The End of Medicine As We Know It
In this final episode of The End of Medicine As We Know It, we return to Max, the man from the prologue, and look at how radically life has changed in a world shaped by genome sequencing, microbiome profiling, digital twins, continuous monitoring, and precision prevention. This is not science fiction anymore—it is a realistic vision of what the healthcare landscape may look like in just a few years. The year is 2036, and Max is thriving. Twenty years before retirement, healthy, active, and free of chronic illness. Thanks to early genome sequencing and microbiome analysis, his personal risk pathways were identified long before any damage could occur. He had no predisposition for heart attack, but a measurable risk of stroke—exacerbated by weight gain, high blood pressure, and low activity in his 40s. In the old healthcare system, Max would likely have experienced a first stroke, then a second, and then a lifetime of disability. Back then, stroke was the third leading cause of death. Today? Max knows nobody who has had one—and long-term consequences have become almost unheard of. Max’s smartphone health app continuously measures: • steps and floors climbed • blood pressure and heart rate • blood sugar • sleep quality • oxygen saturation • heart rhythm • stress level • environmental exposures Everything is integrated into his digital twin. His local health center—staffed by doctors, psychologists, physiotherapists, nutritionists, and his personal trainer—monitors his data in real time. He rarely visits in person. Instead, the team contacts him instantly if anything requires action. This is preventive medicine, not crisis management. Chronic illness has virtually vanished. Genetic risks are corrected early with gene therapy. Entire pathways that once guaranteed disease can now be repaired permanently. The therapies that made this possible won the Nobel Prize years ago. In Max’s world, people talk about health, movement, and goals—not about sickness. In this epilogue, we reflect on the central message of the entire book: Radical change in medicine is not merely needed—it is already happening. The door to a new era of longevity, prevention, personalised health, and equitable access has been pushed wide open. The technologies that seemed futuristic just a decade ago are becoming mainstream and cost-effective for everyone. This is a world where: • early detection prevents nearly all chronic illnesses, • personalised prevention replaces trial-and-error medicine, • health inequities shrink dramatically, • and well-being becomes a global standard, not a privilege. Thank you for accompanying these sample chapters. The future of health is not far away—it has already begun. More information: https://haraldschmidt.online Contact: podcast@haraldschmidt.online
27 episodios
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