these reasons, whenever I'm asked if you could take just one supplement, what would it be, I answer AG1. If you'd like to try AG1, go to drinkag1.com slash Huberman to claim a special offer.
Starting point is 00:33:52 They'll give you five free travel packs plus a year supply of vitamin D3K2. Again, that's drinkag1.com slash Huberman. There's lots more to explore there. We may have to do several of these together, but to touch on all of them. But maybe we could talk about a few of the things that our listeners asked about when I solicited for questions. And I got more than 10,000 responses across social media in a very short amount of time, but there was some redundancy.
Starting point is 00:34:26 One of the things that I'm very curious. Can I just say on that point, though? Yeah, three. One, I'm really glad that you asked folks to submit questions, and it was really excited to see how many people actually wrote in. But I think it's also just a testament to how you've done such an incredible job
Starting point is 00:34:41 of building a channel to the public, to let people know about these topics that are so vital to our health and wellbeing, whether it's sleep or physical activity or mental health. And so I just want to thank you for all the work you're doing trying to help people understand more about health. And clearly the fact that folks are engaging, they're sending questions and they're sending comments to you means that you're building a relationship there with a lot of folks.
Starting point is 00:35:03 So just kudos to you for doing that. Well, thank you. The audience of the Uber and Lab podcast is the only reason we do it. I mean, I love learning and teaching, but that's the truth. So they are the podcast. The podcast is them. So thank you for that. There were a lot of questions, and I also wonder about, why is it that many food additives and preservatives and dyes and things of that sort that are not allowed in Europe are allowed in U.S. food products? Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:35:40 So really good question. And decisions around food and food safety in particular are made by the Food and Drug Administration. So that's the FDA. It's a separate, independent agency. It's not one that our office is involved in directing in any way. And so we're not involved in those decisions
Starting point is 00:36:01 and don't have insight into how they're making their drawing their conclusions, but they do it in a process that's guided by science just like they do with medications, with devices, et cetera. With that said, I am concerned that dietary practices the food that many Americans are consuming are in fact not supporting their health and well-being, and in many ways are detracting from it.
Starting point is 00:36:27 When we look at highly processed foods, one of the concerns I have there is we often see sodium content is very high. We see the sugar content is very high. And they are certainly additives in there as well that I think I would love to have more data on the actual health impacts of those. But the bottom line is that a significant portion of our diet is comprised
Starting point is 00:36:52 of highly processed foods in America. And that worries me. The other piece of this that worries me are just how much, you know, we're fine sugars are being added to so much of our foods. And most people think that sugars are only added to so much of our foods. And most people think that sugars are only added to things like desserts, etc. But you look at spaghetti sauces, salad dressings, salad dressings. A lot of these things which we think of as savory products have sugar added to them as well. And so we are consuming, I think unhealthy levels of sugar in our diet. We're consuming a fair amount of additives given the processed food composition in our diet.
Starting point is 00:37:29 And I think part of the reason this is happening, and I want to be very clear, I don't fault individuals out there for the composition of their diet necessarily because we have also made certain decisions in our country about what we subsidize about what's cheaper and more expensive for people. And the cheapest foods, unfortunately, are often the most unhealthy foods, the most highly processed foods. If you are somebody who lives in the low-income neighborhood, number of these neighborhoods don't even have grocery stores in them, which is a tragedy, because you can't get fresh produce, etc. A lot of times you're shopping, you're grocery shopping may be done at a local convenience store at a 7-11 or somewhere else that may not have the array of fresh fruits and vegetables that
Starting point is 00:38:17 you and your family need. I don't even think they have vegetables. I think they'll occasionally have some lemons or apples or oranges of bananas. But when I walk into a convenience store, what I see is a pharmacy. I really do. I see alcohol, caffeine, energy drinks that have a number of different things in them designed to stimulate different neuromodulators like dopamine and serotonin. I see nicotine products. I see high sugar, high highly processed foods.
Starting point is 00:38:43 And keep in mind, I was a teenager. I mean, I drank my slurpees. I had my butter fingers, you know, I wasn't, you know, Bart Simpson like in my level of butter fingers, but I liked them. But it was a smaller fraction of of what we ate. And when we were at home, those foods were either not available or we weren't, we certainly weren't allowed to eat them in ad libidum. You know? Okay, so what's clear to me is that the FDA makes decisions about what is safe, what's not safe. But for instance, okay, this last year there were several papers published in high quality journals showing that if people eat just high, just sweet and savory foods
Starting point is 00:39:24 combined, that neural circuits in the brain rewire through process of neuroplasticity that drives increased appetite and changes the response to healthier food so that they don't taste as as satiating. Okay, that's sort of a duh to a lot of people but I think it was an important set of findings because it said the brain actually changes in response to the very rich flavorful foods that are associated with highly processed, or even moderately processed foods. Okay, I mean, that's just a couple of studies. There was nothing in those studies that said, if you eat these foods, you're going to develop cancer. in those studies that said, if you eat these foods, you're going to develop cancer.
Starting point is 00:40:04 But, you know, at some point, one has to, as a citizen, a tax-paying citizen, speaking on behalf of many other tax-paying citizens, I have to sort of take a step back and say, how long do we wait, right? Do we have to get a randomized clinical trial about the, you know, the, you know, the 500,000 sick kids that grow into sick adults,
Starting point is 00:40:25 and then run a trial where they go on an elimination diet 500,000 sick kids that grow into sick adults, and then run a trial where they go on an elimination diet where they're eating only on processed vegan or unprocessed meat and vegetable or unprocessed starch and vegetable, I mean, then we're talking about a 30 year health crisis before we intervene. Why not, I mean, if I were in charge, which I'm not, and clearly I wouldn't survive in a government organization because, well, I got the uniform down.
Starting point is 00:40:49 I was wearing the same thing, but a uniform. But I wouldn't because I would wanna say, wait, you know, why not air on the side of caution? Why not send out this AI-generated text message that tells everybody in all the languages that Americans speak and can understand? Hey, you get to make choices about what you eat, but you should be aware
Starting point is 00:41:08 that making your diet comprised of more than 15 to 20% of these foods is potentially going to lead to serious issues down the road. And those serious issues are extremely serious. I mean, the obesity crisis is really a crisis of both body and brain metabolic challenge that we can talk about. So, you know, who sets the thresholds? You know, in other words, why is it that in this country, we have to wait until people start to get really sick
Starting point is 00:41:36 and dying and really struggling before something is done in the direction of their health? And I'm not blaming you. I just want to understand because the wealthy people I know care a lot about their food sources and they pay a lot of attention to it. And why aren't we allowing everyone the opportunity to make better choices? So this is the right question and this is something I think about a lot because I'm conscious about what I eat, but I also talk to folks around the country and realize a lot of people don't have because I'm conscious about what I eat, but I also talk to folks around the country and realize a lot of people don't have either the information or the resources
Starting point is 00:42:08 to actually purchase healthy food, right? And to know like what's gonna be good for them and for their families. This is why I mentioned we have a list of issues that we would work on, if we had more resources, this is actually one of them, because to me, one of the most common questions people ask is what should I eat?
Starting point is 00:42:26 That's simple, but it's it's a vexing. It's complicated and it's incredibly confusing if you go online and just try to search for Information and it's a classic example of where it's important to have an objective scientific Authority that can come and then speak on broad principles around diet that can talk about what we know and don't know. So here's an important thing. I think a lot of times people may see something as, you know, on the market, they might really list of ingredients. They don't recognize half of them because they're additives, but they figure, well, if it's
Starting point is 00:42:59 there, then it must have been studied for 30, 40 years and there must be no harmful consequences, right? But sometimes things are put out there because we have short-term data that says that they're okay and there might be, but there may be a need for more long-term data. Helping people understand what do we know, what do we not know is important
Starting point is 00:43:14 so that people can make decisions for themselves based on how much risk they want to take. The other thing that the concerns me, Andrew, is I, look, I have a bias here, and my bias is that I am worried about the additives and other products we have in food that don't have long-term data that's clear in terms of health risk. So because of that, like my bias is generally to think, how can we get people minimally or less processed foods, and how can we get people minimally or less processed foods and how
Starting point is 00:43:45 can we get the more fruits and vegetables? How can we make sure that they have that more available to them? But we've got to not only meet the information available, but we have to make it accessible from a cost perspective. If you don't have a grocery store in your community, if vegetables and fruits cost 3X, what other foods do, that's going to be a problem to change diet. The other thing we have to keep in mind is that, you know, food companies, you know, a lot of them do a great job of actually trying to get healthy nutritious food out to people,
Starting point is 00:44:11 you know, and kudos to them. But I worry also that there's an incentive also to just try to sell more and more of your product. And one of the ways to do that is to try to hack the body to kind of figure out, okay, well, what kind of synthetic additives could I put together here or what kind of combination of nutrients could I put together that will get people coming back for more and more and more? And we saw this in the nicotine industry.
Starting point is 00:44:34 You saw the nicotine industry. You also, I would say, in other parallels, you see it in social media as well, where the business model of the social media platforms is built on volume of use, right? How much time am I spending on the platforms? It's not quality of time, it's quantity of time, right? So if that's the business model, then you're going to design your platform to maximize how much time someone spends on them, regardless of whether it's detecting from sleep,
Starting point is 00:45:00 detecting from in-person interaction, detecting from anything else that's healthy, regardless of whether that may be causing certain harms. The business model dictates in many ways how these things are designed, and that applies to food as well. Which is why I think it's incumbent upon us to be particularly cautious with highly processed foods, foods that have additives. To understand, how is this impacting our brain? How is that impacting our satiety? How is it leading potentially to greater ingestion
Starting point is 00:45:30 that is healthy and leading to things like obesity, which have a whole host of other medical conditions from cancer to arthritis, diabetes, and heart disease associated with it? Those are the questions as a citizen, as a father, of two young kids who's trying to bring them up at the healthy lifestyle.
Starting point is 00:45:46 Those are the questions that I would want to know the answers to. And it's one of the reasons I think these kind of objective reports are so important for the public. I'm just trying to see the scope of the problem and the mechanics involved in trying to alleviate these issues are complex. I see that. They are an also to one of the things that is important to do that, though, is you need to have authorities that can speak to these issues that are insulated from political
Starting point is 00:46:15 retribution. Right? So, and explain this. Like I meant to that. Yeah. I mean, listen to somebody, forgive me for interrupting me, somebody who from time to time will make not recommendations, but will offer information about potential actionable items, you know, things that people could do or not do according to a couple of studies that have come out. I mean, I've come under intense scrutiny from my colleagues who are like, wait, that's not a randomized controlled trial. How can you do that? And
Starting point is 00:46:44 yet, I know from being in this field for a long time that, for instance, the emerging therapies for PTSD and depression that are now based on federal funding for things like, and I'm not recommending this, by the way, for children or for everybody. But for instance, the macrodose psilocybin, therapeutically supported legal use of psilocybin for major depression, the data there are, they're not perfect, but they're pretty darn good compared to the major SSRIs. But for years, if an academic said, the words I just said, they'd lose their job
Starting point is 00:47:16 almost instantaneously, because they're controlled substances. That's a to-do, but then there are a number of things that we're talking about here that are just about making better choices about things to avoid. If people understood, I think that it's sugar poison, well, some of my audience will say sugar is poison, it's as addictive as cocaine. Look, it is not as addictive as cocaine or heroin. It is not. However, if a child or adult is eating very sweet or very savory foods
Starting point is 00:47:46 of any kind consistently. If those are not healthy foods, or if they contain unhealthy additives, over time, the brain will rewire so that healthy foods don't taste as good. They won't be the choices that people make, and you're gonna end up with a sick individual period. And I don't think we need one more clinical trial funded by federal tax dollars to support that statement. What I'm starting to gather
Starting point is 00:48:10 is that you're a very rational, grounded, broad thinking individual. I'm not just saying that because you're sitting here and you're trained in medicine and you understand the science, but that you don't have the means at your disposal to put out a call that says, hey folks, having some sugar every once in a while, it's reading the kids to ice cream great. But if 80% or more of the diet of our kids isn't made up of minimally or non-processed foods, their brains are gonna be rewired in unhealthy ways
Starting point is 00:48:39 and you can almost expect that they're going to have some health challenge in the future that may not be, you know, autism or schizophrenia, but is going to be a major health challenge of a, and that is serious and now's the time to intervene by avoiding certain things. And if you don't want to do it, look, it's a free country at that level,
Starting point is 00:49:00 you're welcome to do it, but you'd be better off spending X number of dollars on these healthier foods. Because there's also, and we know this from my colleague Ali Krum's laboratory at Stanford, that even the mere knowledge that certain foods are nutritious can lead to more satiety from eating those foods at the level of hormone release, not just psychologically, you're telling yourself, the orange is as tasty and filling as a candy bar. But the understanding of the fact that it is nutritious actually leads to shifts in patterns of, you know, grill and secretion, etc. So people can be feel better on a healthier, slightly lower calorie, nutrient and rich diet,
Starting point is 00:49:41 healthy proteins and fruits and vegetables. And it's not a mind trick, it's physiology. Anyway, I think I feel your pain for frankly. And I'll tell you, look, sometimes people ask, hey, why don't you just go and say a couple of statements that you just said, would that be fine? Why is time needed to prep someone that wire resource needed, et cetera? Here's actually why that I know in today's the age is easy to just go and like rattle off off, you know, off the golf statements or shoot from the Welcome on my social media channels and Really to get the word out to millions. I appreciate that and I may take you up on that But I'll take that one of the reasons one of the things we always do recognizing that when we put out statements that people
Starting point is 00:50:26 recognizing that when we put out statements that people, people, one, they trust it's coming from a scientific authority and that it's been vetted, right? So we put the effort and time into vetting this thoroughly. We check sources, we look at the data, we talk to experts, we think about how to communicate this in the right way. That's the work behind the scenes work that we do before we put out sort of reports and initiatives because we want people to have confidence, to have confidence in what they're hearing. We also know that when we put out initiatives that other people build on them, philanthropists and foundations will then think about should I fund work in this area?
