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True Medicine

13 members • Free

3 contributions to True Medicine
Fallacy #2 The Fallacy of One Drug, One Disease
Why Reductionist Medicine Fails a Complex Human Body Modern medicine has long operated under a comforting but deeply flawed assumption:for every disease, there is a single pharmaceutical solution. This “one drug, one disease” model is tidy, profitable, and easy to standardize but it is fundamentally incompatible with how the human body actually works. Human physiology is not a linear machine with isolated parts. It is an adaptive, self-regulating, multi-layered network and science has been telling us this for decades. Where the Fallacy Comes From: Reductionism The one-drug model arises from reductionist biology, a framework that attempts to isolate a single variable, pathway, or molecule and treat it as the cause of disease. This approach works well for: - Acute infections (e.g., antibiotics for bacterial pneumonia) - Nutrient deficiencies with a single cause (e.g., vitamin C deficiency and scurvy) - Emergency medicine and trauma care But it fails profoundly in chronic, inflammatory, autoimmune, neurological, metabolic, and degenerative conditions the very diseases that dominate modern healthcare. What the Science Actually Shows 1. Humans Are Complex Adaptive Systems Biology is governed by systems biology, not linear cause-and-effect. Research in systems biology demonstrates that: - Cells communicate through interconnected signaling networks - One intervention affects multiple pathways simultaneously - Feedback loops often override single-target interventions A drug designed to “block” one receptor or enzyme frequently causes downstream compensations elsewhere in the body often leading to side effects, diminishing returns, or new symptoms. Key insight: You cannot change one node in a biological network without affecting the entire system. 2. Multi-Organ Interactions Drive Disease Most chronic diseases are not organ-specific, even when symptoms appear localized. Examples: - Depression involves the gut, immune system, hormones, mitochondria, and nervous system - Diabetes involves the liver, pancreas, muscle, adipose tissue, gut microbiome, and brain - Autoimmune diseases involve immune regulation, intestinal permeability, stress signaling, and nutrient status.
1 like • 3d
Wow!
Fallacy # 1 The Fallacy of Symptom Suppression = Healing
Treating symptoms as if they are the disease itself. - Pain is suppressed, not investigated. - Fever is reduced, not interpreted. - Inflammation is blocked, not understood. True healing addresses why the symptom exists, not merely how to silence it.
1 like • 3d
Band-aides don’t heal
Created to Self Heal
I created this community to share not only the findings of my now 34 year journey to wholeness through NON DRUG methods- true medicine. My biggest discovery was that the system my family had entrusted with our health was not only built on lies- but could not and should not be trusted with my own family! My second big AHA moment was that the body was indeed designed to self heal, self regulate, self care-- dis-ease comes when we fail to honor the body's natural order... in this vane the content will focus on the big lies and True medicine that honors the body's innate intelligence to self heal!
0 likes • 3d
Kevin and I have just heard recently this same thing. If the body created it, it can heal it. Definitely AHA moments inspired by Holy Spirit.
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Kim Ellis
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3points to level up
@kim-ellis-1246
If your body created it, it can heal it. Knowing God made us and who we are In Christ shifts our thoughts and by taking them captive, we can heal.

Active 3d ago
Joined Jan 29, 2026
Orange, VA