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Dr. Joseph Mercola - Take Control of Your Health

Dr. Joseph Mercola - Take Control of Your Health

Dr. Mercola · Briana Mercola

1,000 episodesEN

Show overview

Dr. Joseph Mercola - Take Control of Your Health has been publishing since 2021, and across the 5 years since has built a catalogue of 1,000 episodes. That works out to roughly 410 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a several-times-a-week cadence.

Episodes typically run under ten minutes — most land between 8 min and 16 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Health & Fitness show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 2 days ago, with 130 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 629 episodes published. Published by Briana Mercola.

Episodes
1,000
Running
2021–2026 · 5y
Median length
9 min
Cadence
Several per week

From the publisher

Listen to Dr. Mercola's Weekly Podcast, as the legendary natural health pioneer continues to lead you on your journey towards optimal health.

The Differences Between Prebiotics, Probiotics, and Postbiotics

May 16, 20266 min

Study Finds Linoleic Acid May Directly Influence Cancer Growth

May 15, 20266 min

High Use of Anticholinergic Drugs Linked to Increased Cardiovascular Disease Risk

May 14, 20266 min

Dipeptides and Tripeptides: The Emerging Frontier of Collagen Science

May 13, 20265 min

Just Like Cigarettes, Vaping Likely Causes Cancer, Major Study Finds

May 12, 20265 min

The Foods You're Eating Could Be the Source of Your Urinary Tract Infection

About 10.5 million Americans visit doctors annually for urinary tract infections (UTIs), and global cases rose 66% from 1990 to 2021, totaling 4.49 billion infections worldwide Research found that 18% of UTIs in Southern California came from animal-derived E. coli, with turkey (82%) and chicken (58%) showing the highest contamination rates Contaminated drinking water is an overlooked UTI source, as uropathogenic E. coli strains have been detected in water systems but rarely monitored for urinary infections High-poverty neighborhoods experienced 21.5% zoonotic UTI rates, suggesting limited food access and lower purchasing power increase exposure to contaminated meat products Prevention strategies include choosing grass fed meat from regenerative farms, improving kitchen hygiene, staying hydrated, and using cranberries, D-mannose, or methylene blue for natural bladder protection

Mar 4, 202612 min

Is Fiber the New Protein? The Surprising Health Benefits of the Latest Wellness Trend

Fiber has replaced protein as the latest wellness obsession, driven by social media trends, food industry marketing and growing concern over gut and metabolic health Most adults still consume far less fiber than recommended, a gap linked to digestive problems, unstable energy, blood sugar issues and higher chronic disease risk Fiber improves digestion, heart health, mood and brain function only when the gut environment is healthy, which explains why some people feel better while others feel worse when they increase intake Adding fiber too quickly or relying on fiber added to ultraprocessed foods often leads to bloating, gas and discomfort, especially in people with existing gut imbalance The safest way to benefit from fiber is to restore gut stability first, then increase fiber slowly using a wide variety of whole foods while avoiding dietary factors that damage gut and cellular health

Mar 4, 202613 min

How Butyrate Fuels GLP-1 — Your Gut's Built-In Weight Management System

Butyrate is a short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) produced when gut bacteria ferment dietary fiber. It serves as the primary fuel for colon cells, including L-cells that produce GLP-1 When your gut produces enough butyrate, natural GLP-1 secretion works properly, supporting appetite control, insulin sensitivity, and weight regulation This butyrate-driven GLP-1 pathway represents your body's built-in weight management system. My new book, "Weight Loss Cure; Melt Fat Naturally With Your Own GLP-1," provides a step-by-step plan to rebuild butyrate production, restore natural GLP-1 signaling, and correct the root drivers of weight gain Low butyrate production disrupts GLP-1 signaling and contributes to obesity, insulin resistance, and metabolic disease Beyond weight regulation, butyrate also supports gut integrity, immune balance, and protection against chronic disease

Mar 3, 202615 min

Low Vitamin D Levels Raise Risk of Hospitalization for Respiratory Tract Infections

Severe vitamin D deficiency is linked to a sharply higher risk of hospitalization for respiratory infections such as bronchitis and pneumonia, turning common illnesses into serious medical events Adults with the lowest vitamin D levels face worse outcomes after pneumonia, including a much higher risk of dying months after hospital discharge, even when initial illness appears mild Higher vitamin D levels are associated with fewer everyday respiratory infections like colds and flu, reducing how often illness disrupts work, sleep, and daily life Vitamin D deficiency is widespread, often silent, and driven by limited sunlight exposure and modern indoor lifestyles, making it a correctable risk factor rather than an unavoidable one Combining systemic immune support from vitamin D with early, localized airway defenses helps stop respiratory infections from gaining momentum before they escalate

