Whose Side Are You On? Rethinking the Doctor's Role in Treating Illness and Restoring Health
Whose side are you on when treating a patient — the side of illness, the side of health, or both? This is not a rhetorical question. It cuts to the heart of one of modern medicine's deepest unresolved tensions. The correct answer, of course, is both. Yet in daily clinical practice, the balance is rarely achieved. The Western Medicine Blind Spot Western medicine has delivered extraordinary advances: antibiotics, surgery, vaccines, and targeted therapies that have saved millions of lives. But its dominant paradigm remains disease-centered. The clinician identifies a pathogen, a tumor, a biochemical abnormality — and targets it. The patient as a whole person, with immune resilience, psychological wellbeing, and social context, often recedes into the background. This is not merely a philosophical critique. It has measurable consequences. When treatment focuses exclusively on eliminating disease without strengthening the host, outcomes can be incomplete, short-lived, or accompan...