
Picture this: A young, Cornell-trained psychiatrist, armed with an MIT neuroscience degree, specializing in medicating pregnant women, eating McDonald’s for lunch and downing six cups of coffee a day
Written by Kelly Brogan MD

Picture this: A young, Cornell-trained psychiatrist, armed with an MIT neuroscience degree, specializing in medicating pregnant women, eating McDonald’s for lunch and downing six cups of coffee a day
Written by Mike Stone

In the late 19th century, scientific medicine underwent a foundational shift—from the belief that miasma, or “bad air,” caused disease—to a germ-centered approach that focused on bacteria as the primary culprits
Written by Dr. Matthew Wielicki

I entered science to follow evidence… not narratives. Most researchers still do, yet each time a “new record” pops up from a thermometer hemmed in by taxiways and jet engines, the integrity I signed up to protect takes another hit
Written by Jerm Warfare

Germar Rudolf, born in 1964 in Germany, is a chemist who graduated from Bonn University. Initially accepting the official narrative about Zyklon B, his scientific training eventually led him to question the claims surrounding what occurred in the Auschwitz gas chambers
Written by Dr. Samantha Boardman

Here are 15 simple, evidence-backed activities that boost resilience—no couch time necessary
Written by Independent Medical Alliance

The shocking truth about SSRIs: minimal efficacy, serious withdrawal, and a debunked serotonin theory. Author Laura Delano joins Dr. Varon and Dr. Marik to discuss her book “Unshrunk”
Written by Dr Steven L. Robertson

In the 19th century, a scientific rivalry emerged that would influence the direction of modern medicine
Written by Ian Brighthope

In the evolving landscape of mental health care, the gut-brain axis has emerged as a pivotal link between physical well-being and psychological stability
Written by Michael Schulson

As trust in public health plummets across the U.S., Idaho has become a testing ground for a big question: What does it look like to put a vision of individual health freedom into practice?
Written by Andy Rowlands

On August 1st, a website called BBC Future published an article entitled The world is getting hotter – this is what it is doing to our brains
Written by Elizabeth Kucinich

The FDA has approved nearly 700 drugs for use in food-producing animals, residues of which contaminate America’s meat supply and are stored in animal fat
Written by Vijay Jayaraj

By refusing to play by the EU’s restrictive climate rules, Poland has begun to build one of Europe’s most energy-secure economies
Written by Dr Sam Bailey

When it comes to germ “theory” we are used to hearing names such as Louis Pasteur, Robert Koch and Joseph Lister. However, some mainstream sources are now listing Florence Nightingale as one of “germ theory’s key 19th century figures”[1].
Written by Larry Bell

While the demand for additional electricity over the past 20 years has been in the range of a few percent per year, AI and data centers will need an estimated 13% to 15% more per year alone for their power-hungry infrastructure.
Written by Sayer Ji

Here’s a question that might fundamentally challenge everything you’ve been taught about medicine: What if the real “quacks” aren’t the herbalists, homeopaths, or traditional healers, but the very establishment that coined the insult?
Written by Suranjana Tewari

Australia is betting big on a discovery with a billion dollar loan to a mining company to extract rare earth metals – and disrupt a supply chain that China has monopolised.