You canโt read the label from inside the bottle.
In healthcare, we are "inside the bottle"โdeep in the data and the science. But our patients are on the outside, reading the "label" (the messaging and the fears).
If we stay inside, we can't see the whole picture.
Vaccines, Amen by Aaron Siri is an absolutely fascinating read on the topic of vaccines. Written by an attorney, it provides the "outside perspective" that we in healthcare often miss.
Itโs time to look at the label.
Wesley
Wesley
wesley@nostrplebs.com
npub196sr...h280
Farmer. Physician. Bitcoin. Husband. Dad. Christian. Skeptic. Mainstream medicine outcast.
What are the best Bitcoin "piggybank" options for children? I have three children age 4-7 and I want something where they have the ability to save in Bitcoin, see their stack grow, and then spend it as appropriate. Or maybe even borrow against it at some point. Having interoperability with the fiat system <I think> is still important so they can realize some sense of converting fiat into Bitcoin, and see how the value of Bitcoin goes up in fiat terms. I'd prefer a subaccount on my account so that I don't need to use separate logins for each one. Maybe @strike has something in the works?
Aluminum along with other adjuvants and preservatives used in vaccines are likely a more substantial cause of autism than acetaminophen use during pregnancy. Note that vaccines given to children are also associated with acetaminophen use at the time of inflammation caused by these vaccines, so that could potentially increase the risk further.
When looking at populations that have lower rates of autism, I think of the Amish. And with the Amish you get less screen time, less exposure to artificial light spectrums, less exposure to nnEMF, less noise pollution less exposure to processed food (note that's been changing a lot over the prior several decades though). They are generally exposed to farming communities which creates a different microbiome. There have fewer medical intervention such as prenatal ultrasounds.
So I think trying to blame just acetaminophen or just vaccines is not sufficiently comprehensive.
AI can make medicine more efficient.
It can expand differentials.
It can prevent mistakes.
It can propose diagnostics and treatments.
It can document the note and thought process behind the decisions.
It will continue to get better.
But it canโt teach wisdom.
If young doctors never learn to argue with the algorithm, the pipeline of learning wisdom dies.
In ten years, the thinkers will be the ones naming their price.