Starting point is 00:50:56 You know, schools and workplaces will think about shifting some of their practice. Policy makers will also think about legislation that they may want to design based on that. So we want to make sure it's really solid. But the point I was making when I said also that we have to make sure that not just our office, but folks who are, you know, in public health and who are in medicine who are trying to speak to the public about their health, that they are protected from retribution and attacks is this is what I meant, which is that saying things about diet, saying things about tobacco, these can be challenging for some folks
Starting point is 00:51:31 because their industry's built around these, right? Which may not always like what you have to say if it hurts their business model or their bottom line. And they may then lean on, political leaders, elected leaders, others to then try to silence you or shut you up. And I'll tell you, I've experienced this in the past. You know, then I was Surgeon General during my first term.
Starting point is 00:51:53 I had issued two key reports. One was on alcohol drugs and health about the addiction crisis. And the other was about the e-cigarette crisis among youth. I will tell you that they were plenty of people who were very unhappy that I was issuing the first federal report on e-cigarettes. Folks who felt that, hey, this is going to make folks unhappy. It's going to create political pressure. It's going to create a lot of problems.
Starting point is 00:52:20 Similarly, with alcohol drugs and health, there are many folks who said, hey, if you do this, you're really going to upset the alcohol industry. Do you really need to have alcohol in the report? Why don't you just focus on other drugs? Why don't you take alcohol out of the title? All of these sort of concerns are raised. Are there people who get paid by the alcohol industry? These are people in government who are reading the tea leaves and who are supportive of the
Starting point is 00:52:43 work we're doing, but are saying, hey, you're going to really upset a lot of people in industry and you're also going to help a lot of people. Yeah. Well, this is what it comes onto. They say, well, and if you upset folks, then they're going to try to fire you. They're going to try to do all these things to which honestly, like my, my response to a lot of these and the reason we just put them out anyway was because I said, well, the worst thing that can happen is I get fired.
Starting point is 00:53:05 And that's okay. You know, if I go out and know I did the right thing here, then I'm fine with that. I'm not looking to build a lifelong career in government. I'm not doing this job to like, you know, get to the next thing on the ladder or like, this is about serving for the time I can. I want to be able to go to sleep at night, look myself in the mirror. I know I did so with integrity. So that was an easy decision for me. But my point is that like, we have to be thoughtful
Starting point is 00:53:29 that in these issues that they're going to be headwinds, right? I'm sure in your case, for example, you probably gotten pushed back from folks about talking about certain things that may have wrinkled folks who may have had an interest in those issues. And that's okay. You keep talking about them as you should, and I'm grateful for that. But this is especially important at a time where I think public trust in our institutions more broadly and in science and in medicine have taken a hit over the last few years. And I think it's a time where we have to be even more vigilant, those of us in medicine and public health to make sure that what we do is based on data that we're transparent about why we're saying what we're
Starting point is 00:54:10 saying, that we're also clear about what we know and what we don't know, so that if recommendations change over time, people recognize that this isn't necessarily flip-flopping, you should change your recommendations if the data changes, if the circumstances change. So, anyway, this is all part of the work that we've got to do. But to me, this is a really important part of the work. The integrity behind our work in public health is not just about the issue we're taking on today. It's about the trust that we need to rebuild in the field more broadly. So if I understand correctly, if you were to, for instance, put out a call that says, look, you know, there are food additives that are allowed in the US that are not allowed
Starting point is 00:54:52 in Europe, that may be of risk. We don't have enough data at present to avoid these things, but here's a kind of a yellow zone. You know, you're green, known to be safe, red, clearly known to be unsafe, yellow, we just don't know yet, not enough data. So here's what my recommendation would be for my children. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:10 It's free country, you know? There are people that argue it's not, but at least at the level of which foods you want to buy with your own budget, it's a free country. So you're saying that you get messages that warnings about certain things could lead to push back. But if I have to imagine that there's something,
Starting point is 00:55:31 and I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but there has to be either the people that are saying, look, there could be problems, are just friction averse. They just don't like anyone to be angry at anyone. Or there must be some incentive for things to remain quiet. I mean, totally the government has not had problems saying to do things or to not do things that upset companies or shut down companies or elevated companies and their success.
Starting point is 00:56:02 So I'd like to know more about the back contour of this. Well, look, I think, and this is not too dissimilar for I think what happens in other industries, but it's, you know, whenever you do something in, whether it's in the private sector and government, people weigh what, what are the pros, cons, what's the pushback I'm going to get, how do I deal with that pushback, right? And pushback isn't always a bad thing, right? If you get pushed back from the public, people, hey, that just makes sense, it makes sense, or that's, you should listen to that
Starting point is 00:56:26 and then use it to inform your approach. But that's the public whose your job is to serve. I'm talking about pushback from companies is different. Right, so when pushback comes from people who have a financial interest in the product that you may be commenting on, then you've got to be, you need to know about that number one so that you know how to, how to mitigate it. And while people may take different approaches to this, my approach
Starting point is 00:56:48 as a public official as surgeon general has been to say at the end of the day, like, I'm happy to, to hear from anyone in terms of their concerns or pushback. But the end of the day, what's going to guide my decisions about what we issues we take on, what decisions we make, and what we say to the public is going to be what is in driven by science and the public interest. And if that means it's politically inconvenient, that's okay. If that means that something happens, you know, to my job, that's okay too. You know, like we look, the bottom line is life is short.
Starting point is 00:57:17 We don't know how much time we have here. We may as well make the time we have count. We as a do the things that are right and that are going to serve people. That's my simple philosophy. My parents taught me when I was growing up. So that's the approach I bring to this. And that's why if we were to do, let's say, an initiative on diet, I have no doubt that some of the things that we would say would be perturbing to folks who had a financial
Starting point is 00:57:37 interest in industry because I don't think that the current setup in the industry is serving the public well. I think we have made unhealthy foods cheap. That's a problem. We've made unhealthy foods cheap. That's a problem. We've made healthy foods expensive. That's a problem. We put health from a dietary perspective out of reach for millions of Americans.
Starting point is 00:57:53 That is a fundamental problem. And we've also disempowered people with that by not giving them the information that they need to make decisions. So even if you have resources, I guarantee there are people listening to this podcast and many more people out there who go to the grocery store and just feel confused. Like, what on earth should I buy? What's healthy? What's okay anymore? It's just hard to know. And so I think we've done a disservice by not doing more to help the public understand
Starting point is 00:58:20 and access healthy foods. And again, it's why it's an issue that you know that that was on our list of issues that we would want to work on because I think that the public health need here is immense. I'd like to just take a brief break and thank one of our sponsors, which is Element. Element is an electrolyte drink that has everything you need and nothing you don't. That means plenty of salt, sodium, magnesium and potassium, the so-called electrolytes, and no sugar. Salt, magnesium, and potassium are critical to the function of all the cells in your body, in particular to the function of your nerve cells, also called neurons. Now people, of course, have varying levels of requirements for sodium, so people with
Starting point is 00:58:59 hypertension or pre-hypertension probably shouldn't increase their sodium. However, many people are surprised to find that by increasing their sodium intake, they are able to function better, cognitively, and physically. And that's because a lot of people, especially people who are following low carbohydrate, or even moderate carbohydrate, and really clean diets, oftentimes are excreting a lot of water and electrolytes along with it. And simply by increasing their electrolyte intake using element, they just feel better and function better.
Starting point is 00:59:23 I typically drink element first thing in the morning when I wake up in order to hydrate my body and make sure I have enough electrolytes. And while I do any kind of physical training, and certainly I drink element in my water when I'm in the sauna and after going in the sauna because that causes quite a lot of sweating. If you'd like to try element, you can go to drink element that's LMNT.com slash Huberman to claim a free element sample pack with your purchase. Again, that's drink element LMNT.com slash Huberman. I have a question about trust in big institutions and public health initiatives in general. The
Starting point is 00:59:56 question is about masks early in the pandemic. As I recall, we were told that masks were not necessary, then we were told they are necessary. And I think for a lot of people, that flip in messaging landed like a parent telling their teenage kid to always wear a seat belt, but then you look into the front seat and how my dad aren't wearing seat belts. And as anyone who's been around teenagers, or who's been one, you make that mistake once, you're not making it again. And you may never recover from that particular example.
Starting point is 01:00:33 In other words, the public felt like there was a switch of messaging, but what I don't recall happening was a, like, hey, we got that one wrong. So sorry on us. You know what, the new data say blank. What I recall was a message of don't and then do. But there wasn't a lot of kind of acknowledgement
Starting point is 01:00:58 of how challenging the situation was. It was just a lot of top down mandates. And in my opinion, and this is just my opinion, I think that led to a pretty rapid distrust of subsequent messages from which we still haven't really recovered. And so, why do you think it's so challenging for public facing officials to just say, look, doing the best we can at the moment,
Starting point is 01:01:24 screwed up before, doing the best we can at the moment, screwed up before, changing the message and now it may change again. We're navigating this in real time, it's dynamic. Please stay with us because, you know, goes without saying there's been a huge chasm around just and related issues. Yeah, and look, it's an important question.
Starting point is 01:01:41 And look, I'm always, I want to be thoughtful about, you know, how I comment on what was done in the first year of the pandemic. I was a citizen as outside government, and I don't know what was happening inside government in terms of the decisions that were made there. But I do know sometimes from my experience in Ebola and in Zika during those experiences we had as a country that in the, you know, in the fog of war when everything's coming at you, sometimes it's hard to make the right decision all the time. So I want to give some of those folks who are there
Starting point is 01:02:12 in the first year of the pandemic, some benefit of the doubt. But I do think that the important thing, the principal, I certainly try to follow, but when I think that, and we can all do better, I can do better, certainly too. But I think an important principle for us in public health communication has to be that we're clear, that we're transparent about what we know and what we don't know, and that we explain the why to people.
