Episode 33: Is it all the media's fault?

The podcast features Siri Helle, a psychologist who wrote the book, Smarter than your phone, about social media, and Amelia Adamo, who has worked with media since the 1970s. Is it the media that creates our health anxiety or does it help us with the answers? How should we relate to all the advice, exhortations and good-looking and successful people that are everywhere in social media? Does comparing ourselves to others make us sick or does finding like-minded people online make us healthy?


Contact us

Environment and Public Health Institute

The movie house
Borgvägen 1
115 53 Stockholm

info@ephi.se

Org. number: 559342-4947

Latest from ephi.se on TT

Party healthy with Bingo Rimér

Party healthy with Bingo Rimér

Bingo Rimér, no longer a girl photographer, talks about everything from couples therapy to the quality of her sperm. Loneliness is more dangerous than...

Podcast: Health for the unhealthy

178. Benjamin Dousa saves the snuff

White snus is under threat on three fronts, says Sweden's Minister for Development Cooperation and Foreign Trade Benjamin Dousa. He tells us what the government will do to stop tax increases and bans.

read more

177. Healthy cosmetic surgery

Journalist Erik Galli answers whether cosmetic surgery can improve well-being, and whether being able to move your forehead is really desirable. 

read more

176. Reduced VAT on food, a bad idea

VAT is not a left-right issue, says Patrick Krassén, tax policy expert at Företagarna. Can the reduced VAT on food get rid of inflation? Or is it just election pork that risks leading to an even fatter population? We find out in today's...

read more

175. Sport and gender

Sex hormones affect both strength and endurance. Therefore, athletes who have gone through male puberty should never compete with women, says Tommy Lundberg, associate professor of physiology at Karolinska Institutet.

read more

174. All about functional medicine

Peter Martin, CEO of FunMed, talks about how functional medicine can help patients get to the bottom of their health problems, while publicly funded healthcare could cut costs. 

read more