Stone Age Medicine to Modern Medicine

August 14, 2014 reprint 11/12/18

The state of our medical practices in the west and most specifically in the US downright primitive.  Our methods of caring for illness and diseases is sadly inefficient and in some cases woefully ineffective.  This is a collective observation.  That’s the bad news.

The good news is we are just about to enter into a new far more effective and light-years better delivery system.  I’ll explain this in a moment.  However, first, there is some more bad news. Doctors role in medicine is going to change.  Pharmaceutical companies will lose its gravy train of people on lifelong regiments of pill popping based on dubious science and FDA rubber stamping.  Hospitals will change its role of the primary healthcare provider to exclusively emergency services, surgery, and advanced health care and rehabilitation.

The medical landscape of today is going to change forever.  The weight of huge overhead cost, monuments to ineffectiveness and inefficiencies hiding behind false promises and preying on a culture of trust and hope is killing the same people they are trying to help by sucking them financially dry.

Before I continue, I don’t hate doctors.  They are doing their best in a business that is burying them in paperwork, loading them down with procedures and practices that are fundamentally flawed.  They are being preyed on by the system that is trying to rein in costs, without making changes to the system that does not get results consistently and whose vested interest is to keep their jobs.

The whole picture is hung upside down.  It is not a system that needs a financial fix, ie, more money, it needs a new process.  The patient is the customer. The customer has a problem that needs fixing.  There are answers that work, and there are procedures to get there.

Yes, the system is involved.  That complexity can be embraced in a systematic way. Technology regularly deals with complexity. It is that complexity that will solve the equation of what is wrong with the patient.

Instead of discussing variable integer equations, its time a cut to the chase, by way of illustration.

A database of stored anonymously as reference files to include the individual’s genome analyzed sequence blood test result will be compared against the genome library and cross-referenced with symptoms and treatments that are successful.  In this way at the treatment success improves dramatically.  For situations that are outlying the universe the genome library, a body system on a chip will be the test platform.

When a patient complains of a problem

There are a set of variables. Determine the variables of a given problem, and the solution exists.

#revisit diagnostic healthcare #heathcare costs #Heathcare 

#revisit diagnostic healthcare #heathcare costs #Heathcare alternative #healthcare cost controls

Save the Straw, Worm Habitat Destroyed

The announcement that Starbucks and Hyatt Hotels will be withdrawing the plastic straws by 2020 has been met with horror and dismay by the worm community. 

There is always another side to every story.  When we are presented with only one view, we see the world in its finest duality, creating distance between our fellow human beings.

Animal rights group meetings in secret, in universities and colleges throughout the world,  are working hard to formulate a response to the good intentions of the environmental movement to eradicate the plastic drinking straw. In contrast, the plastic bottle and the 6 pack plastic holder are notorious pollutants of water and land.  Particularly the 6 pack plastic holder has caused irreparable harm to marine mammals.   It is well known that the 6 pack hold’s plastic resembles jellyfish and light reflecting off of fish scales, luring a feeding response. It is equally well studied that bright pink fluorescent pigments to the plastic would significantly reduce the feeding response.

The plastic straw has taken on an evolutionary role in the habitable domestic earthworm, an endangered species in North America.  With the introduction of the Asian earthworm eatausallius, a parasitic invasive species brought to North American on sailing ships, native earthworms have been all but entirely displaced.

The potential salvation of the domestic earthworm population, so far, has been the earthworm’s adaptation to the usage of plastic straws as a breeding, sanctuary, and temporary home.  Ideal in structure, the plastic straw ranging in aperture from the swizzle stick to the coffee stirrer, to the narrow gauge straws used in bar and upscale eateries, to the standard size soft drink straw going up to the super end big gulp straw provides the ideal environment for the growth and development of the North American earthworm population.

Dr. R.U Reel, the well-published expert from the University of Southwest Northern Michigan, has stated in the EW international Symposium back in 1989 that habitat evolutionary adaptation of the domestic earthworm to the usage of tools is remarkable and encouraging.  Dr. Reel has written extensively about the difficulty of government agencies address this problem that is both unique and evolutionary.  The government wants to look at everything in terms of absolutes; it is either good or bad.   In the case of the earthworm, bad is good, and none is terrible.  Dr. Reel admits this is a hard concept to wrap your head around.