Mar 3, 202615 min

Why Weight Loss Stalls When Your Cells Are Starving for the Wrong Fuel

My new book, "The Weight Loss Cure," offers a step-by-step guide to rebuilding your gut ecosystem so you can restore your body's natural weight-control system — no injections required Your gut produces the same GLP-1 hormone that weight-loss drugs like Ozempic mimic, meaning your body already has the natural machinery for appetite control and fat burning Damage from seed oils and low-fiber diets weakens your gut barrier, disrupts GLP-1 signaling, and causes inflammation that blocks weight loss A key gut bacterium called Akkermansia muciniphila helps repair your gut lining, balance blood sugar, and promote natural fat loss — even in its pasteurized, non-living form Restoring gut health begins with repairing the barrier, reducing linoleic acid intake, and gradually reintroducing diverse fibers to produce "Gut Gems" like butyrate that calm inflammation and stabilize metabolism

Mar 3, 202616 min

The Hidden Role of Bacteria in the Formation of Kidney Stones

Kidney stones form when minerals in urine crystallize and clump together. Among all types, calcium oxalate stones are the most common Calcium oxalate stones were long thought to result solely from physical and chemical processes, but a recent study found that bacteria are embedded inside them These bacteria form dense biofilms within the stone, creating sticky structures that give crystals more places to attach, helping the stone form and grow A separate study showed that kidneys host their own microbiome, where certain bacteria promote stone formation while others help limit crystal growth within kidney tissue Simple steps like staying hydrated, moderating oxalates, reducing seed oils, moving more, and avoiding unnecessary antibiotics can help lower stone risk while supporting kidney microbial health

Feb 25, 202612 min

This Widely Used Pesticide May Raise Your Parkinson's Risk by Over 2.5 Times

Parkinson's disease is a neurological disorder that gradually interferes with movement, coordination, and cognitive function. New research points to environmental exposures, not just age or genetics, as a risk factor Research links long-term chlorpyrifos exposure to a more than 2.5-fold increase in Parkinson's disease risk, especially when exposure occurred 10 to 20 years before diagnosis Chlorpyrifos, a widely used organophosphate pesticide, has remained part of agriculture for decades, creating repeated low-level exposure through food, air, water, and agricultural drift that affects large populations Beyond Parkinson's, chlorpyrifos has been linked to reduced IQ, developmental delays, thyroid disruption, impaired fertility, and respiratory problems You can protect yourself and your family from pesticides by choosing organic foods, filtering drinking water, and improving indoor air quality

Feb 25, 202614 min

Human Hearts Can Regrow Some Muscle Cells After Severe Damage

Heart attacks occur every 40 seconds in America, affecting a total of 805,000 people annually. It is characterized by blocked coronary arteries that starve cardiac muscle of blood flow Australian researchers found human hearts can regenerate muscle cells after heart attacks, with preserved cardiac tissue showing 7% to 8% mitosis rates (a measure of cell regeneration activity), though 25% to 50% is needed for full repair Hypoxia, which is the oxygen-deprived state during heart attacks, may also trigger regeneration, similar to how fetal hearts produce new cells in the low-oxygen womb environment Advanced heart failure reduces heart muscle cell renewal dramatically, but patients with mechanical heart pumps showed regeneration rates of 3.1% annually — six times higher than healthy hearts Prevention remains crucial. Strategies such as minimizing linoleic acid consumption, monitoring body fat percentage, engaging in moderate resistance training, and learning to recognize heart attack warning signs increase outcomes

Feb 25, 202613 min

Low Lycopene Intake Tied to Higher Risk of Severe Gum Disease

Severe gum disease reflects chronic inflammation and strongly links to broader health risks, including heart disease and diabetes, not just tooth loss Older adults with low dietary lycopene intake face a much higher risk of advanced gum disease compared to those who consume adequate amounts Cooked tomatoes paired with healthy fats improve lycopene absorption and support gum tissue resilience Smoking, frequent sugar intake, and ultraprocessed foods accelerate gum damage by feeding harmful bacteria and impairing blood flow to oral tissue Consistent whole-food nutrition, gentle daily oral care and mineral support strengthen gums from the inside out and lower long-term disease risk

