¶ Intro / Opening
This BBC Podcast is supported by ads outside the UK. Tem quebrar, onde? Jag har fått in larm om det för sken barn. Hej, Alexandra Rappa här. Jag spelar Veronika Gren i serien Veronika. Jag undrar om du har sett mils. Du är inte fattar vilket är det har att göra med. Som är tillbaka med säson 3. Den här utredningen som jag håller på. Problematisk för oss. Streamar Veronica Säsong Trén nu, bara på Sky Showtime. Här hör vi hjärt lagen. Vi finns här när du vill räkna på bolån. För alltid.
Have you practiced your listening with the listening room yet? Listen to real BBC news reports and answer the questions to practice your listening skills. From Lionel Messi to Guerrilla Friendships, you'll find lots to interest you. Go to the skills section of our website now, bbclearningenglish.com and improve your listening today.
¶ Saunas: Popularity and Personal Experiences
Hello, this is Six Minute English from BBC Learning English. I'm Neil. And I'm Georgie. In winter, people find different ways of keeping warm, like wearing extra clothes or staying indoors. But in some countries there's another way of keeping the cold out, going for a sauna. Yes, Nordic countries like Sweden and Finland have a long history of taking saunas, but now they're popping up in Britain too.
Have you ever been for a sauna, Georgie? I have, yes, and if I'm honest, I'm not a huge fan. I don't really like being too hot. It's uncomfortable. What about you, Neil? Oh, really? I quite like a sauna. You feel really refreshed afterwards. So what is a sauna? Well a typical sauna is a small wooden room heated with steam to around eighty degrees Celsius.
It's hot enough to make anyone sweat. But are saunas good for your health as well? That's what James Gallagher wanted to find out for BBC Radio four program Inside Health. We're seeing what saunas do to the human body. They're popping up all over the country with claims that high temperatures boost your health and well being. But are they all they're cracked up to be? James wants to find out if saunas are all they're cracked up to be. He means are they as good as people say?
And that's exactly what we'll be finding out in this episode, along with some useful new words and phrases. And remember you can practice all the new vocabulary from this episode with the quiz and worksheet on our website. BBC Learning English dot com But now I have a question for you, Georgie. The word sauna comes from the Finnish language, but what does it mean? Does it mean a sweat?
B hot water or C bathhouse. Ooh, I'm going to guess C bathhouse. Okay, well we'll find out if you're right at the end of the program. In recent winters, saunas have grown in popularity in the UK. BBC reporter James Gallagher met some people going to Moor A Sauna, a beach sauna in South Wales. He asked them why they love saunas so much. Hello everyone. Who loves a sauna? Tell me why. Oh it's just
so relaxing and it just makes you feel at ease. It's also great for um relaxing muscles and if you're up tense or anything like that at all. Yeah I always love coming down here when I'm a bit stressed out um and by the time that I'm finished I feel like I've completely reset. It's wonderful.
The first speaker says saunas make her feel at ease, a phrase meaning comfortable and relaxed. And the next speaker thinks saunas are great if you feel tense, an adjective meaning worried and unable to relax. Saunas make the final speaker feel like she's reset. You might already know the word reset to mean turning a computer off and on again when it's not working, but used in connection with a person, reset means to start again after a rest so that you feel better about life.
So it seems saunas do help people feel better, but is there actual medical evidence that it's good for us?
¶ Exploring Sauna Health Benefits and Data
Here's James Gallagher again speaking with Professor Damian Bailey, an expert in human physiology for BBC Radio 4 program Inside Health. When we start to connect this to the arguments around health benefits. Is there a health benefit to going in a sauna? Yeah. I mean I looked at the research really closely. I was fascinated by the evidence. Huge benefits. I mean, really huge benefits.
And it's cultural of course. Five million people in Finland, ninety percent of them use saunas. Maybe we should be copying what the Finns do, because there's a forty percent reduction in all cause mortality with the saunagoas. Now this is what we would call observational data, but it's based on thousands and thousands of saunagoers.
These are observational data sets, so we really do need what we call RCTs, randomized controlled trials. So everything, just as you've mentioned there, everything is absolutely controlled. But we can't turn our noses up at the current data, the observational data. Damien discusses the evidence from Finland, a country where ninety percent of the population are regular sauna goers, and it's impressive, a forty percent reduction in deaths from all causes.
But it's important to remember that this is based on observational data, information collected from watching people's natural behavior and not from controlled medical trials. Nevertheless, this observational data is based on evidence from thousands and thousands of Finns over many years. That's why Damien thinks we shouldn't turn our noses up at it. We shouldn't reject it simply because we think it's not good enough for us.
¶ Vocabulary Review and Conclusion
Well, all this talk about saunas has made me want to give it another try. But not before you reveal the answer to your question, Neil. I asked you what the Finnish word sauna means. Is it A sweat, B hot water or C bathhouse? And I said bathhouse, am I right? You are absolutely correct. Well done. Yay. Okay, let's recap the vocabulary we've learned in this episode.
If something is not all it's cracked up to be, it isn't as good as people say. When someone's at ease, they feel comfortable and unstressed, whereas a tense person is worried and unable to relax. When someone resets they start again after a rest which has made them feel better about life. Observational data is information collected from watching people's natural behavior without interfering in it.
And finally, if you turn your nose up at something, you reject it because you think it's not good enough for you. Once again, our six minutes are up, but if you want to improve your English with more trending topics and useful vocabulary, you'll find plenty on our website, bbclearningenglish.com. See you again soon, but for now it's goodbye. Goodbye.
Jag flyttar in förra veckan. Det är bara några rör köker som ska bytas ut. Sen är det Landsvita resten av sommaren. Sa du. Mina! Ni står ut det här! Ni kommer ner. Vi finns här när du vill ha en bra hemförsäkring.