Starting point is 01:02:40 So if we're telling someone to do something, why is it because there's a lot of data behind it, is it because it's a lot of data behind it? Is it because it's a sort of expert agreement best practice? Because sometimes, you know, in medicine, sometimes when we don't have enough data to guide us on a therapeutic approach, but when the problem is imminent, then sometimes experts will get together
Starting point is 01:03:00 and put together expert informed guidelines to say, okay, look, based on our best judgment and the limited data we have, here's what we recommend. And as the data evolves, we will change, you know, and modify those recommendations. We do that with hypertension, right? New evolve and update recommendations. We do that with lipids. Here too, I think that has to be like a key part of the approach. I think one of the challenges that I saw many public health officials encounter was even
Starting point is 01:03:25 when they went out with comprehensive messages like that, which are hard to fit into a sound bite or into simple posts on social media, often a lot of that wasn't covered. What gets covered is the top line. This is what's already been recommended. That's what's being required, etc. All the explanation is lost. It's missing, right? And I think we also are living in a time where people are reading headlines like they're living busy lives right there, not necessarily, you know, always hearing all of the nuance, you know, that's being explained. But I think that that's a challenge, right?
Starting point is 01:03:55 It was like, I know many public officials struggled with how do you deliver nuanced information at a time when there isn't a clear black and white answer to things. But I think the last piece around this is, I think something I was taught early in medical school is to approach your patients with humility, recognizing that even though you have more training and then they do, you don't aren't living their life. You don't necessarily know what they're going through. And you shouldn't assume things about them, right? And so approaching with humility means that you've got to recognize that not everyone's going to be able to follow your guidance and if they aren't able to, that isn't mean you criticize
Starting point is 01:04:33 them. It also means recognizing that people may have ideas or suggestions for you that may actually improve your recommendations or how you communicate. And so these are the principles I think that are important in public communication, but I think that both the challenge of translating nuanced arguments into what's actually covered, that was tough for many public health officials. I think the other thing honestly, just on a human level that became hard for many of them.
Starting point is 01:04:58 And I am thinking particularly about local and state public health officials who were on the front lines that I talked to a lot, was they ended up getting attacked a lot and abuse a lot during the pandemic and I don't just mean like attacked online I mean people showing up at their houses people were harassing their children people threatening their safety and
Starting point is 01:05:19 And this is often people who were upset about some of the requirements that were being put down from local departments of health. And you can understand how COVID was as stressful a time as we've seen recently. People lost their jobs before losing loved ones. I mean, talk about a stressful time. But I think at a human level, public health officials who were exposed to that kind of abuse who started to worry about their children's safety, many of them stepped out of the arena and said, is this really worth it?
Starting point is 01:05:46 To put my family at risk. And that was hard because we lost a lot of good public health people in that respect. So I think in addition to having sort of these core principles of public health communication in place, then what we also need to restore is an environment where we, frankly, a humility and civility where we don't attack people, you know, who maybe have different views
Starting point is 01:06:09 or are coming out the recommendations that, you know, are not palatable to us. And, and I think it's also incumbent upon our leaders in society to not stoke that kind of resentment and violence as well, because that happened during the pandemic as COVID got increasingly politicized. And while that may have been, at times done for political reasons here and there,
Starting point is 01:06:31 the people who suffered were both the public health leaders who were trying to do the right thing for their communities and the public themselves who weren't able to have a clear direct channel to, and a dialogue with their public health officials because a lot of that ended up getting closed off. Yeah, I feel like there was a lot of talking down to the dissenters in the general public.
Starting point is 01:06:52 Yeah. And I totally agree that, you know, getting violent or harassing people with whom you disagree is totally inappropriate. And you know, the one thing I just just say about the humility piece, and I'll give you an example here of where I think this could have been should have been done better, is in an effort, for example, around masks to recommend that people wear masks. And one important thing just to know is that when it comes to like schools requiring masks,
Starting point is 01:07:19 like those are decisions that are made on local levels, right? The federal government doesn't mandate masks in schools. It doesn't have the authority to do that. So those are local, local decisions. But at the end of the day, they were people who did not want their children to wear masks, right? For a variety of reasons, some worried about their development, social development, some worried that it was adding stress to their kids. People had different reasons why they may or may not have wanted their children to wear masks. And one of the things I think that was not helpful was that when they were to keep parents who made the decision, they didn't want their kids to wear masks,
Starting point is 01:07:50 I think some of them received a lot of criticism without people necessarily stopping to understand why they may have been making that decision. Because I'll say as a parent whose children were in school, my kids are five and seven, and in the first year of the pandemic, they were doing preschool virtually, which was a nightmare. It was incredibly hard for us. Even when they got back to school
Starting point is 01:08:12 and the fall of 2021, it was a really tough adjustment for them. And I could understand like some of the concerns that parents were having wondering about, hey, how are these precautions affecting my child's experience and social development? So on the whole, this recommendation may still be, hey, improve ventilation in your classrooms,
Starting point is 01:08:32 recommend masking, recommend testing, et cetera. But those recommendations, I think, have to be made in a way that acknowledges, like the humanity of people who are, may have a different point of view or may make a different decision for their child. And I know that when local localities made the decision, in many cases,
Starting point is 01:08:51 to require schools and their, you know, kids in their district to wear a mask, that puts some parents who didn't want that, they put them in a hard place, right? And, but I think that our failure to actually have an open, honest, respectful conversation about this, where we didn't feel like we were each being attacked, you know, as parents for our decisions or as community members for the decisions we were making, I think that
Starting point is 01:09:15 not only hindered, I think the response, but I think it actually contributed to this division, the sense of black and whiteness that, hey, it's us against them. And then suddenly, if I was against one measure, then I was against all of them. You know, or if I was for one measure, I was for all of them because we just started segregating into sites. And this became a polarized experience at a time where really it should have been a crisis that brought us together as messes it was. And that, honestly, Andrew is what I worry about most for the next pandemic, right? Like, I think we've learned a lot from
Starting point is 01:09:49 this pandemic about how to manufacture vaccines and how to develop them quickly, how to distribute them efficiently. And, you know, we had one, I want to, it was one of the, I think most historic and effective vaccine distribution efforts in this country, even though, you know, certainly could have been better, but it was historic by, by all measures. We've learned a lot about how to do vaccines, therapeutics, a lot of the nuts and bolts of a pandemic response well. But I worry what we are still struggling with is how we build trust, how we communicate with the public, and how we stay together as a country in the face of adversity. Because if we're going to, if we're divided the way we were during COVID, during the next pandemic or the next, you know, for a thought that
Starting point is 01:10:36 may come from foreign adversary, that's a huge national security issue for us. And so that's what keeps me up at night when I think about the next pandemic that may come. Two questions related to what you just said. First of all, as it relates to vaccines, in my opinion, and I think the opinion of many people out there that the response to the next pandemic will be heavily contingent on at least some sort of acknowledgement that there are people who at least feel that there have been vaccine injuries, right? To simply say, okay, the previous town round with COVID went this way. And now there's now virus X, right? Let's hope not. I've got for bid, but sounds like it's coming at some point.
Starting point is 01:11:27 And people are going to think to the last time and they're going to immediately say, well, the last time we were told to, you know, take a vaccine, some people had a good experience with that. Other people didn't. And in this empathy model of acknowledging and, you know, you're letting your moral compass guide and understanding the why behind what people are doing and how they're reacting, it seems to me that now would be the time to at least try and understand where they're coming from, even if one disagrees, maybe even especially if one disagrees. And try and get people aligned now before the next pandemic. And so what efforts are being made if any to try and acknowledge that some people really do feel as if they were harmed.
Starting point is 01:12:17 I'm not saying if they were or not, but clearly there are people who feel that they or people they know were harmed. Is there an effort to present them with data, to have discussions with them, to try and get people aligned so that the next time around, we can be more of a unified front, whatever the necessary response happens to be.
Starting point is 01:12:38 Yeah, it's a really important question. And to me, I always go back to sort of first principles from practicing medicine, right? Which is, if there is a medicine you give a patient and Even if it helps 99.99% of patients, but this one particular patient that happened to be harmed by it you go in you acknowledge it you talk about it and you Together try to out a path for how you want to move forward and the path forward might be yes Let's get rid of that medication, but let's use an alternative. Let's try it. Or we can't use that medication anymore.
Starting point is 01:13:08 Here are the risks you may sustain, but we'll find other ways to protect you, right? So that's what we would do in medicine, right? That's what I've done with patients over the years. I think here too, similarly, when I think when it comes to tracking adverse events from vaccines, this is an area where the CDC and the FDA track and collaborate. And tracking means not just not only collecting reports from the public and from clinicians when they see an effect that may be related to a vaccine, but it also involves analyzing those to see where they correlate or where there's actual causation there, right? Because you know, if I, if today, for example, I felt
Starting point is 01:13:45 unwell, and I traced back what happened yesterday, and it turns out, hey, I ate this burrito that was out in the, the sun for way too long. The question is, am I feeling sick because the burrito or did the burrito just happen to be, you know, something that happened that is independent of how I'm feeling? Maybe turns out somebody was actually sick with a GI bug, you know, around me. And that's the of how I'm feeling. Maybe turns out somebody was actually sick with a GI bug around me, and that's the reason that I'm feeling the way I am today.
Starting point is 01:14:09 So the analysis that needs to be done on cases that are reported is important, and it's something that the CDC and the FDA do together. Now, that analysis, I think, is essential to communicate clearly to the public. And whenever I engage with folks in the public, which we do often, and people will talk to me about their experiences with vaccines,
Starting point is 01:14:30 I do think it's important to acknowledge what people have gone through. Like some people, for example, when I got vaccinated for COVID, for example, I felt like I had mild flu-like symptoms for a couple of days. It wasn't great. I would have preferred I didn't have those feelings. And then I felt better a couple of days later, and then I moved on. But I acknowledged it didn't feel. I would have preferred I didn't, you know, have those feelings like, you know, and then I felt better a couple of days later and then I moved on. But, you know,
Starting point is 01:14:46 I acknowledged it didn't feel good, you know, to, to feel that way. There are other people who may have had experiences where they felt that they had more serious, you know, side effects, and there may be a question, was that related to the vaccine or not? So I think we have to both hear and acknowledge those. I certainly try to do that. I know I think it's important to keep doing that across all of government. But I also think it's important for us to help people understand the process that we have to go through to understand whether those are related or not. If you go online and the CDC's site where they collect a lot of this information and you just purely look at reports that are given of potential adverse effects, that you can't sort of take that and say,
Starting point is 01:15:25 ah, those are all related to the vaccine. Look at this rate of harm. It's extraordinarily high because we don't actually do that with any other vaccine or medicine. Sure. We start there. We do the analysis and we try to understand what's actually related or not.