Feb 24, 202614 min

Exploring the Link Between Niacin and Fatty Liver Disease

Fatty liver disease is the most common liver disorder, driven by obesity, Type 2 diabetes, and insulin resistance. It often progresses silently for years before symptoms appear Niacin helps your body use energy better. It turns down a molecule called microRNA-93, which normally blocks two key proteins that help your cells make energy and burn fat. By restoring those proteins, niacin helps your mitochondria work more efficiently. This shift supports fat burning in your liver instead of fat storage Higher niacin intake has been linked to reduced liver fat, lower inflammation, improved insulin sensitivity, better cholesterol levels, and reduced long-term mortality in fatty liver patients Niacinamide is the better choice compared to niacin because of its function as an NAD+ precursor. The ideal dosage is 50 milligrams three times a day, ideally in powder form for precise intake. Niacinamide also doesn't cause skin flushing Increasing choline intake is the best way to manage fatty liver disease. Research shows it helps transport fat out of the liver. While there are several types of choline supplements available, citicoline is the preferred one because of its high bioavailability

Feb 24, 202614 min

Hidden Fat in the Pancreas and Abdomen Linked to Brain Aging and Cognitive Decline

Hidden fat stored deep inside organs, especially the pancreas and abdomen, links to brain shrinkage, cognitive decline, and a higher risk of neurologic disease even when your weight looks normal An MRI-based study of 25,997 adults found that fat distribution patterns inside the body predict brain aging and cognitive outcomes more strongly than body mass index (BMI) alone People with high pancreatic fat showed around 30% fat concentration in the pancreas, which was up to six times higher than lean individuals and tied to extensive gray matter loss The "skinny fat" profile involved high internal abdominal fat despite only moderate BMI, with men showing the steepest decline in brain volume and slower thinking speed Simple metabolic assessments like fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, CRP, lipid profiles, and waist-based ratios offer practical ways to detect hidden risks early, before obvious symptoms appear

Feb 24, 202612 min

Reaching the Right Vitamin D Level Cuts Breast Cancer Risk in Half

Blood vitamin D levels, not supplement dose, determine breast cancer risk, with studies showing roughly a 40% to 50% lower risk once levels rise into protective ranges Women who maintain blood vitamin D levels around 50 to 60 ng/mL experience the greatest protection, while levels below 20 ng/mL consistently link to higher and more aggressive breast cancer risk Large pooled analyses and clinical trials show breast cancer risk drops step by step as vitamin D levels increase, with no evidence of harm at higher physiological levels Sunlight, exercise, and metabolic health strongly influence how much vitamin D actually reaches and protects breast tissue, explaining why intake alone often falls short Addressing low vitamin D by combining sunlight, targeted supplementation, exercise, and metabolic support turns vitamin D into a measurable, trackable strategy for long-term breast cancer prevention

Feb 23, 202614 min

Astaxanthin — A Therapeutic Agent in Cardiovascular Disease

Heart disease develops quietly over years as blood vessels lose resilience under oxidative and inflammatory stress, long before symptoms appear Astaxanthin supports heart health by protecting cell membranes and blood vessels from damage at the cellular level, rather than targeting surface-level markers alone Research shows astaxanthin helps maintain flexible blood vessels, steady blood flow, and healthier heart tissue during periods of high stress or reduced oxygen The benefits of astaxanthin depend on using natural sources and having it present before and during cardiovascular strain, not after damage has already occurred Reducing oxidative stress through diet, improving sleep timing, and supporting natural vitamin D production all reinforce the same vascular repair pathways astaxanthin supports

Feb 23, 202612 min

New Study Shows Hobbies Help People Find More Meaning in Their Jobs

A five-week study of nearly 200 working adults found that leisure crafting, using hobbies more intentionally, boosted creativity and meaning at work, often more strongly than benefits seen in participants' personal lives Creative activities like art, music, dance, and gaming are linked to younger-looking brain function, stronger connectivity, and greater mental flexibility Reading regularly strengthens brain function, delays cognitive decline, and may reduce Alzheimer's risk by up to five years, making it one of the most powerful, affordable habits for long-term mental health Cooking at home and free-form dancing both support brain and body health by improving mood, reducing stress, and encouraging you to experiment Being intentional with your health by improving your diet, moving more, and getting sunlight can boost your energy, focus, and resilience so you can fully enjoy the hobbies that bring you joy

Feb 21, 202612 min

Arthritis Is Forcing Millions of Americans Out of Work

Arthritis-related disability remains high, with nearly half of adults with arthritis struggling to perform basic daily movements that affect independence, mobility, and quality of life About 40% of working-age adults with arthritis report that the condition limits their ability to work, threatening income, job security, and long-term financial stability during prime earning years Difficulty with walking and climbing stairs is the strongest signal of serious disability, showing that loss of mobility — not just pain — drives work and activity limitations Arthritis-related limitations are far more severe when other chronic conditions such as heart disease, diabetes, anxiety, or depression are present, compounding physical and economic strain Addressing root drivers like chronic inflammation, excess mechanical joint stress, and impaired cellular energy slows joint damage and helps preserve mobility and work capacity

Feb 20, 202615 min