Medical education has got it backward. We're front-loading biology and anatomy, then backfilling with the principles of evidence-based medicine. We need to flip this equation, placing evidence-based medicine at the fore, right from the get-go. Patients don't care about the biological mechanisms; they care about what helps them get better, regardless of the underlying science. That's the crux of our argument today.
Let's take a step back and look at the evolution of medical education over the 20th century. With the boom in biological sciences, our understanding of human anatomy, physiology, and pathology has expanded exponentially. This knowledge has undoubtedly been invaluable, forming the bedrock of our modern approach to diagnosing and treating diseases. There's a problem, though. By placing biology at the center of medical education, we've inadvertently created a situation where we're missing the forest for the trees.
Simultaneously, another revolution was brewing in the medical field during the 20th century: the rise of evidence-based medicine. Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) became the gold standard, the north star guiding our therapeutic decisions. The power of RCTs lies in their objectivity, their ability to tell us, unequivocally, whether an intervention works or not. It's not about hypotheses or educated guesses; it's about cold, hard data. Yet, this pillar of modern medicine often plays second fiddle in our educational curriculum.
Here's the rub: when we instill a deep-seated reverence for biology before introducing the principles of evidence-based medicine, we're setting up our future doctors for cognitive dissonance. It's harder to accept that a treatment doesn't work when it "should" according to biological principles. As a result, evidence that contradicts our understanding of biology is often met with skepticism, even outright rejection. This is a disservice to our patients, who ultimately care about outcomes, not biological plausibility.
This brings us to the crux of our argument: the need to revamp the medical curriculum. Let's start with the history of medicine, the triumphs, and the pitfalls. Next, introduce the principles of clinical trials, the linchpin of evidence-based medicine. Show students examples of medical reversals, such as the Cardiac Arrhythmia Suppression Trial (CAST), where our understanding of biology was turned on its head by clinical trial data. Such an approach will underscore the importance of evidence over theory, preparing our future doctors to prioritize patient outcomes over biological dogma.
In essence, we're arguing for a reordering of priorities in medical education. While the knowledge of biology and anatomy is crucial, it should not overshadow the importance of evidence-based medicine. By introducing students to the principles of evidence-based medicine early on, we can create a generation of doctors who put patient outcomes first, regardless of biological plausibility. It's not a case of one over the other; it's about getting the sequence right.
Remember, the ultimate goal of medicine is to help patients. Let's ensure our future doctors are equipped with the tools and mindset to do just that. Evidence-based medicine first, biology and anatomy later. This isn't a radical overhaul; it's a necessary adjustment to align medical education with the realities of modern medicine. In the end, it's about providing the best care for our patients, and that's something we can all stand behind.
I believe that medical education has to stop being guided by big pharma. The medical student of the future must fully understand the primary causes of chronic illness -- toxicity, dietary, and other lifestyle problems. The medical student of the future must understand detoxification strategies, nutrition and behavioral interventions addressing other lifestyle risk factors. Instead of focusing on pharmaceutical management of symptoms, the medical student of the future must learn about the cornucopia of healing interventions that can not only arrest chronic illness, but reverse it or heal it.
The medical student must be properly taught the risks of the diagnostic and therapeutic interventions that they are taught and how to assess whether the risks are worth the benefits. Big pharma must be shut out of medical education. Science, including empirical clinical data, as Dr. Prasad says, must rule medical education, not special interest groups. Preventive medicine should be taught to every student, including prevention of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes. We have a lot of work to do. It will take decades. But it begins with cleaning out the pollution that has contaminated not only medical education, but the entire biomedical system.
When “the science” is corrupted, the “evidence based medicine” is corrupted.