Modern medicine is extraordinary at keeping people alive. It is much less good at keeping people well. The Rockefeller model of medicine we inherited in the early 20th century shifted our focus toward treating symptoms through a pharmaceutical-centered approach (or "oil-based medicine"), rather than addressing the root causes of our diseases. We started treating the human body like a machine with broken parts. You have a symptom, you get a pill. You have a tumor, you cut it out. This approach has produced genuine miracles, but it has also produced a healthcare system that is among the most expensive in the world and leaves tens of millions of people chronically sick, chronically medicated, and no closer to understanding why they got sick in the first place. We are treating outputs. We need to be treating inputs. Consider cancer research: we pour billions of public dollars into targeting specific diseases one at a time, when the science is telling us that most non-infectious diseases—e.g., cancer, Alzheimer's, diabetes, heart disease—are ultimately diseases of aging, sharing the same upstream causes of cellular damage, chronic inflammation, and metabolic dysfunction. Redirecting even a fraction of that funding toward slowing the aging process itself could prevent all of them simultaneously. This is moving away from a mechanistic, Rockefeller-based model of medicine and towards a systems approach rooted in better philosophy. This new approach is called the biopsychosociospiritual model of medicine, and it recognizes what every good clinician already knows: that physical health is inseparable from social, psychological, and even spiritual contexts. Chronic loneliness damages the body as profoundly as smoking. Trauma rewires the nervous system in ways that surface decades later as autoimmune disease. People without community, purpose, or spiritual grounding get sick more, recover more slowly, and die younger. This is the new model of medicine. It's not an alternative, "hippy" model built on shoddy evidence. It is built on the latest knowledge stemming from the frontiers of the sciences today. In short, we don't need more pills. We need a better philosophy, and the courage to build a new system based on what we currently know about humans.
Book Recommendations: Civilized to Death by Christopher Paul Ryan