Starting point is 01:15:38 So I think that's what we've got to do here too. One last thing I'll say is that it's important, I think also for us to help put this in context of other vaccines and medicines and interventions that we use. So, for example, just take Tylenol, for example. Like most people think, oh, well Tylenol, it's safe. There's nothing bad happens if you take Tylenol, et cetera. But people who track the data know that Tylenol by and large is a Generally speaking a safe medication, but there are people who experience adverse effects from Tylenol liver damage, you know and other adverse effects and
Starting point is 01:16:16 You know that data is available But what has happened in the case of that medication is that the risks and benefits are both analyzed and then a recommendation is put forward about a generally safe way to use it and then there's data put out about the the side effects common or rare, right? But I think sometimes we also forget that a lot of the medicines that we have come to take and just see is a normal part of our life, just like any other vaccine, like there's some rate of rare side effects that will happen. I say that because what I worry about in the black and white environment that we're living in is sometimes people will take an anecdote about a potential adverse effect and we'll portray that as the rule, right? And we'll say, well, look, I know somebody who had this side effect. So nobody should take this
Starting point is 01:17:02 because this is what's going to happen to you. If we did that, nobody would ever take Tylenol, no one would ever take ibuprofen, no one would take NICOL, like no one would take any of the common medications that we pick up at the drug store and that we commonly use. So that's how I think we have to approach this with a combination of clear communication, empathic listening, and data and context. Again, that doesn't fit neatly in a social media post per se, but I think part of what we need to do as a country is rebuild the relationship, honestly,
Starting point is 01:17:34 between the medical and public health establishment and the public, and I think it starts with this kind of communication. The other question I had about the next pandemic and the one we just had is, why not have committees of people of diverse backgrounds, socioeconomic diversity, racial diversity, every aspect of diversity rather than individuals standing there telling us what to do for several reasons. One is we are a country of many different people. I think there are dozens, if not hundreds,
Starting point is 01:18:07 of scientific papers showing that patients follow the advice of doctors that look like them and sound like them, or to whom they would aspire to be like. We know this. And yet public health officials typically are unitary. One person telling us, do this, don't do that. This is a good idea, that's a bad idea. I'm but one citizen, but I'm putting up both hands,
Starting point is 01:18:30 both feet and all toes and saying that committees, small but diverse committees that people can relate to and feel as if the messages that they're getting are vetted through a common understanding. Yeah, so it's a really good suggestion and I couldn't agree with you more that a diversity of voices is really important to get a message out. And during COVID actually that's one of the things that our office actually was always helping to build with something called the community core, right, where we
Starting point is 01:19:01 actually, we recognize it's very clearly, and this is something I came to see as a doctor. Sometimes I was a right person, a message to patients. Sometimes I wasn't. Right? Sometimes it was the nurse. Sometimes it was the medical student. Sometimes it was an administrator or the social worker with different background, different life experiences. So, part of this work is going to step up, one back, right? But the community core that we were building was a really diverse group of people. And a lot of them had public health backgrounds, but a lot of more community leaders who understood health,
Starting point is 01:19:33 even though they didn't have formal training, but they're people who knew their communities, right? And they had the trust of their communities and they understood what was going on. They wanted to be helpful. So we brought them together to say, okay, look, here's what the science is telling us. Here are the general recommendations. Here's what we would provide. You ask us any questions you have, like if there's something we don't know, we'll go back
Starting point is 01:19:53 and look it up. But you're the leaders in your community. They should be hearing from you about, you know, about these messages. And then those folks went out and actually we worked closely with them, collaborated with them. They would design the messages for their community based on what they thought made sense. They weren't taking what we said word for word and we didn't want them to. But to me, that kind of diverse approach is what we need more of. Now, I'll tell you what I would have liked. I would have liked if more media networks put those folks on TV and got them on the radio, right?
Starting point is 01:20:24 Because it's important that many of them were showing up in their communities. We're knocking on doors, we're doing local podcasts, et cetera. And that was great. But I would have liked more of their faces, I carried on TV, right? So that's a place where when we talk to media and when I talk to folks in media, one of the things I encourage them and push them to do also is to say, look, if you can take more of these diverse faces and voices and put them out there, that's actually good for the community. And it also helps people see that it's not like one or two people who are sort of pushing
Starting point is 01:20:53 an agenda here. This is like the public health community is big. It's broad, it's diverse. It has a lot of voices. And the more voices we can hear from this public, I think they're better off we are. Yeah, here, here. I, you know, again, I genuinely hope and pray that we don't have another pandemic, but if and when we do, I hope there will be committees
Starting point is 01:21:14 rather than individuals. I know we, you know, this is a thing in this country, we like the idea that one person's gonna save the climate, one person's gonna save transportation, one person, you know, the covers, the person of the year type approach. But then we get frustrated when that person does things or makes decisions that we don't like in their public or personal life, and then it all seems to fall into division.
Starting point is 01:21:36 And I just feel like, I'm not talking about groups of hundreds of people with small groups. So I think we're aligned in that way. Yeah, and look, there's the thing in a notion that I think sometimes we do want like the one person who can not only necessarily have all our trust and we can look to, but also who we can hold accountable, you know, if something doesn't quite work out, we don't like something. And while I get that sort of mentality, I think that in this moment, especially when we're trying to rebuild trust, I think it's important for people to know what they may be hearing in terms of medical or public health recommendations.
Starting point is 01:22:09 It's important for them to know how broad an audience that's coming from or brought a group of experts. And there was a lot more broad agreement, for example, during COVID and during Ebola, during Zika, on public health recommendations. But you wouldn't always know if you turn on the TV because you were seeing the same couple of faces. So I think we have to just certainly diversify that. One other thing I'll tell you that's important here
Starting point is 01:22:35 is I think we have to also think about how we fund groups on the ground that are doing the hard work of getting public health messages out because one of the things that those groups often would tell me, and these are, I might say, the groups I'm talking about, the community organization that spent years in a neighborhood getting to know families, where folks who recognize them when they're walking down the street, they'll go,
Starting point is 01:22:56 yeah, that's a person of organization X, they understand as they get us, they're looking out for us. A lot of those organizations had spent their resources helping the community getting to know the community, but they didn't have sophisticated mechanisms to apply for grants, for example. They didn't have grant writers who had done this a thousand times. So historically, those groups have a hard time getting support and funding. So I'll tell you one interesting thing my wife did, which I certainly was very proud of, is she was helping to build an effort and
Starting point is 01:23:26 to build a nonprofit organization with a couple of colleagues that a big organization of people who knew how to get money, how to apply for grants, how to get foundation support, but who also had the wisdom to know that the most important they could do was to give portions of that money to groups on the ground. So they saw themselves as an organization that channeled money to groups that had trust and they executed their mission that way. And that was very effective. And I think we need more of that when it comes to disseminating funding. One thing I think many people may not appreciate is that it's actually hard from government
Starting point is 01:24:03 to put out a lot of money at once and to do so quickly, right? Like, when you've got a lot of funds that you need to get into communities, what happens is the federal government often will give it to states. States will then give it to local communities, to like the local department of public health part potentially, and then they will look to distribute it to others. That takes time, but it also means if you're not connected to that network, if you don't know your local department of health or you're not connected to the state department of health, sometimes it can be challenging to figure out how to get the money. And so I think we need more operations like, you know, like what my wife and others have been building
Starting point is 01:24:37 to try to get those funds directly to the folks who not, you don't necessarily have the most fancy you know grant writing operation, but they have the relationships. Because at the end of the day, it's those relationships that create the trust. It's a trust that allows in for life-saving information to get to people. And that's the link that's missing. Very interesting. Farma, big pharma. I got a lot of questions about whether or not big pharma is on the take for every public
Starting point is 01:25:07 health initiative. Now, as somebody who understands a bit about and certainly believes in the use of certain prescription medications, I find most questions about, quote, unquote, big pharma to overlook the fact that there are thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of medications, that save lives in rich people's lives, that are prescription drugs. I also believe, my audience knows, I say it over and over again, that better living through chemistry
Starting point is 01:25:35 still requires better living. We still have to get our sunlight, get our sleep, social connection, good nutrition, exercise, and all those things. There's just no pill that's going to replace those. But I think it's a valid question that people are asking. Is there a direct relationship between big pharma and public health initiatives in a way that should have us concerned about the messaging that we're getting at times and the fact that the United States consumes the vast majority of drugs for mental health,
Starting point is 01:26:09 for instance, as compared to other countries. So that's one question. And then I want to dovetail into that question. What are your thoughts on the fact that, you know, there's a history of, say, the tobacco industry being, you know, very interdigitated, shall we say, with government policies in ways that had us basically injure, if not kill, millions of Americans.
Starting point is 01:26:31 And then eventually say, you can't smoke on near a hospital. You can't smoke anywhere. There's very few places where you can consume tobacco products. That kind of relationship and financial incentives and then a lot of backpedaling later, I think war on people's trust. So how should we frame the relationship between the pharmaceutical industry, government and public health initiatives
Starting point is 01:26:58 in a way that is at least halfway functional? Hey, it looked, I understand where the concern and suspicion comes from, right? And look, I think it's important that public health initiatives and medical advice is independent of the influence of industries that may seek to profit from what's being recommended or from medications that are being prescribed. And we have a history in medicine, right, of doctors who were, you know, given
Starting point is 01:27:29 gifts and vacations and all kinds of fancy things by pharma companies in an effort to influence what they prescribed. That was really problematic. And now we're seeing a lot less of that, which is good. A lot of rules are being put in place by medical societies and professional societies and by academic institutions to say this is an unacceptable way to practice. And that's really important because I do think that human psychology is that sometimes we underestimate how much we're influenced by incentives. We think, yeah, I'm getting that,
Starting point is 01:27:56 but I know how to make independent decisions, but at the end of the day we're human and we're influenced. Or it's a great drug. It could be, wow, this is a drug that's really helping my patients. I'm happy to recommend it to them. Yeah, so one separate one thing though, like taking money from a pharma company as a physician, I think is highly problematic, right? I think it's hard to say that it doesn't influence practice, maybe it doesn't for some people,
Starting point is 01:28:21 but it's really hard to know who those people are. I do think that separate from that, you can be a physician who prescribes medications because you believe they work. Look, as a doctor, I have prescribed many antibiotics during cases of infection that have helped my patients. And I would prescribe those again. I'm glad that those exist. In many cases, they've saved the lives of patients I was caring for in the hospital. So that's what should drive us. Is does the data show that they work
Starting point is 01:28:51 and does our patient need them, right? That's what should drive our decisions. When it comes to public health recommendations, here too, I think a similar principle holds, which is that I don't think that farma money should be influencing our public health decisions, which means that it shouldn't be funding our public health organizations that are making recommendations.
Starting point is 01:29:11 Certainly, I'll, you know, this is obvious to you, but I'll say just to be clear for everyone who's listening. Like, our office doesn't take any money from industry, not just farm industry from any industry. Like, the money that we get is allocated by Congress at the end of the day, it's taxpayer money, and that's all we get. And that's important. We don't want money from pharmaceutical companies. But that's important because people need to know that these decisions are not being made for financial gain. That's being said, there's a broader concern I have, Andrew, which is,
Starting point is 01:29:48 I think that we have become a pill for every problem society, where we look for a quick fix of a medicine for every challenge that we may incur. And sometimes, yes, I'm a believer that if science helps us create medications that can help solve disease we should use them appropriately, but I think we discount heavily the behavioral changes that we need to make, the more broader societal and environmental changes that we need to make that influence our health, like our food environment matters for our health, our decisions about how physically active we are matter for our health, whether or not we sleep matters for our health, our decisions about how physically active we are matter for our health, whether or not we sleep matters for our health, and all of these impact our mental health and
Starting point is 01:30:29 well-being as well. And so when I think about that bias, to me is not always stemming from money that came from a pharmaceutical company, although I think the ads that we see all the time from pharma companies, I think, try to convince us convince us that hey just take this pill once a day and all your problems will go away. But I think it's more complex than that. And I think that even for, you know, in the healthcare setting, like if you're seeing a patient who has pain, who's having intense pain. It feels easier sometimes to prescribe a medication for
Starting point is 01:31:06 that pain rather than trying to deal with non-medicative and based approaches or try to get the deeper origins of the pain. I'm not saying that's what doctors do all the time, but I'm saying that we're living in an environment and a broader culture where we, I think, increasingly reach for something that we see as a quick immediate fix. And again, don't blame people for that. We'd rather take a quick fix over something that's going to take a long time. But I think it is selling us, I think, sometimes a false hope, which is that that's all we need
Starting point is 01:31:37 to solve our problems. And I mean, a lot of times you need more. You need the behavioral changes. You need the environmental changes. That's one of my big concerns in terms of how we communicate about health. Would a potential solution be this idea of small committees? So let's say somebody is experiencing chronic pain,
Starting point is 01:31:56 localized or general, that they would go to their general practitioner, but in the room would also be somebody who understands somatic medicine, a would also be somebody who understands somatic medicine. A trained clinical psychologist who understands somatics that the body and the brain are linked through the nervous system and could also assess possible psychological roots of the issue. And then somebody in the room who can make behavioral, nutritional, maybe even supplementation-based, safe supplementation-based recommendations, and then the physician who can say, you know, in an addition to that,
Starting point is 01:32:30 I think the person should have on hand, you know, a 5 milligram dosage of a prescription drug that if they need it, they could take. And I think it would provide a lot of protections against, you know, potential adverse effects of any one of those things in isolation. There are great protections in having people meet in groups for lots of reasons. And the person would feel very well cared for. So again, small committees of people with diverse expertise pooling together to treat people from a lack of a better word, a more holistic
Starting point is 01:33:05 perspective. Why not? I mean, you're just writing the dream. I think that's exactly what we need. Interdisciplinary teams that can provide integrative care, recognizing that in this day and age, there's not one person who has all the expertise to help us figure out how to best manage our health challenges. I think what we have not figured out are a couple of things. Number one, who are all the right people who need to be in the room or the sort of virtual room, if you will. The second is how do we create a structure, a health care system where that can actually happen with efficiency where it can be reimbursed appropriately, but that's what we
Starting point is 01:33:41 should be doing. And then the third leg of that is the group experience for patients, right? And there's increasingly more clinics and healthcare systems around the country that are working on creating group experiences where patients who all, let's say, are working on diabetes come together, let's say once a week and they meet
Starting point is 01:34:01 with the healthcare practitioner, that might be an addition to their individual appointments, but there is so much power in groups coming together, groups of patients who can find community who can help each other learn from each other's experiences. That's highly underutilized right now in medicine, but to really do this well, Andrew, I think means that we have to pull back
Starting point is 01:34:22 from the model we have had for years in medicine, which has been a very highly individual type model, which says, okay, you go to your doctor, you see your doctor one on one, you get everything you need. Maybe you need to go see a specialist, okay, then you wait a few weeks, get another appointment, drive 30 miles, go see somebody else. Maybe they're connected to the electronic health system, maybe they're not, maybe they know what was discussed, maybe they don't, maybe they'll call and talk to their primary care doctor, but maybe they won't because they're too busy.
