Woohoo! Congratulations and thanks to the Ferrettis and LECOM for focusing on 'whole person health'. All the best with your current endeavors and upcoming Jacksonville site in 2026.
This is fantastic! There are many disillusioned physicians, nurses and healthcare worker who are celebrating the positive actions being initiated in this new health focus! I am wondering if there are any of the Rockefeller funded institutions who are considering a renewed approach. No?
Perhaps government funding of such institutions can be re-examined prioritizing those institutions interested in developing the much needed the Whole Health focus. Addressing root cause has never been the priority in corporate medical model. The alternative therapies have not been funded for studies because healthy people do not feed the corporate medical model. We applaud this giant leap for humankind.
Such good news! For MAHA to succeed, medical education must make a major shift. Thanks to LECOM and the Drs Ferrtettis for the good work they are doing and the changes this will bring, especially to primary care.
The Whole person Concept is extremely important, but when 95% of health problems are connected to what goes in the mouth...I did not see the word nutrition mentioned once.
I am so happy to know of this medical school. They have prioritized the whole body perspective in treatment of patients. Something sorely lacking in allopathic medicine. Current practice is to send everyone off to a specialist who couldn’t care less about the body’s other systems not under his/her purview. PCPs are being replaced with PAs, so no one is coordinating the patient’s care. At last a school that does train physicians to look at the whole patients to prevent disease rather than just treat it. Thank you Drs Ferretti.
Congratulations to the Ferrettis! I never heard of LECOM and it's right here in Pennsylvania. I will look into their osteopathic graduates as my county is planning on increasing medical services with, unfortunately, a large system.
Woohoo! Congratulations and thanks to the Ferrettis and LECOM for focusing on 'whole person health'. All the best with your current endeavors and upcoming Jacksonville site in 2026.
This is fantastic! There are many disillusioned physicians, nurses and healthcare worker who are celebrating the positive actions being initiated in this new health focus! I am wondering if there are any of the Rockefeller funded institutions who are considering a renewed approach. No?
Perhaps government funding of such institutions can be re-examined prioritizing those institutions interested in developing the much needed the Whole Health focus. Addressing root cause has never been the priority in corporate medical model. The alternative therapies have not been funded for studies because healthy people do not feed the corporate medical model. We applaud this giant leap for humankind.
❤️🔥👏🏼 👏🏽👏🏾☀️
Such good news! For MAHA to succeed, medical education must make a major shift. Thanks to LECOM and the Drs Ferrtettis for the good work they are doing and the changes this will bring, especially to primary care.
https://livingwelllocally.substack.com/p/primary-care-is-critical-care
Thank- you for your work Drs. Ferretti, Sayer Ji, and Tony Lyons. Humanity hungrily awaits more like you!
Thanks for your great work!
We've shared this link on 'The Stacks'
https://askeptic.substack.com/p/the-stacks
The Whole person Concept is extremely important, but when 95% of health problems are connected to what goes in the mouth...I did not see the word nutrition mentioned once.
beautiful. and finally, back to the roots of osteopathy: wholeness and self-healing
I am so happy to know of this medical school. They have prioritized the whole body perspective in treatment of patients. Something sorely lacking in allopathic medicine. Current practice is to send everyone off to a specialist who couldn’t care less about the body’s other systems not under his/her purview. PCPs are being replaced with PAs, so no one is coordinating the patient’s care. At last a school that does train physicians to look at the whole patients to prevent disease rather than just treat it. Thank you Drs Ferretti.
Congratulations to the Ferrettis! I never heard of LECOM and it's right here in Pennsylvania. I will look into their osteopathic graduates as my county is planning on increasing medical services with, unfortunately, a large system.