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Amir

Dr Amir Khan on kindness, community and caring for mind and body

Some conversations remind us why healthcare is, at its heart, about people. This episode of Yorkshire Talks does exactly that.

Matt Jameson and Christine Talbot are joined by Dr Amir Khan, the GP millions recognise from ITV. Warm, approachable and endlessly reassuring on screen, Amir is just as thoughtful and engaging away from the cameras. What unfolds is a funny, honest and deeply human conversation about medicine, identity, kindness and what it really means to care for others.

Call the Doctor! with Dr Amir Khan | Yorkshire Talks Series 2

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Growing up, belonging and finding your place

For the first time, Amir speaks openly about his childhood in Bradford, growing up as the only brother in a lively Muslim family of six sisters. He reflects on the strength and humour of his upbringing, shaped by family, faith and the now famous presence of Mama Khan, whose warmth and wisdom continue to ground him.

These early experiences, Amir explains, played a huge role in shaping his values as a doctor. Growing up in a close knit, community focused environment helped him understand the importance of listening, empathy and cultural awareness. Skills that matter just as much in a consulting room as medical knowledge.

Life as an NHS GP behind the TV cameras

While many people know Amir from television, he remains a full time NHS GP. In this episode, he talks candidly about balancing media work with frontline clinical care, and why staying connected to patients is essential to who he is.

He speaks about caring for some of the most vulnerable people in society and the responsibility that comes with that role. About the emotional weight GPs carry. About the small interactions that stay with you long after a clinic ends. Amir’s reflections offer a rare insight into the realities of modern general practice and the quiet resilience required to keep showing up.

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Laughter, honesty and the human side of medicine

There is plenty of laughter throughout the conversation. Amir reveals his mischievous side, including a cheeky white lie told early in his career, and a prank involving a urine sample that still makes him cringe. These moments of humour matter. They remind us that doctors are human too, navigating nerves, embarrassment and learning curves just like everyone else.

By sharing these stories, Amir gently breaks down the invisible barrier that often exists between patients and clinicians. Trust, he believes, grows when people feel safe enough to be themselves.

Health beyond prescriptions

As the conversation deepens, Amir speaks passionately about health as something broader than diagnosis or medication. He talks about kindness as a health intervention in its own right. About community as a protective factor against loneliness and poor mental health. About compassion as something that benefits both the person receiving care and the person giving it.

He also shares his love of animals and nature, and how spending time outdoors helps him reset and stay grounded. These reflections echo growing evidence that connection with nature, routine and simple pleasures can have a meaningful impact on wellbeing.

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Powering up the brain

Amir also offers practical advice on keeping the brain healthy, drawing on both clinical knowledge and everyday habits. He talks about the importance of sleep, staying curious, social connection and movement. Small, sustainable actions that support cognitive health across the lifespan.

Rather than presenting quick fixes, Amir emphasises consistency and kindness towards yourself. Health, he reminds us, is built gradually through daily choices, not perfection.

A doctor people trust

What makes this episode so compelling is the balance between warmth and substance. Amir is funny, reflective and deeply sincere. He speaks with clarity about the challenges facing healthcare, but also with hope about what still works. Human connection. Compassion. Community.

This conversation reveals the man behind the TV doctor. A GP who takes his responsibility seriously. A son shaped by family. A clinician who believes that listening is one of the most powerful tools in medicine.

Patient picks for Yorkshire Talks

Lindsey Burrow on love, caregiving and life after loss

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Lindsey Burrow on love, caregiving and life after loss

Some stories change the way a country talks about illness, love and resilience. Not because they are extraordinary in a sensational sense, but because they reveal what happens inside ordinary families when life becomes unimaginably hard. Matt Jameson and Christine Talbot sit down with Lindsey Burrow, mother, campaigner and the devoted wife of Rob Burrow. Together, Rob and Lindsey became the public face of love in the face of motor neurone disease. Their story moved millions not because it sought attention, but because it showed what commitment, dignity and compassion look like when everything else is stripped away. This conversation is not simply about loss. It is about caring, endurance, identity and what it means to keep showing up for the people you love when the future becomes uncertain.

von Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

Jono Lancaster über Identität, seltene Krankheiten und den Mut, sich selbst anzunehmen

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Jono Lancaster über Identität, seltene Krankheiten und den Mut, sich selbst anzunehmen

Jono Lancaster on identity, rare conditions and the courage to embrace yourself: a powerful Yorkshire Talks conversation This episode of Yorkshire Talks is one of those moments. Before the cameras even begin rolling, it is clear that Jono Lancaster brings with him a presence shaped not by fame, but by lived experience, compassion and an extraordinary emotional clarity. Jono’s story has reached millions across the world. Many know him from his uplifting memoir Not All Heroes Wear Capes or from his recent Channel 4 series Love My Face, where he stepped into the homes and the hearts of families navigating visible differences. But sitting with Matt Jameson and Christine Talbot, we meet Jono not as a presenter or an author, but as a man whose life has been shaped by early rejection, profound resilience and a lifelong commitment to helping others feel seen.

von Thomas Andrew Porteus, MBCS

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