Starting point is 01:34:49 And then you as a patient are stuck trying to piece all this together. What while often in pain? While yeah. In physical and emotional anguish, not referring to my own experience, although I've had you know, mild examples compared to what other people dealt with. But people with chronic pain are irritable for understandable reasons. I mean, maybe somebody is close to veering towards suicidal depression. Then there's the interpersonal effects. I mean, I feel like the crisis is one of a lack of efficiency and
Starting point is 01:35:20 thoroughness. And again, I'm not throwing stones at the medical profession. I I like you believe that it's a collection of mostly well-meaning people trying to do their best, but the specialist model and the referral model is incredibly cumbersome. It really is cumbersome and and like you look, I having worked with many medical professions over the years, like these are colleagues who I deeply admire. I mean, like they're there for the right reasons. They want to help people alleviate suffering. But they too are feeling burned out and frustrated by the inefficiencies of the system. Because that's how you, one of the greatest contributors to burnout for doctors and nurses
Starting point is 01:35:57 is a lack of self-efficacy. It's seeing a patient who has a problem in front of you and feeling like you can get them to help that they need. That is the greatest paper cut, if you will, to the sort of spirit of clinicians. And many find themselves in that circumstance where they either find that they know what's needed, but the system is throwing up prior authorizations or other insurance hurdles and preventing their patient from getting that care. Or they are kind of at the edge of their expertise. This happens to pediatricians and primary care doctors more broadly all the time with mental health.
Starting point is 01:36:31 Most of the mental health care that's delivered in this country is delivered in primary care offices. Now, primary care doctors didn't necessarily train specifically and only in mental health, yet they find themselves having to manage a lot of that, including increasingly complex substance use disorders and treatment, resistance, depression, and they need help figuring that out. But if you don't have a lot of resources to get that referral to collaborate with the mental health professionals
Starting point is 01:36:58 and you're stuck on your own figuring that out. And so, I think the pain is being experienced mostly by patients, but also very much so by clinicians. And that's where that overhaul is needed. And I think, look, a lot of this is, you know, I'm not a healthcare economist per se, but I will say that a lot of this, I think is tied into the business model
Starting point is 01:37:15 that we built around medicine, the notion that, you know, we're paying individual people for individual services and individual procedures that are done, while that has some merit in some cases, what we really care about is that the person is getting efficient, integrated, multidisciplinary care overall. And so when health systems, for example, come together and say, okay, rather than sort of focusing on the amount of getting reimbursed for every procedure, we're going to take more of a value-based approach here where we say, okay, we've got to run amount of getting reimbursed for every procedure, we're gonna take more of a value-based approach here
Starting point is 01:37:45 where we say, okay, we've got to turn amount of money into care for certain people. What's the most efficient way for us to provide them care? Recognizing if we don't do that, it's not only bad for them, but our costs in the long term will go up because we're not getting reimbursed for every procedure, we're getting reimbursed for the care,
Starting point is 01:38:02 overall care that we're taking for a patient. So there are more of these value-based models that are being adopted, certainly in 2010 when the Affordable Care Act was passed and when other measures were taken in the Obama administration in Medicare, like that really pushed value-based payment models forward. And again, they're not perfect. They need their own tweaks. But I don't think that the existing financial structure that we had in medicine was serving us
Starting point is 01:38:29 in terms of delivering the kind of multidisciplinary, integrated, efficient care that we increasingly need. Tough problem, but through recognition of tough problems comes good solutions. That's my belief. I'm an optimist at the end of the day. You mentioned mental health. Lately, you've been increasingly vocal about the crisis of isolation. Just once again, before we go there, one thing about the tough problems, you're exactly right. And the problem
Starting point is 01:38:52 is a longer we take to acknowledge and address these tough problems, the more entrenched the interests become that profit from the status quo. So if you look at the private insurance industry right now, there are so many challenges we have right now with patients and clinicians saying that they know what care is needed but it gets denied. They know what care is needed but prior authorizations get thrown up there and required. Even for a medicine that clearly your patient needs urgently, you know, I've had the experience myself of having a family member who is needed a medication
Starting point is 01:39:32 for an urgent situation, and then being told that the pharmacy will not fill it because it requires a prior authorization, but that can't be processed until the weekend is over because no one's in the office to approve the prior authorization. And you're thinking yourself, this is make any sense? Like this is an urgent situation.
Starting point is 01:39:50 My family member needs his medication. I've also had the experience as a doctor of fighting for my patients who have been denied care by an insurance company. Being on the phone saying, I'm sitting here in front of my patient. I know that they are sick. I know they can go home. I know they need to be in rehab. There's nobody literally to help them at home, but then not having like the rehab bed approved by somebody who's not even there, right? And there's also just a practice that we've seen time and time again where
Starting point is 01:40:22 insurance companies will also just burden clinicians with more and more requests for information before they will agree to reimburse for services that have already been delivered for patients who needs them, which is just creating more and more barriers, hoping that if you're a small time doc out there who's got, you know, a shingle that you put up, you don't have a lot of resources, how are you going to keep fighting all of this and sending more and more paperwork? And so eventually you'll just give up. We have a lot of problems right there and industry that should be delivering care.
Starting point is 01:40:52 Often is doing good things, but too often I think is allowing barriers to be put up to the care that's needed. And this is particularly true with mental health. I know we're gonna talk about that, but mental health care is just been such a difficult thing for people to get in our country. And part of the reason, there are many reasons, but one of them is that insurance companies historically did not reimburse
Starting point is 01:41:14 adequately, or in the same level for mental health care as they did for physical health care, or if they did, they would only reimburse for a limited number of sessions that you could have. But if you're a mom out there who sees her child struggling with depression, you're really worried. You don't want to be told, you know what? You can only get three sessions. That's it. What are you supposed to do after three sessions, right? And so what has happened is that even though in 2008 there was a law passed called the Addiction Equity and Mental Health Parity Law, even though that was passed to try to close that gap, there were many ways that insurance companies were scurrying it right. So one of the law wasn't even being adequately reinforced for many years, but two insurance companies sometimes would say okay, you know, we're reimbursing adequately, but when you look in the network, they had very few
Starting point is 01:42:06 providers, so you really couldn't access somebody, right? So that was a problem for patients. And then the other challenge is that they would say, okay, you can see somebody, but you've got to complete this prior authorization, have that completed by your primary, your primary doctor, et cetera, again, throwing up more and more barriers. So very recently, in fact, just a few weeks ago, President Biden just announced that we are from as administration putting out a throwing up more and more barriers. So very recently, in fact, just a few weeks ago, President Biden just announced that we are from as administration putting out a proposed rule to actually strengthen the mental health parity law to prevent some of these, what I
Starting point is 01:42:35 think of as abusive practices, because they're preventing people who need care from getting in. And if you've ever been, as I know, many people have been who are listening to this, if you've ever been in a situation where you or somebody you love has struggled with a mental health concern, what you need in that circumstance is help. You don't need to be filling out paperwork. You don't need to be waiting three months to actually get care. You don't need to show up and be told only you only have two more appointments. You need to know that help is there when you need it. And a lot of these denials are being issued to people who have done their part of the bargain. They've paid their premiums. They've held up their end of the bargain and care
Starting point is 01:43:14 should be there for them when they need it. So, this is something that upsets me a lot because I just, I have seen too many patients over the years struggle without the care that they deserve and should get because of barriers that are being thrown up by industry. But I say all that just to say that when you take on big problems, you will run up against entrenched interests. And that's a fight we have to take on. We can't shy away from it.
Starting point is 01:43:38 We can't say, you know, this is politically too difficult. Like one of the things I'm very proud of is that we're finally negotiating on drug prices through the Medicare program. Something that should have been done decades ago. But it's finally happening now. You know, the administration just decided this has got to happen. It was passed by Congress. This was good.
Starting point is 01:43:57 And it just, it makes no sense that we would pay more than we need to and pass the cost on to taxpayers when we can negotiate. If you're collecting taxes as government, you should be doing your best to make sure every one of those dollars is being spent well. Because somebody took money out of their paycheck, didn't use it for their family, didn't use it for their kids, and they gave it to the government. For good reason, because that supports first responders, police officers, a whole bunch of services that we need.
Starting point is 01:44:27 But the response being in government is to make sure that money's being used well. And to pay more for medications than we should makes no sense at all, especially for our patients and taxpayers. So clearly some steps in the right direction are occurring while on the topic of mental health, let's talk about the isolation crisis. What is the isolation
Starting point is 01:44:47 crisis? What aspects of mental and physical health is it impacting? And then perhaps most importantly, what can we each and all do about it? Well, this is one of those issues that I, if you had told me Andrew 10 years ago, hey, you and I are going to be sitting here talking about loneliness and isolation that would have said I don't think so But I was really educated by people I met across the country about the fact that this was a real problem and the truth is It was familiar to me because of my own personal experiences You know as a child I struggled a lot with a sense of loneliness and isolation. I was really shy as a kid. I was pretty introverted.
Starting point is 01:45:26 I wanted to make friends and hang out with other kids, but it took me a while to actually build those relationships. I spent a lot of time feeling left out. There were times when I would like my elementary school, and there were days where I pretended I had a stomach ache, so my mom wouldn't make me go to school. And it wasn't because I was scared of a test or a teacher, because I didn't want to walk into the cafeteria one more time and be scared that there was nobody to sit next to, or they know and want me to be at their bench.
Starting point is 01:45:58 As I know what it feels like, and I also know what the shame is like, because I never told my parents about this. I never told anyone about that. Because even though I knew my parents loved me, I just felt like, hey, because I never told my parents about this. I never told anyone about that. Because even though I knew my parents loved me, I just felt like, Hey, if I'm feeling this lonely, it means it's something's wrong with me. I'm not likable. I'm not lovable. I'm something's got to be, it's got to be my fault in some way. It was only years later, Andrew, when I talked to friends from grade school, that I realized that a lot of them were feeling the same thing.
Starting point is 01:46:22 We were all struggling by ourselves. No one really knew it. And I came to see a lot of this as a doctor when I was taking care of patients. And I never took a class on loneliness in medical school, who was in part of our residency curriculum. Yet, when I showed up in the hospital, I found that the patient who would come in with a diabetic wound infection or who would come in, you know, because they had had a heart attack.
