When Less is More: A Simple Solution to Complex Healthcare

While many healthcare institutions nationwide face challenges in enhancing goals-of-care discussions with seriously ill patients, an unexpectedly simple study from the VA demonstrated that a different approach could change how we think about these conversations. In 2013, at the Palo Alto VA Medical Center, Dr. Manali Patel proposed what seemed like an unlikely solution: What if individuals without medical training could assist veterans with advanced … Continue reading When Less is More: A Simple Solution to Complex Healthcare

What If This Is the Best I’ll Ever Feel?

Im not afraid of dying, she said, smiling at me. I feel like Im on a runway, about to take off. Her words, spoken with such clarity by a woman facing two advanced cancers, have stayed with me. As a palliative care physician, I wish more patients felt empowered to face their mortality with such openness. But the truth is, we, as a society and … Continue reading What If This Is the Best I’ll Ever Feel?

AI and the Future of the Patient Narrative: The Rise of (a)iRecord

When Efficiency Trumped Narrative Here’s an odd thing about modern medicine: We have perfected the art of medical storytelling for over 4,000 years but have spent the last few decades systematically destroying it. Doctors have always been storytellers first, from ancient Egyptian scrolls to medieval Islamic physicians carefully documenting case histories. Until we decided efficiency mattered more than narrative. Today, we stand at another pivotal … Continue reading AI and the Future of the Patient Narrative: The Rise of (a)iRecord

When Food Loses Its Appeal: Medicine’s New Understanding of Cancer’s Oldest Companion

The Chef’s Voice  I was driving home from clinic on a rain-soaked Monday when I heard something that made me pull over and listen. It wasn’t about medicine or cancer or the patients I’d just spent the day treating. It was chef Matty Matheson, who plays Neal Fak on the acclaimed TV show “The Bear,” being interviewed by Kara Swisher. “Food is an uncompromising love,” … Continue reading When Food Loses Its Appeal: Medicine’s New Understanding of Cancer’s Oldest Companion

Hidden in Plain Sight: How Our Brain’s Endocannabinoid System Could Transform Pain Medicine

Opioids have a dual role in medicine, serving both as pain relievers and also their use may lead to addiction, complicating pain management conversations, especially for cancer patients. Recent research from Weill Cornell Medicine demonstrates a potential method to separate pain relief from addiction risk by manipulating brain compounds, offering hope for improved treatment strategies and quality of life. Continue reading Hidden in Plain Sight: How Our Brain’s Endocannabinoid System Could Transform Pain Medicine

Beyond Numbers: Making AI Work for Patients with Advanced Cancer

The Evolving Challenge of Cancer Prognostication Over the last decade, I’ve witnessed a remarkable transformation in my supportive oncology practice. The advent of targeted therapies and immunotherapy has moved us beyond the traditional triad of surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation. While these advances have dramatically improved the survival of many patients, they’ve paradoxically made one of our core responsibilities—prognostication—more complex than ever. Understanding Modern Cancer Trajectories … Continue reading Beyond Numbers: Making AI Work for Patients with Advanced Cancer

New Insights: Exercise to Combat Chemotherapy Neuropathy

It turns out that there is yet another thing that exercise helps for – chemo-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN). It not only helps to diminish the symptoms of neuropathy that already took place, but it can prevent it (!), which many other things that have been vigorously tried before (vitamins, fish oil, medications, etc.) failed to do so. It is potentially quite paradigm changing finding that … Continue reading New Insights: Exercise to Combat Chemotherapy Neuropathy