Reflections on Brain Death, Hope, and the Limits of Certainty
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Physicians can define brain death. Legislatures can codify brain death. Courts can adjudicate brain death. None of them can fully explain life. The greatest physicians... Read more.
Charles Augustus Leale, Abraham Lincoln, and the Physician We Are Slowly Losing
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Maybe the biggest lesson from Leale’s story is that medicine was never just about technical skill. It was meant to include responsibility, sacrifice, judgment,... Read more.
Medicine by Captivity: The Rise of the Hostage Physician
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When doctors spend more time serving systems than serving patients, medicine changes. When physicians are afraid to speak honestly, medicine changes. When throughput... Read more.
The Hantavirus Panic Machine: When Rare Diseases Become Media Theater
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If there is a lesson from the current hantavirus hype, it is not simply that the media exaggerates risk. It is that societies must relearn proportional thinking.... Read more.
When War Teaches Medicine
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War is likely to persist. Medicine, however, must remain steadfast, anchored in principles that transcend conflict, ideology, and time. It should not become a weapon... Read more.
The Lost Art of Medicine: What Maimonides Knew That We Forgot
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Contemporary medicine is not failing for lack of knowledge. It is failing under the weight of complexity. Nearly every aspect of patient care can now be measured.... Read more.
The Last Lesson My Mother Taught Me
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In the end, we cannot stop the circle of life. But we can decide how we meet its final turn. With fear or with clarity. With chaos or with dignity. With denial or... Read more.
What Covid Policy Did to Doctors Who Refused to Stay Silent
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The real lesson of the pandemic is not about a virus. It is about the courage required to defend the integrity of medicine itself. Physicians must remain free to... Read more.
The Quiet Crisis of Procedural Medicine
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The solution is not opposition to technology, but advocacy for balance. It is not anti-progress, but in favor of prudence. Medicine is not about doing more, but... Read more.
The Moral Ecology of Community
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Despite the availability of advanced tools to manage human life, societies are seeing spiraling rates of illness, loneliness, and anxiety, with resilience on the... Read more.
The Silence of the Waiting Rooms
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The waiting rooms are quiet now. Yet, in the face of this silence, there is hope—an opportunity for action. By reaching out to local representatives, supporting... Read more.
Insect Loss As an Early Warning of Systemic Biological Failure
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In medicine, silence can be more alarming than noise. For example, a patient who abruptly stops voicing discomfort or a monitor that ceases activity may signal system... Read more.











