SNS: Special Letter: Undiagnosed: Why Is the Future of Medicine Being Ignored?
 
 
SNS Subscriber Edition • Volume 18, Issue 31 • Week of August 17, 2015

 THE STRATEGIC NEWS SERVICE ©
GLOBAL REPORT ON
TECHNOLOGY AND
THE ECONOMY
Special Letter
 
Undiagnosed:
Why is The Future of
Medicine Being
Ignored?

 
by Katia Moritz
 


 
 
 
 

 

 

 

In This Issue

 

Feature:

Special Letter:

Undiagnosed:
Why Is the Future of
Medicine Being Ignored?

 

My Diagnostic Odyssey

Defining "Undiagnosed"

The Future of Medicine:

Can Technology Save Us?

Medical Refugees

Hazards of an "It's All

in Your Head" Diagnosis

How I Accidentally

Became a Filmmaker

The CLARITY

Undiagnosed Challenge

 

Inside SNS

 

Upcoming SNS Events

 

Where's Mark?

 

[Please open the attached .pdf for best viewing.]

 

   By Katia Moritz

 

 

_____

 

 

 

Please join us at FiRe 2015 to explore:

 

42 new technologies and

The Power of Patterns.

 

October 6-9, Stein Eriksen Lodge

                                  Park City, Utah

 

www.futureinreview.com/register/

 

 

 

 

Stein_Eriksen_Lodge_Deer_Valley_Summer_Exterior_Spa_Runs-noSPA.jpg

 

 

Publisher's Note: This week's discussion combines the most advanced areas of medical discovery with the personal challenges that come with living just beyond the edge of today's medical knowledge.

 

When I first met Dr. Katia Moritz, and heard about her search for a diagnosis, I considered "The Undiagnosed" to be a small, unfortunate group of people who had somehow fallen through the cracks of modern medical practice. Now, I know better.

 

Despite the money and time that has gone into today's medical toolbox, there are an unbelievably large number of people who are either un- or mis-diagnosed. A recent randomized study of those who die in US hospitals, conducted by the University of Michigan, found that about one-half die of diseases for which they had not been diagnosed or treated.

 

As I learned more from Katia, I came to realize that "Undiagnosed" is a synonym for all that doctors today do not know. And unfortunately, there is a very great deal that fits this description. All of our members interested in the edge of medical knowledge will find Katia's tale fascinating, and not just a little frightening. - mra.