The rapid expansion of lifestyle medicine content on social media has fundamentally transformed the dissemination and consumption of health information. Among the most prominent contributors are physician influencers (“medfluencers”), who leverage professional credentials to communicate directly with public audiences. Within this evolving digital ecosystem, an under-recognized subgroup has emerged: physicians undergoing midlife or mid-career transitions who translate personal health transformations into publicly disseminated narratives. This Perspective introduces the concept of
Midlife Wellness Medfluencers
(MWMs) and critically examines its implications for evidence-based lifestyle medicine. Specifically, it explores the intersection of medical authority, autobiographical experience, and midlife transition within the amplifying context of social media. While experiential insights may serve as valuable sources of hypothesis generation, their increasing prominence raises important epistemological concerns. In particular, the conflation of personal narrative with generalizable scientific evidence risks undermining the principles of evidence-based practice.