At Dr. Reel’s office, plastic straws are at the centerpiece of his earthworm breeding, recycling, and reintroduction program.  With reintroduction sites planned throughout North American, Dr. Reel’s carefully detailed rollout of adapted earthworms may be derailed by the well-meaning but short-sighted vision of the environmental movement.

Dr. Reel is currently living in an aqua – environment adjacent to the hot water volcanic vents in the central Pacific, studying the microhabitat of the sulfur feeding tube worms.  In his recent video conference to his 15,000 worm enthusiasts, Dr. Reel announced preliminary findings that his research had uncovered worm technologies that can reverse the carbon accumulations in the atmosphere bonding sulphuric, carbon into a rubber-like substance that generated energy in movement and is resistant to abrasive wear, potentially perfect for electrical car tires.  As Dr. Reel states, you can reduce greenhouse gases and generate electricity by driving your vehicles, a perfect symbiosis of a problem begetting a solution without human habit changing.

When Dr. Reel was informed of the human withdrawal of straw-based worm habitat, he was deeply saddened.  Fortunately, his staff and assistants have a stockpile of 107 million straws sufficient for the first phase of introduction in Vermont and Massachusetts.

Dr. Reel suggests that everyone ought to take their straws to a park, lawn, or public square and plant a straw for the time being.  This is best done by first boring a simple aperture hole at a depth of 1-inch longer than the host straw. That is all you have to do.  Ideally, the soil/earth should be wettened before straw planting.  And as Dr. Reel always says, nature will take its course, and remarkable adaptations will occur.  It is the perfect human participation, plant it and forget it.

In an interview before the release of this article, Dr. Reel was informed that a straw, straw replacement may be available. He stated that that would be ideal as long as the structural integrity of the straw holds its shape for at least 93 days of the maturation cycle for the North American earthworm.

Unfortunately, Dr. Reel’s satellite connection was curtained by the pending onset of the super typhoon in the mid-Pacific. Before Dr. Reel’s sign-off, he implored his students to look for alternatives to the plastic straw as he noted that something would go amiss when a man decides to do something regardless of the expected and best intentions.  As often cited, the North American Bison and the carrier pigeon are prime examples of things that go wrong and are short-sighted.

As a sidelight, Dr. Reel’s semi-submersible habitat is designed to weather storms of super typhoon strength and waves of 127 feet in height.

#earthworms #plasticstraws #eviromentalplastic #banningplastic straws #seniorsprotestplastic straws ban #Adultsippycupss #http://tiny.cc/968w0y #http://tiny.cc/3b9w0y 

July 22, 2018

Making Money Off of Healthcare

Almost a billion dollars in profit in the past ninety days for a health insurance provider? If Trump wants to fix the healthcare industry he needs to take the profit out of writing healthcare insurance. It is morally reprehensible to make money on people who fear of not being able to pay for their medical care and have no choice but to buy insurance. The non-stop premium increases with its own self-generating and unbridled cost structure with no correlated to inflation, but a leverage of fear and no choices.

Aetna made 836 million dollars in the 3rd quarter. how do they make that profit? The charge an egregious amount of policies and pay out a pittance. https://news.aetna.com/news-releases/aetna-reports-third-quarter-2017-results/

There is math behind these statements. The number of policies that Aetna writes, the premiums paid and the payout or underwriting profit. If Trump truly wants to solve this problem the companies need to become mutual companies, where the premium holder is the shareholder, and the interest of the premium holder is aligned with the company’s operations. That is to reduce costs to the buyer/the shareholder, whether that mean negotiating prices for drugs, an efficiency of procedure, bulk buying of a lab test, empowering the patient/the shareholder to report abuse, fraud, malpractice, and any other offense that increases the cost of providing healthcare. If there is an underwriting profit, the money is returned to the policyholder in the form of reduced premiums in the successive years.

The next cost containment breakthrough for effective healthcare is to establish best practices. To make the program successful there need to be technical tracking proven results. The program is a 2 way street for savings and feedback through documenting ailments and successful treatment. The genome mapping will be part of the integrated relationship.

In the coming missives, I will discuss the system for best practices, patient and doctor benefit and how to create massive savings.