Almost all medical editing is based on standard treatment guidelines. Unfortunately, the standard treatment guidelines can be 30 years behind current medical research. This is due to the time it takes to amass the necessary studies on things like safety, efficacy, and cost-effectiveness for a new treatment to be accepted by the many institutions involved in public health.
Innovations in medicine can radically change the understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of disease. Germ theory, anesthesia, hand washing, MRI, etc are prominent examples, but the scope of an innovation may just touch on a single disease (discovery that peptic ulcer disease was primarily caused by a specific bacteria), or a category of diseases (discovery of spinal disk herniation as a major cause of sciatica). Regardless of scope, medicine before was nothing like medicine after. New innovations will change today's medicine similarly. When they happen, you might not want to wait 30 years to hear about it.
There are three core medical innovations I write about, all related to the field of nerve entrapment:
Each of these innovations is transformational compared to the old ways of doing things. Each 0 to 1 innovations. Chained together they can form a complete solution to previously untreatable disease: A single MR scan can localize a suspected compressive nerve lesion within a cubic centimeter; A single image-guided injection can confirm this unambiguously; An endoscopic nerve decompression can permanently, curatively treat it. No more lifetime subscriptions to chronic pain centers and all the limitations of chronic pain.
Almost all medical editing is based on standard treatment guidelines. Unfortunately, the standard treatment guidelines can be 30 years behind current medical research. This is due to the time it takes to amass the necessary studies on things like safety, efficacy, and cost-effectiveness for a new treatment to be accepted by the many institutions involved in public health.
Innovations in medicine can radically change the understanding, diagnosis, and treatment of disease. Germ theory, anesthesia, hand washing, MRI, etc are prominent examples, but the scope of an innovation may just touch on a single disease (discovery that peptic ulcer disease was primarily caused by a specific bacteria), or a category of diseases (discovery of spinal disk herniation as a major cause of sciatica). Regardless of scope, medicine before was nothing like medicine after. New innovations will change today's medicine similarly. When they happen, you might not want to wait 30 years to hear about it.
There are three core medical innovations I write about, all related to the field of nerve entrapment:
Each of these innovations is transformational compared to the old ways of doing things. Each 0 to 1 innovations. Chained together they can form a complete solution to previously untreatable disease: A single MR scan can localize a suspected compressive nerve lesion within a cubic centimeter; A single image-guided injection can confirm this unambiguously; An endoscopic nerve decompression can permanently, curatively treat it. No more lifetime subscriptions to chronic pain centers and all the limitations of chronic pain.