Starting point is 01:46:47 When I sat down and talked to them, often in the background, they would talk about how lonely they were. Sometimes I would ask them, hey, you know, we're, I need to have a difficult conversation about your diagnosis. This is, or somebody you'd want me to call to be with you during this time. And too often the answer was, you know, I wish there was, but there's nobody. I'll just have the conversation by myself. So, but it was when I was surgeon general, I realized that those experiences weren't limited to me and my patients, but they were incredibly common. And two things I learned when I dug into the
Starting point is 01:47:16 data, Andrew was number one that loneliness is exceedingly common with one in two adults in America, reporting measurable levels of loneliness, but the numbers are actually even higher among young adults and adolescents. The numbers and among youth, actually, depending on the surveys you look at, are between 70 to 80% who say that they're struggling with loneliness. So that's the first thing that I learned, but the second thing was how consequential loneliness was. I used to think loneliness was just a bad feeling. But what I came to see in digging into the scientific literature was that feeling socially
Starting point is 01:47:53 disconnected, being lonely and isolated, was actually associated with increased risk of depression, anxiety, suicide, but also an increased risk of cardiovascular disease of dementia. And these are not small risks. We're talking about 29% increase in the risk of coronary heart disease, 31% risk, and the increased risk of stroke, 50% increased risk of dementia among older people, increased risk of premature death, and the mortality impact of loneliness, by the way, and loneliness and isolation is comparable, you know, to the mortality impact of many other illnesses.
Starting point is 01:48:30 In fact, it's even greater than the mortality impact we see associated with obesity, which is something we clearly recognize as a public health issue. So, you put all this together, and for me, one of the key takeaways is that loneliness and isolation are critical public health challenges that are hiding behind the curtain, behind this wall of stigma and shame. And unless we talk about it and address it, unless we reconcile what's been happening to us over the last 50 years where fewer and fewer people are participating in community organizations,
Starting point is 01:49:03 where more and more people are feeling isolated. And we're not going to be able to repair the fraying foundations of society which are grounded fundamentally in our connection to one another. You mentioned community organizations. Could you elaborate on those growing up in the 70s and 80s, I was exposed to like community soccer teams, swim team. There was a community pool. These were all public things. There were churches,
Starting point is 01:49:35 synagogues, and mosques. Are we not seeing as much participation in those, those types of organizations anymore? And what other types of organizations are out there that come to mind when you think about the isolation crisis. Yes, so there are several factors that have led to us being as isolated as we are. One of them, as you mentioned, is the decline in participation in community organizations. This isn't a recent phenomenon. This has been happening over the last half century in America. We've seen lower participation in faith organizations, and recreational leagues, and service organizations, and other community groups that used to bring us together.
Starting point is 01:50:14 And I think, you know, we can talk about the reasons why that has been the case. But one of the key consequences of that is that people don't have places where they can come together and get to know one another, especially across differences. So we actually associate more and more with people who are like us. But this has also been fueled by a few other factors that are going on at the same time. One is that just from a cultural perspective, as modernity has arrived, not just in the US, but in other countries, we've seen that people are more mobile, right?
Starting point is 01:50:44 They move around more. We don't always stay in the countries, we've seen that people are more mobile, right? They move around more. We don't always stay in the community that we grew up in. We tend to, even if we move somewhere else for school, we may go somewhere else for a job. We may change jobs and move somewhere else. We are leaving behind communities that we grew up with, that we went to school with, that we worked with. And I'm not saying that's all a bad thing, right?
Starting point is 01:51:00 We have more opportunities, and that's a really good thing. But I think one thing that we have not accounted for is the cost of these changes, right? We have more opportunities and that's a really good thing. But I think one thing that we have not accounted for is the cost of these changes, right? If we know what the cost are of certain actions, we may still take those actions, but we may find ways to mitigate the costs. We may, in this case, invest more in our relationships, we more conscious of our reaching out to other people going to visit them. But that has been a quiet but devastating consequence. The other piece is with modernity is that we have more convenience in our life, which means that we also don't need to see other people to get certain things done, like buying groceries or mailing an item out or getting something from the store.
Starting point is 01:51:38 I can sit in the comfort of my home and have everything just come to me. Now on the one hand, that's incredibly efficient, right? But I think efficiency is an interesting thing because it's only one factor we should be considering in our lives. There too, we have to ask the cost. And one of the interesting thing about COVID, as many people in the first year of COVID when we were all separated from one another, you know, when we finally came back together and I had so many people who said to me, you know what, I expected to miss my parents and my siblings and my friends not being able to see them. What I didn't expect was missing the strangers that I saw at the coffee shop where the folks who are ran into at the grocery store or seeing neighbors as
Starting point is 01:52:17 I walked down the street. Like, I actually missed that more than I thought I would. So we have lost out on some of those interactions and those loose ties. But the final thing to keep in mind also is about what is happening with how we are using social media technology, which I think is fundamentally transformed how we interact with one another and how we see ourselves and each other. And this is particularly true for young people who are growing up as digital natives. is particularly true for young people who are growing up as digital natives. But what has happened there, I worry, is that, and it is not that social media is all bad, just to be clear, technology, I'm a believer that in technology broadly speaking, I'm a user of technology, I spent seven years building a tech company, I'm a believer in tech,
Starting point is 01:52:59 but I think whether technology helps or hurts us is about how it's designed and ultimately about how it ends up being used. And what we've seen with social media as well is that for many people, it ended up leading to in-person connections being replaced with online connections. We came to somehow value and almost seek out more and more followers and friends on social media feeling somehow that made us more connected. almost seek out more and more followers and friends on social media, feeling somehow that made us more connected. But the nature of dialogue also changed. Like as human beings, we evolved over a thousand of years to not just
Starting point is 01:53:33 understand the word someone is saying, but to hear the tone of their voice, to see their facial expression. Like you and I are sitting across and we're both processing our body language, right? And I'm seeing you nod your head and I'm seeing your eyes focus. Like all of that matters to how we communicate. But also, you and I are less likely to say something hurtful right now to one another because we can see each other.
Starting point is 01:53:56 If I said something that hurtful to you, like I probably see the pain or consternation on your face, and that might give me pause, right? When you're communicating online with other people without any of that information or without any of the barriers, if you will, that make you pause before you hurt someone, it leads to a very different kind of communication, one that can be quite hurtful at times.
Starting point is 01:54:18 And I also think that one of the people, many people don't recognize is that to communicate with somebody else and reach out and build a relationship with someone, it actually takes a certain amount of self-esteem to do that. You have to believe the other person is going to want to hang out with you. They're going to see something valuable in you. And for many young people, what has happened, and I think, frankly, for many older people, too, is their experience on social media has shredded their self-esteem as they're constantly comparing themselves to other people. Like when you and I were growing up in the 80s, we compared ourselves to the people too.
Starting point is 01:54:51 People have for millennia, but what's fundamentally different now is that in a given day, you can compare yourself to thousands of images that you see online. That's actually literally what young people tell me. I do round tables with college students and high school students all the time around the country. And the three things they tell me most consistently about their experience and social media is it makes them feel worse about themselves, worse about their friendships, but they can't get off it because the platforms are designed to maximize the amount of time they spend on them.
Starting point is 01:55:20 So you put all of this together and I think what has happened is that we're talking more but we understand each other less. We have a lot of information but we're lacking in the wisdom that comes from human relationships. And I think that that's really hurt us. We see it certainly in the data that tells us about mental and physical health outcomes but there's also the human suffering component, Andrew. Like it's really heartbreaking for me to travel around the country and to hear from people of all ages,
Starting point is 01:55:51 often in quiet whispers about their struggles with isolation about how they feel like they just don't matter at all, about how they feel like they just don't have a place where they belong. And it's, these are people on the outside to look perfectly fine, right? They're posting happy things online to the folks at work. They're seeming like everything's going great.
Starting point is 01:56:12 But this is why I always tell people, like loneliness is a great masquerader. It can look like withdrawal and sadness. They can look like anger and irritability. It can look like aloofness as well. And so it's only when we stop to ask someone how they're doing, and we take pause for a moment to maybe reflect on what's happening in their life, that we realize that, wow, the majority of people in our country are actually struggling with loneliness.
Starting point is 01:56:36 Yeah, I'm a firm believer that our nervous system evolved under conditions of close interpersonal and direct connection and to suddenly throw a technology in front of ourselves that deprives our nervous system of its normal development is clearly gonna lead bad places. It's also clear to me as based on what you just described that when we go on social media, we see something, but they don't really see us. Hence, perhaps why people get aggressive
Starting point is 01:57:06 in the comment section, you know, they want to be heard. Yeah. We want to be seen. I think all of us want to be seen and see other people. Yeah. And social media doesn't allow for it so easily. I also know that a lot of young people will congregate with their friends to play video games online,
Starting point is 01:57:24 but that's different. You're essentially showing up as an avatar. And when we were kids, we also played different characters in our games, but also different now. Do you think that there will be a youth rebellion movement against these kinds of technologies? I mean, there's a long history of young people rebelling against the stuff that's been put in front of them. So I mean, there's a long history of young people rebelling against the stuff that's been put in front of them. And they're like, no, no more. We're gonna rebelle. In fact, that was the way that youth overcame
Starting point is 01:57:52 the nicotine epidemic, if you recall. It was the advertising pitching them against, or pitting them, excuse me, against wealthy, cackling older men in rooms counting their money. That was what actually was successful in getting kids to not smoke because kids have a rebellious streak. As opposed to when they were told, hey, smoking's terrible for you.
Starting point is 01:58:15 Your lungs are gonna fill with cancer. Kids didn't stop smoking. Teenage didn't stop smoking. It was rebellion has been baked into our nervous system in the adolescent in teen years. So do you see a rebellion against this social isolation? Our kids are going to start putting away their phones and hanging out together again, and that's going to rescue us. And that's a way of saying, what can we do for them? What can they do for themselves?
Starting point is 01:58:40 And what can we do as adults? Because there are a lot of the silent suffering is the thing I also really worry about. So it's a good question. And I think there is already a movement that's building among young people to create distance between them themselves and their devices and particularly social media. And it's cropping up in different ways.
Starting point is 01:59:02 I'm meeting more and more. Some of these are organized efforts, but I'm also meeting more families where the parents and kids together have decided that they're gonna delay using social media and, you know, to pass middle schoolery, in some cases even later, or where they're deciding that they're gonna drop boundaries
Starting point is 01:59:19 around social media use, where they're gonna replace their smartphone with a dumb phone that allows them to do things like text and make phone calls and use maps and all that stuff. It doesn't necessarily have social media apps on it. That this is still a small minority. And where's you dealing with a bit of a network effect here, right? Because if you're the only one who's not on social media in your middle school class, and you might feel left out, which is why it's so important for parents and kids to actually do this together.
Starting point is 01:59:45 But I do think that to use your analogy with smoking, that one thing that I think many young people bristle against is this notion of being manipulated and used for the profit, you know, of a social media platform. And the reality is that the, again, we've talked about how the fundamental business model is, or most social media platforms is built on how much time you spend on those platforms that translate to ad revenue and to translate to the bottom line. Whereas what I care about as a parent as search in general is about how well that time is being spent, is it actually contributing to the health and well-being of a young person or is it not?
Starting point is 02:00:28 Is it actually harming them? And this is where I think when I go out and talk to young people about this. Number one, I'm so impressed by a lot of young people because they already have a lot of these insights. They're the ones living it. They're not thinking that this is all perfect and it's all a pure benefit here. They're the ones telling me that it makes them feel worse about themselves and their friendships.
