The digital world has been in a separate orbit from our medical cocoon, and it's time the boundaries be taken down.
Medicine is still all about treating populations, not people - one-size-fits all treatments and diagnoses.
I am prescribing a lot more apps than medications these days.
A lot of the diagnosis and monitoring functions will be done through little devices - smartphones - by the patient with computer assistance. So it's a real big change in the model of how we render healthcare.
Where today people surf the web and check their e-mail on their cell phones, tomorrow they will be checking their vital signs.
The problem is that it takes physicians so long to accept a radical change. And the lag is unacceptable.
I love information. I can never get enough. I get bored easily.
The digitization of human beings will make a parody out of doctor knows best.
For diabetes in particular, we know there's a relationship between lack of glucose regulation and complications like blindness and kidney failure. So if you were diabetic and you knew that you could get your glucose in a tight, normal range just by adjusting your lifestyle, wouldn't that be great?
It's infrequent that people are rail thin yet have high blood pressure.
Chemotherapy is just medieval. It's such a blunt instrument. We're going to look back on it like we do the dark ages.
There are estimates that 2 to 3 percent of cancers in the U.S. each year are engendered by exposure to repetitive imaging.
I use a portable pocket ultrasound device instead of a stethoscope to listen to the heart, and I share it with the patient in real time. 'Look at your valve, look at your heart-muscle strength.' So they're looking at it with me. Normally a patient is tested by an ultrasonographer who is not allowed to tell them anything.
I have had my genome fully sequenced and have learned a great deal about which medications I would respond to and which might or would induce major side effects, along with knowing many medical conditions for which I'm particularly susceptible.
For some men, the inflammation of their arteries is a result of really low good cholesterol.
The stethoscope for listening to the heart is over. It's obsolete.
Not only can consumers handle their personal genetic information, but they are getting genomically oriented and anchored about such data.
The ability to diagnose an imminent heart attack has long been considered the holy grail of cardiovascular medicine.
About half of all people don't take medications like they're supposed to.
Warfarin is the drug the medical community loves to hate.
Of course, the medical profession doesn't like D.I.Y. anything.
For people who have heart disease, statins are great. But if all you've had is high cholesterol, what you're doing is taking this 1/100 chance of getting a benefit and offsetting it with 1/200 chance of getting diabetes.
Medicine is incredibly ritualistic.