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Doctor Warrick Bishop - Heart HealthHeart Attacks are Preventable! Author: Doctor Warrick Bishop Language: en Genres: Health & Fitness, Medicine Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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EP443: Medication Apprehension
Sunday, 21 June, 2026
Welcome to my podcast. I am Doctor Warrick Bishop, and I want to help you to live as well as possible for as long as possible. Iām a practising cardiologist, best-selling author, keynote speaker, and the creator of The Healthy Heart Network. I have over 20 years as a specialist cardiologist and a private practice of over 10,000 patients. Episode Overview Dr. Warrick Bishop, a cardiologist, author, keynote speaker, and CEO of the Healthy Heart Network, hosts this solo episode focused on practical lessons from recent patient consultations. Using two anonymized patient cases, he explores the psychological and emotional dimensions of managing chronic conditions and medication adherence. Key Takeaways: A reframe from frustration to gratitude can transform a patient's relationship with their medications ā Dr. Bishop shares his own experience with glaucoma eye drops as a personal example of this mindset shift. Modern medical treatments, whether tablets or eye drops, represent remarkable advances that deserve appreciation rather than resentment. There are only three types of medication side effects: anaphylactic reactions, idiosyncratic reactions, and dose-related intolerances ā and only the third is typically negotiable. Anaphylactic and idiosyncratic reactions are absolute contraindications to restarting a medication, while dose-related intolerances can often be managed by adjusting the amount taken. When managing dose-related intolerances, starting at an extremely low dose is a valid and sensible medical strategy, not a compromise. Excessive anxiety about a medication can block productive clinical conversations and prevent patients from receiving beneficial treatment. Patients sometimes invest disproportionate emotional energy into manageable medical decisions, energy better reserved for truly serious life challenges. Doctors should meet patients where they are emotionally before attempting to problem-solve or prescribe. Staying on even partial therapy (such as ezetimibe alone) during a medication dispute is better than stopping treatment entirely. Calm, collaborative problem-solving between doctor and patient leads to better outcomes than fear-driven decision-making.













