STAT January 27, 2026
Alexa Lee

Meet the medical experts, pseudoscientific entertainers, and MAHA mobilizers

The era of wellness content — and its frumpier, under-resourced sibling health education content — has arrived in the online influencer space with aplomb. Tune into a “Call Her Daddy” podcast episode on getting through a breakup and you’ll receive a special discount code for online therapy. Watch the world’s most popular YouTuber pit 50 of his colleagues against one another for a cash prize, only to realize you’ve walked into an ad for wearable health tech.

At the same time, as health educators compete for attention against TikTok’s ruthless algorithms and Substack’s top echelon of popular writers, their content often mimics entertainment content — with varying degrees of success. The...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
ZeOmega

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: Govt Agencies, HHS, Patient / Consumer, Provider
Infographic: 3 Social Media Tips for CNOs
What Home-Based Care Consumers Really Want
283: A candid conversation: Physicians on the front lines of GLP‑1 care
The 250 best hospitals, according to Healthgrades
Doctors Increasingly See AI Scribes in a Positive Light. But Hiccups Persist.

Share Article