The article points to a deeper structural issue in the fight against health misinformation: the gap between evidence-based clinical medicine and the everyday issues of health and well-being that matter to many people. The healthcare system and the anti-disinformation ecosystem often fail to address the mundane problems that people turn to social media influencers for, such as gaining energy, reducing fatigue, or improving cognitive performance. Many people follow influencers not because of sensational misinformation, but because they are looking for answers to practical health and wellness questions for which the medical system and many health professionals are ill-prepared. The article emphasizes that the use of unverified supplements or devices sold in a for-profit industry should not be encouraged. At the same time, not every doctor is expected to become an expert in all aspects of health and wellness. The solution is to narrow this gap between medicine and people's everyday health needs.