There is extraordinary medical care being practiced in the United States. While medical breakthroughs do not occur linearly, there is a clear forward trend of progress. Naturally, there are setbacks and failures which are learning opportunities in medicine as they are in life. My own medical journals are increasingly populated with studies examining the use of artificial intelligence. Endoscopic scope journals present examples of technical wizardry which only years ago would have been thought to be science fiction. Sooner than we imagine, medicine will be offering widespread personalized or precision medicine when treatments will be customized according to a patient’s genetic profile. Up to now, most of our treatments follow a one-size-fits-all model which is already recognized as a clumsy tool. Ten patients might both have rheumatoid arthritis, for example, but these genetically unique individuals would likely benefit from tailored therapies. But despite the monumental prog
Quite regularly, I am asked to comment on the care of folks who are not my patients. Often, these are friends or their relatives who are suffering gastrointestinal (GI) distress. “Would you be able to give her a call”? On other occasions, a member of my own family wants me to connect with someone who has a GI issue. This is tricky terrain and I navigate it very cautiously. Obviously, I am not the individual’s doctor and would never assume this role. The individual shares with me only his version of the facts which may not represent the totality of the medical situation. I don’t have the data and have not performed my own examination.. It would be highly irresponsible and unethical for a physician from afar, who has no professional attachment to the individual, to dispense medical advice or to sow doubts about the quality of the medical care rendered. Indeed, a physician who crosses a line here can cause confusion and doubt which can have deleterious health effects. Physici