Starting point is 02:00:48 But they are also having a hard time getting off of it because again of how these platforms are designed. So about a third of adolescents are saying that they're staying up till midnight or later on weeknights using their devices and a lot of that is social media use. And this takes away from sleep, which we know, and you know better than anyone,
Starting point is 02:01:04 is so critical to the mental health and well-being of all of us, but of young people in particular, who are at a critical phase of development. The other thing that is very concerning to me is nearly half of adolescents say that using social media has made them feel worse about their body image, as they're constantly comparing themselves to others online. And we used to think of, this is just girls
Starting point is 02:01:24 who are experiencing this. And yes, it is a lot of young girls who are experiencing these body image issues, but now it's increasingly boys as well. So this is happening across the board. But the other piece that concerns me thinking about mental health symptoms is that we look at how much time
Starting point is 02:01:40 kids are using social media. And average adolescents are using it for three and a half hours a day, on average. So many social media. Just social media. And that means many are using social media on average, adolescents are using it for three and a half hours a day, on average. So many social media. Just social media, and that means many are using it for far more than that. And what you're finding though is that for adolescents who use it three hours or more in a given day, their risk of anxiety or depression symptoms double. So, and if the average uses three and a half days, that means that
Starting point is 02:02:09 millions of kids all across our country, the majority of our kids are at risk here. And so, you know, you put all this together and it paints a very concerning picture, whatever benefits there may be for some kids of using social media. And there's some, and we lay out some of this in our advisory and social media. Some kids find social media is a great way to express themselves, to reach other people, to find support, especially if they're from a community that doesn't have a lot of folks who are like them around. It can be really reassuring to connect with others. But we can't say that just to get those benefits, we have to subject our children to all of these other harms. Kids are experiencing exposure to harmful content, to harassment and bullying online, six out of 10 adolescent girls are seeing they've been approached by strangers on social media
Starting point is 02:02:50 and ways it made them feel very uncomfortable. Our kids are also finding that health promoting activities in their lives are being cannibalized by their use of social media, that it's detracting from time for sleep in person interaction, physical activity. And the erosion of self-esteem really concerns me as well because you need that not just for social interaction, but as a father, I want my children to grow up being confident about who they are, being confident enough to be authentic as they show up in the world, to not feel like they need to create some brand that's different from who they fundamentally are just to sell that to the world.
Starting point is 02:03:25 I want them to know who they are and to be comfortable being who they are and to encourage other people to do the same, to support them in their efforts to be authentic. That's what I want my kids to do. That's not what's happening to a lot of kids on social media. So I think we not only need more kids to understand this and just support them in their efforts to create space and sacred spaces away from social media. But we need to support parents here too.
Starting point is 02:03:49 Because Andrew might be concerned with parents is, look, we've taken this technology, which is rapidly evolving, which we didn't grow up with as kids. And we've still parents, you manage it all on your own. We put the entire burden on parents and kids to manage this. When we were growing up, you remember, the motor vehicle fatalities were really high in America. And we didn't say, okay, you know what, that's just a price of modern life,
Starting point is 02:04:18 which is that we've accepted and keep moving on with our lives. We said, hold on, we don't have to go back to horses and buggies, but we also don't need to accept this set, we need to make this experience safer. And so we put in place with the advocacy and support of incredible groups like Matt and others across the country, madming mothers against strong driving.
Starting point is 02:04:37 Ultimately, the government put in place safety standards that got us seat belts, air bags, crash testing to make sure the frame of cars were robust in the setting of an accident and that helped us reduce motor vehicle accidents and deaths. And that's what we need here too. Like we need to have the backs of parents and kids. And that means from a policy perspective, putting in place safety standards to protect kids from exposure to harmful content from the experience of bullying and harassment, and that also protect them from features
Starting point is 02:05:09 that would seek to manipulate them into excessive use, which is happening far too often right now. We also need the policy that requires data transparency from the companies. Researchers tell us all the time that they are independent researchers. They tell us they are having a hard time getting full access to the data from the social media platforms about the full impact of the platforms on the mental health of kids. As a parent, look, I don't, when we bought
Starting point is 02:05:34 car seats for my children, when they were born, we looked up the safety data like many parents wanted to make sure the car seats were safe. But if you had told me that, hey, you know, the manufacturers of these car seats are actually not disclosing some of the data on the impact on children, but go ahead and buy it anyway. You know, I'm sure other people are buying these car seats, you should be fine. I would have been very disturbed by that. Right? No parent wants to feel that information is being hidden from them about the health impact of products on their kids. That's what we have right now. So this is a place where I think, while yes, and we'll talk about some steps parents can take, because I want to get to practical steps of people who are here as parents or people of kids in their lives can take.
Starting point is 02:06:15 But we need policymakers to step up and step into the void here and to fill the gap, because this is too much again to just ask parents to manage entirely on their own. And this isn't again about telling parents what to do and restricting them. This is about giving them the support they need. So they have confidence when they see, you know, a technology out there, a device out there, a product out there for kids that they know it's been tested, that it's been studied, and that it's actually safe for their children.
Starting point is 02:06:45 My understanding is that in countries like China, there are limits as to how many hours kids can be on screens, period. And when I was a kid, we were allowed to watch TV for a certain number of, I think it was a half an hour or an hour. My mom was constantly kicking us out of the house. Like, literally, you got to leave the house.
Starting point is 02:07:02 You got to go down the street and play. Yeah. Unfortunately, I liked outdoor activities. Nowadays, we also have the issue that a lot of parents are on their phones at soccer games and at kids events. And so the kids are modeling their parents. Yeah. Parents are distracted as well.
Starting point is 02:07:16 So there's a lack of social connection. People even in immediate family. People are screened in, the TV, there's laptops, there's multiple phones, iPads. People are more engaged in, the TV, there's laptops, there's multiple phones, iPads, people are more engaged in the screen portals than often than their own portals. You go to a concert and people are watching the concert through their screen so that they can send the same image that everyone around them is sending out to the world. If you think that's kind of crazy, but I guess they want to capture that unique experience,
Starting point is 02:07:46 but it's not unique at all. That's the myth, that's the illusion. There's nothing unique about your post of something that you went to go see. What would be truly unique is to just experience that in real time, right? It's so wild to think about what we think of as our unique portal is actually not unique at all.
Starting point is 02:08:04 It's what we do with it. My stance is glean and learn information online then go use it in real life. Come back from time to time, you know, maybe an hour a day, maximum or so. Can I just underscore the two words you said, real life? Because that, I think, is a really important key here, which is that all of real life isn't happening on social media. There's a whole world out there, which is that all of real life isn't happening on social media. There's a whole world out there, which I think is real life, which is happening offline. And what's happening online too often is distorted, right? It's giving us like, like even just take, you know, just take the images that we see of people there. You
Starting point is 02:08:40 know, there are some or beach images, there are like great vacation images. That's not representative of their entire life, of how they're living their life. But we see that, we see people's anger, and their vitriol, and we come to believe over time that that's how people feel. That's what people are dealing with and experiencing in their life. And we've just got to get, you know, your mom, I love what your mom did, getting you guys outside. My parents did the same thing too. Like I was very blessed to have two parents
Starting point is 02:09:09 who didn't come, you know, they didn't have a lot of resources worrying up, they didn't come to this country with a lot of resources. But one of the greatest gifts they gave us is that they loved us unconditionally. And the other great gift that they gave us is they pushed us to just explore, to meet people, to learn about the world.
Starting point is 02:09:32 They wanted us outside, playing, experimenting, just discovering the world, writing our bike around the neighborhood. And that's what we did. But right now, two critical things that kids need for their mental health and development are two important forces I should say that are impacting their mental health and development. One is social media, but the second also is the lack of unstructured playtime that kids have. Like unstructured playtime is time when we as kids learn how to negotiate situations with other kids, how to resolve conflict, how to recognize what's going on in someone else's eyes before they say something. We learn how to collaborate and play with other kids. There's a lot you learn on the playground as it turns out. But I worry that right now that we've almost somehow made that kind of unstructured time
Starting point is 02:10:12 seem inefficient. You know, we've set these standards for our kids that they need to be, you know, getting fancy jobs and into fancy colleges and making an X amount of money and the path to doing that is, you know, to be enrolled in X number of activities after school and to do all this stuff in school. And their lives are so hyper structured that I worry that the time to just play to be creative, to reflect and think, to just have unstructured time with other kids has evaporated. And I think that that also is hurting the mental health and well-being of our children. I love the idea that that unstructured playtime could be framed in the accurate context of the nervous system developing the way it was supposed to develop. I mean, I would argue that success is going to be easiest for children that engage in the real world more.
Starting point is 02:11:01 In fact, there's great risk to posting everything that you do online. We've seen some examples of that preventing people from getting into or staying in college based on things they said or did previously that they shouldn't have said or done. Those are kind of negative highlighted cases. But in general, we know that the nervous system thrives on diversity of types of interactions and social interactions in particular. I'm just restating what you just said. So if ever there was a call for kids to get out into non-screen life, let's call it and engage their nervous system that way, it without question is going to benefit them in terms of their ability to learn and retain information, perform well in school,
Starting point is 02:11:41 which is not everything life's about, but let's face it, we still live in a society where hitting those milestones on a consistent basis is the best predictor of people being able to live self-sustained lives, build families, and that sort of thing. You mentioned a few actionable items for parents as it relates to kids, maybe, well, not maybe, limits their screen time, force them outside in the safe weather and safe conditions, of course. But what about adults as well?
Starting point is 02:12:11 What can we all do? Should we be restricting our screen time to X number of hours per day? I mean, you're the surgeon general. If you had a magic wand, which I realize you don't, and you could make a highly informed recommendation about what the thresholds for too much time on social media are.
Starting point is 02:12:35 What would it be? Two hours, three hours? Yeah, so it's a good question. And let me actually go through some of these things that parents can do for kids and that we can all do for ourselves With kids in particular what I would do specifically with social media is and this is this is frankly what I'm planning to do with my wife for our kids As they grow up and number one
Starting point is 02:12:56 I would seek to delay the use of social media past middle school at minimum. And I know that that is hard to do at a time when all kids are on social media and you don't want your child to be thrown in and left out and to be lonely as a result. So that means no account of their own. It means no account of their own. And I would make see to the best of your ability see if there are other parents that you can partner with to do this because it's hard to to do alone as a parent, but it's also if there are other parents you're partnering with, that means there are other kids who are also delaying you, so I mean, your child is not alone. And I think if you start the conversation with other parents who will realize a lot of them are
Starting point is 02:13:36 worried about the same things you are, they may have thought about delaying you, but they also don't want their kid to be the only one. So this becomes a numbers challenge, but partnership can help us. If your child's already on social media, what I'd recommend is to create sacred spaces in their lives that are technology free. And specifically, I would think about the hour before bedtime and throughout the night as time that you want to protect. Because kids are losing not just sleep
Starting point is 02:14:03 because they're going to sleep later because they're on their devices, but they're also waking up in the middle of the night. Maybe to use a bathroom, maybe to get some water and then they get back on their devices again. So the quality of their sleep is being significantly impacted by access to those devices during the night.
Starting point is 02:14:17 So I would protect that time, hour before bed throughout the night. I would also create, make sure meal times were tech free zones so that people actually, that you talk to one another, you see one another, and time with friends and family members when you're out at a birthday party, et cetera, make their tech free time, let them focus on their time with other people. Those three tech free zones can do a world of good to help your child. And the last thing I'd recommend here, the many things I think parents could do, is to start a dialogue with your child about their
Starting point is 02:14:50 use of social media. We don't always know how social media is making our kids feel. From the item, and we may realize when we talk to them that they actually have their own concerns. They might say, yeah, it's not making me feel really good, but it's just like card not to be on it. Everyone's like texting on this. Everyone is, you know, everyone's, you know, sharing information and posting pictures on it. I feel like I need to be on it. You can only help them start to manage that if you know that that's a challenge that they're having. So, opening a conversation so your child knows that you're not judging them, but you're trying to understand their experience is important. Also, so that you can help them understand what is not acceptable for them to experience on social media. If they're being harassed or bullied by strangers, that is a problem.
Starting point is 02:15:32 You want your child to tell you about that, to report that. If they see something posted online that's really concerning to them, let's say they see a friend post that they're thinking of taking their own life or harming themselves in another way. You want them to know that that's important to flying and to get help, you know, that they shouldn't just, you know, scroll past that. So that conversation is really important. And finally, as parents, we can lead by example, right? And this is hard because the truth is, we've been talking about social media and youth, and that's what the subject of my search and journal's advisory was on. But I have concerns about adults too.
