

Why wellness 3.0 is playing out offline
Lightning-fast wifi, on-demand entertainment and never being far from a phone charger have been the modern metrics of a life well-lived, both at work and home. So why are the best-connected women suddenly booking digital detoxes and scouring eBay for brick phones? WH computes how logging off became 2025’s wellness power move
How Davina got her joy back
When Davina McCall was diagnosed with a rare brain tumour in August 2023, she was reassured by the word ‘benign’. But after learning that the tumour left her with a one in 100 risk of sudden death, she set about training for her toughest challenge yet: brain surgery. Six months on, she reveals the role fitness has played in her recovery
The intoxicating allure of the buzzy health narrative
Meta’s fired its fact-checkers and vaccine-sceptic Robert F KennedyJr is now US Secretary of Health. As a trippy new era of alternative facts gains traction, WH examines why misinformation – especially when it comes to mind and body – feels more nourishing than a hard body of evidence
The mums are not okay
As maternal mental health month collides with the 10th anniversary of Shared Parental Leave, WH’s features director – an exhausted mum of two – asks what the dream model of labour division really birthed
The English way
In the four years since she filmed herself making a salad from her locked-down kitchen, and launched a probiotic brand. But from cooking meals for her four siblings from the of disordered eating, her meteoric rise has been simmering for decades. As she Emily English has amassed more than a million followers, written a bestselling cookbook Bedford council state where she grew up to recovering from a debilitating episode prepares to publish book two, WH meets the woman behind the glossy grid posts
THE PANDEMIC FIVE YEARS ON
We suspect you know where you were, half a decade ago this spring, when then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the country to ‘stay home, protect the NHS, save lives’. But as research paints an increasingly detailed picture of the ways in which those years shaped everything from our health habits to our identities, academics are asking a different question: who were you back then? And who are you now?
Why wellness 3.0 is playing out offline
Lightning-fast wifi, on-demand entertainment and never being far from a phone charger have been the modern metrics of a life well-lived, both at work and home. So why are the best-connected women suddenly booking digital detoxes and scouring eBay for brick phones? WH computes how logging off became 2025’s wellness power move
How Davina got her joy back
When Davina McCall was diagnosed with a rare brain tumour in August 2023, she was reassured by the word ‘benign’. But after learning that the tumour left her with a one in 100 risk of sudden death, she set about training for her toughest challenge yet: brain surgery. Six months on, she reveals the role fitness has played in her recovery
The intoxicating allure of the buzzy health narrative
Meta’s fired its fact-checkers and vaccine-sceptic Robert F KennedyJr is now US Secretary of Health. As a trippy new era of alternative facts gains traction, WH examines why misinformation – especially when it comes to mind and body – feels more nourishing than a hard body of evidence
The mums are not okay
As maternal mental health month collides with the 10th anniversary of Shared Parental Leave, WH’s features director – an exhausted mum of two – asks what the dream model of labour division really birthed
The English way
In the four years since she filmed herself making a salad from her locked-down kitchen, and launched a probiotic brand. But from cooking meals for her four siblings from the of disordered eating, her meteoric rise has been simmering for decades. As she Emily English has amassed more than a million followers, written a bestselling cookbook Bedford council state where she grew up to recovering from a debilitating episode prepares to publish book two, WH meets the woman behind the glossy grid posts
THE PANDEMIC FIVE YEARS ON
We suspect you know where you were, half a decade ago this spring, when then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson told the country to ‘stay home, protect the NHS, save lives’. But as research paints an increasingly detailed picture of the ways in which those years shaped everything from our health habits to our identities, academics are asking a different question: who were you back then? And who are you now?