Why Functional Medicine?
AFTER 15 YEARS OF PRACTICING FUNCTIONAL MEDICINE
and witnessing the extraordinary clinical results from applying this new
operating system to chronic disease, I am clear this must be the model for
medicine going forward. I want to enlist your help as advocates, activists, and
leaders in making this new paradigm the medicine we do now. Part of this
involves learning about the theory and practice of functional medicine through
case studies and review articles that will be the subject of upcoming
newsletters. The Institute for Functional Medicine's strategic
plan serves as its handbook and blueprint for how we are going to accomplish the expansion, validation, and
diffusion of functional medicine that we know is desperately needed to bring
this form of research, medical education, and clinical practice to the
forefront. From heart disease to diabetes, from depression
to dementia, from attention deficit disorder to autism, from asthma to autoimmune
disease, from digestive disorders to cancer, we must change not only how we do
medicine, but the medicine that we do. We cannot arrive at the
solutions for our health care crisis only by improving access to care and
medical quality and reducing errors or waste while still applying the same 20th
century diagnostic and therapeutic methods. We cannot arrive at a better health care system by doing the same
things better. We must transform medical education, research,
practice, and policy to match the current scientific shift from reductionist,
organ-based medicine to a more ecological understanding of health and disease
based on systems medicine. We cannot otherwise get to the solutions for our
health care crisis, or solve the problem of chronic disease. Functional medicine is the best-kept secret in
science and medicine today. That must and can change by implementing
initiatives in research, education, collaboration, and policy on a large scale
to support and nurture the seed of a viable health care system nationally and
globally. The new National Council on Prevention, Health Promotion, and Public
Health, created within the 2010 Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act, is poised to become a vehicle for transformation through
changes in related policy in the health sector, education, agriculture, transportation,
and the environment. I was recently nominated by Senator Harkin to be part of a
25-member advisory group to support the new council. Functional medicine
provides a framework for how to create health, not simply treat symptoms or
diseases, and can serve to inform the policy changes needed to create a healthy
nation. The nation's first "health council" is
chaired by Surgeon General Regina Benjamin and composed of senior government
officials across federal departments and agencies. The council is charged with
elevating and coordinating prevention activities and designing a focused
strategy across federal departments to prevent disease and promote the nation's
health. This presents a historic opportunity to bring
prevention and wellness to the forefront of the nation's efforts to improve the
health status of all Americans. Functional medicine needs to be at the
forefront of this activity. I know there are many things competing for your
time and interest, but I believe that functional medicine is one of the
most important ideas of our time -- an idea that can help relieve the
unnecessary suffering of millions. I encourage you to explore, learn,
investigate, question, and become re-enchanted with medicine alongside me, through
the doorway of functional medicine. I hope that you look forward to hearing from
functional medicine's leading thinkers, teachers, and scientists -- including
colleagues like Jeffrey Bland, Sidney Baker, Leo Galland, Joe Pizzorno, Patrick
Hanaway, Bethany Hayes, and Catherine Wilner -- starting in the next issue. |