Starting point is 02:16:04 I said, as somebody who's had challenges in my own use, you know, of social media, finding sometimes it bleeds, you know, past my bedtime. And I'm realized, you know, I think M&H checks something for five minutes. And hour later, I'm still there, you know, scrolling through something. And sometimes I, you know, I find myself, I have over the years, I find myself comparing myself also to posts I see online in unhealthy ways. Sometimes I find myself, over the years, I find myself comparing myself also to posts I see online in unhealthy ways. Sometimes I find myself sort of pulled into content that ends up being angry and vitriolic and leaves me feeling worse at the end.
Starting point is 02:16:36 So I've experienced this as well. And I think it's parents one of the hardest things to do is to follow this advice we're giving our kids to draw those boundaries as well. And to put our devices away when we're around our kids, one experience I had which sort of, I still feel bad about, but which really helped kind of knock some sense into me, was after my son was born, my older child,
Starting point is 02:16:57 I was actually, I was searchin' general at that time, you know, I had, you know, the local non was busy job, et cetera, but I wanted to make sure that I protected bed times and meal times for our subitigathers of family. Yet, one day when I came home, you know, after dinner, when we were doing the bath time and bed time routine, getting my son ready for the night, my wife was changing his diaper, and instead of helping, I was just standing at the side scrolling through my inbox, and my wife, who is infinite patience, and is like one of the most well-adjusted people that
Starting point is 02:17:27 I know just paused. And she turned to me and Alice said, do you really need to be doing that right now? And she said just very quietly, but I felt such a sense of shame when she did it because it was like, what am I doing? This is my infant child, and the rare few hours I have with him during the day. I'm just scrolling through my inbox, my phone, this is terrible. Look, I know that all of us do this,
Starting point is 02:17:59 it may be in different contexts, but I was a wake up moment for me because I realized one one, like, as you know, well, as a neuroscientist, we can't really multitask, right? We're rapidly task switching, right? And that was time in my, when I had was in my inbox and my head wasn't with him, you know, my heart wasn't with them, right? I was just distracted.
Starting point is 02:18:19 And so as parents, if we can honor those sacred times, you know, when we're with our children to keep our devices away, meal times, sleep time as well. It's not easy to do, but it really sets a good example for our kids. All behavior change that we're talking about here, the kind of behavior change I've worked with the patients over the years around physical activity and diet, all of this is harder to do when we're doing it by ourselves. It's a lot easier to do when we have a couple of friends or family members who we agree to do this with. We hold each other accountable,
Starting point is 02:18:53 we encourage and support each other. It's how I've been able to make the most successful behavior changes I've made in my life have come about because I have two good buddies, Dave and Sunny, who are part of my brotherhood, and the three of us as brothers talk about health. We talk about our finances. We talk about our family and our friendships and our failings, and we help keep each other
Starting point is 02:19:15 accountable. I would just encourage parents, like, is this sounds daunting or overwhelming? You don't have to do this alone. Think about one or two people, other parents who you might want to do this with. And I guarantee you, there are a lot of us struggling with the same stuff. And they would probably welcome an opportunity to do this in collaboration with another parent. Such spectacular advice that I hope everyone will follow, not just for their kids, but for themselves. I think that whether or not social media is addictive in the true sense of the word is kind of a meaningless debate at this point.
Starting point is 02:19:49 It's at the very least a compulsive behavior for many of us, and as you described it in the example you gave, it becomes reflexive. We're just, you know, we're not necessarily seeking pleasure or looking to engage in online battles. It's just, it's become reflexive. So like finding yourself with your hand in the refrigerator, just you can't even think about it, you're just doing it. So becoming more conscious of the use and thereby more conscious of the value of putting away the screens and social media for extended periods of time each day.
Starting point is 02:20:21 And certainly in the middle of the night, folks, neuroplasticity, brain rewiring happens in the middle of the night while you're asleep. And when you mention kids certainly in the middle of the night, folks, neuroplasticity, brain rewiring happens in the middle of the night while you're asleep. And when you mentioned kids awake in the middle of the night, looking at their phone, I just, I saw you phone, oh my goodness, it just, it pains me. And I've looked at my phone in the middle of the night, I try not to, but I'm certainly not in the window of maximum plasticity. Either it's terrible for everybody, but especially terrible for kids. What you just provided is an incredible, let's just call it a, I'll call it a mandate.
Starting point is 02:20:51 You didn't say it, but a suggestion of teaming up with people to become more like-minded around these issues and to really promote health. Along those lines, I really wanna thank you. First of all, for the conversation today, you're incredibly busy, you're responsible for an entire country is worth of people. So to take time to sit down with me and to discuss these topics for our audiences, it incredibly appreciated by me and by them, I feel comfortable extending their gratitude
Starting point is 02:21:23 here. And it's also clear based on today's conversation that you face an enormous number of challenges by them, I feel comfortable extending their gratitude here. And it's also clear based on today's conversation that you face an enormous number of challenges at the level of budgetary challenges. By the way, I'm going to work on that. It's hard to shut me up as well as the huge array of issues that you confront. And it's clear that it's a challenge that you've embraced for many years now, 100 difficult conditions and that you're clearly willing to get out and talk to people and
Starting point is 02:21:51 hear their criticism, hear their concerns, hear and learn from them. And so it's been a great benefit to us to hear and learn from you. And I hope this won't be the last of our conversations. Now, there's many more topics to cover, but I just really want to thank you. Thanks ever so much for the intellectual power and the emotional power that you put into what you do, because that is very clear. You're a physician first, and you care about your patients, and your patients are all of us.
Starting point is 02:22:20 So thank you so much. Andrew, that's for so many just incredible kind of you. Thank you. I appreciate that. And I've loved our conversation. And for me, what I hope most of all for my kids for our country more broadly is that we can go deeper, like beneath these surface issues, I worry that we find ourselves disagreeing
Starting point is 02:22:46 about and fighting about online, and recognize that there is a deeper challenge that we are facing that I think underlies a lot of these, the anger and the vitriol, and this issue around how disconnected we've become from one another, I think is at the heart of that. I don't think that there's any policy or program we can implement. That's going to ultimately fix what A.L. society without fundamentally realizing that a lot of this is a manifestation of a society that has become more disconnected and more disinvested in one another, like over time. And that's just not who we are. It's not how we evolved over thousands of years. It's not how we're going to thrive in the future. So I know that sometimes when you look at these
Starting point is 02:23:29 big, intractable problems, like widespread loneliness in the United States, that it can seem like hard to address these. But I do want to encourage everyone to recognize that when it comes to human connection, that it is small steps that can make a big difference because we are hardwired to connect as human beings. And if you just pause for a moment and if you just think for a moment in your own life about someone who has been there for you during a time of great need, somebody who has stood up for you and you couldn't stand up for yourself, someone who's helped to remind you of why you're still a good person, why you still have worth and value to add to the world, even when you had lost faith in yourself.
Starting point is 02:24:16 When you think about their faith in you, about their support for you, about their love for you, think about how healing that was. That's the power that we have to help each other heal. We are going through an identity crisis in many ways as a country, where I think we need to ask ourselves, who are we? Like, what defines who we are? What are the set of values that we want to guide us in our life and to guide our country? And I know that it feels like we're a nation of people who are mean, who only care about ourselves, we're throwing blame and anger at each other all the time,
Starting point is 02:24:58 who are pessimistic about the future. But I actually don't think that's really who we are. I think at our heart, we are hopeful and optimistic people. I think in our true nature, we are kind and generous to one another. In our hearts, we are interdependent creatures who recognize that if someone also suffering, we want to be out there to support them, and we want people to be there to support us as well. That's who we really are. But we have to make a clear choice here about our identity, you know, as individuals and as a country. And recognize that that choice is real implications
Starting point is 02:25:41 for everything else that we're talking about here. That's the foundation. And when I think about my own kids growing up, like many parents I worry about the world that they're coming into, I worry that they're gonna use the wrong word even though their intentions are right and people are gonna blame them or cast them out.
Starting point is 02:26:03 I worry that they're gonna stumble and fall down and people are just gonna keep them or cast them out. I worry that they're going to stumble and fall down and people just think you're walking by. Not caring, because everyone's living their own life. I worried that they might become someone who does the same thing to other people, none of which I want. What I want for all of our kids is for them to grow up in a society where we care about one another. We have each other's backs.
Starting point is 02:26:22 We recognize as that old African proverb goes, that we can go fast if we go alone, but if we really want to go far, we go together. And that's what I want for my kids in our country, but that's what we each have the power to create in our own lives. It starts with the decisions we make, but how we treat one another.
Starting point is 02:26:42 Do we, for example, reach out for five minutes a day to someone that we care about? Do we pick up the phone and call them to say, hey, I'm thinking about you, we can all do that today. Do we give people the benefit of our full attention? Recognizing that while time is scarce, our attention has the ability to stretch time. It can make five minutes feel like half an hour, but it's a hard thing for people to get because they're distracted by their devices, but do we give people the benefit of our full attention?
Starting point is 02:27:09 And do we look for ways to serve one another, recognizing that it's through our acts of service that we actually forge powerful connections, but we also remind ourselves how much value we have to bring to the world. And this is important in the time when the self-esteem of so many of us and our young people in particular is being eroded, particularly by their use of social media. So these are the steps that we can take to build connection in our life. But the core values, I believe, that have to be at the heart of our identity. These values around kindness and generosity, around courage and service. These also have to animate the decisions that we make in our life about programs we advocate for,
Starting point is 02:27:53 the policies we support, the leaders we choose. These should all be reflections of the values that we want to see in our children and in society more broadly, because I'll tell you that 90% of the plus of the decisions leaders make, they make behind closed doors. And what's guiding them in those moments are their values. That's true, whether you're the leader of a company or a nonprofit organization or a leader in government. So those values matter. And I want us as a country to speak more about
Starting point is 02:28:20 the values that we choose, about the identity that we want to anchor ourselves to. That's the way in which I feel like America can be an even greater beacon of hope for the world. Because the world is struggling with this too. We're not the only ones who are dealing with loneliness and isolation. We're seeing anger and resentment and vitriol bubble up at extraordinary levels. We're seeing mistrust and institutions soar. Many countries are experiencing this. I would love America to lead the way in some ways, in showing what it's like to embrace some more human identity that centered around kindness and service and friendship and generosity. Like to me, all of these values ultimately Andrew stem from love.
Starting point is 02:29:06 Love is our greatest source of power. It's our greatest source of healing. I say that as a doctor, he's prescribed many medicines over the years, but there are a few things more powerful than love and its ability to help us through difficult times and help mend the wounds seen and unseen that we all carry with us. And I think if we recognize that, we recognize that, you know, we don't have to have an MD after our name, or have gone to nursing school to be healers. We all have the power to help each other heal. Like Andrew, we are not fundamentally a nation of bystanders, who just stand by while other people suffer.
Starting point is 02:29:46 Like we're a nation of healers and hope makers who can restore hope that the future can be better, who can create a better life for ourselves and the people around us right now. So we're capable of. It's what we're built for. And that's the identity that I think we now more than ever need to embrace Amen Thank you for that I agree love is
Starting point is 02:30:13 Definitely the verb that can get us where we need to go Thank you so much for your words for your incredible efforts to support public health and for your incredible efforts to support public health and hopefully to continue to support public health. I know you've been at this a long time and we have all benefited and thanks for your open mindedness especially around some of the questions that invoke some challenge. And again, for your taking the time to come talk with us today. And I really also enjoyed it. It's been a real pleasure. And there was a lot of learning for me.
Starting point is 02:30:49 And like I said before, I hope it won't be the last time. I hope not, either. Now, I look forward to the next time to stay in touch and just love this conversation. Thank you for what you've done for being this beautiful channel of information for the public. But it's most importantly, thank you for what you've done for being this beautiful channel of information for the public. It's most importantly, thank you for who you are. Who are Andrew? Like, come to Cross very clearly. When I meet you, you have a good heart and you have
Starting point is 02:31:14 good intentions. You're a good man. And we need more people like you in the world. Thank you right back at you. Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Dr. Vivek Murthy, the surgeon general of the United States. I hope you found it me for today's discussion with Dr. Vivek Murthy, the surgeon general of the United States. I hope you found it to be as informative as I did. If you're learning from Endor and enjoying this podcast, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. That's a terrific zero cost way to support us.
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