HEALTH TRAIN EXPRESS
Mission: To promulgate health education across the internet:
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Gregg Braden: We produce new brain cells until the day we die. However, you have 7-10 days to use them before the brain thinks you don’t need them and atrophy sets in.
Sunday's Health Train is making many stops on our journey...Consider these a new bullet train.
INCREDIBLE: A team of renegade doctors has exposed 18 alternative cancer treatments the mainstream tried to bury. They defy Big Pharma’s narrative and put survival back in the hands of the people. These methods are backed by science, many are low-cost or even free, and they’re delivering results that terrify the medical cartels. Cancer is fed by lies, and the hospitals profit from misery. But these 18 methods prove there’s another way. Ketogenic Diet – Starves cancer cells of glucose, cutting off their lifeline. Patients report slowed growth, even remission. Exercise – Activates immunity, destroys cancer cells, reduces inflammation, and restores strength. Stress Reduction, Sleep, Sunshine – Stress fuels tumors. Deep sleep repairs, while sunlight boosts Vitamin D and immunity. Vitamin D3 – Low levels linked to higher cancer risk. Supplementing blocks cell proliferation. Propranolol – A heart drug that starves cancer cells of stress hormones they need to spread. Melatonin – Not just for sleep. Shields healthy cells, boosts immunity, and kills cancer cells. Metformin – A diabetes drug cutting off cancer’s sugar supply. Proven to slow tumor growth. Curcumin/Nanocurcumin – Anti-inflammatory, anti-tumor, triggers cancer cell death. Ivermectin – Demonized during COVID, now revealed to sabotage cancer cell survival. Mebendazole/Fenbendazole/Albendazole – Anti-parasitic drugs that stop cancer cells from dividing. Green Tea – EGCG compound blocks tumor growth and blood vessel formation. Omega-3 Fatty Acids – Reduce inflammation, slash risks of breast, prostate, and colon cancers. Berberine – Ancient plant compound, regulates sugar and kills cancer cells. Statins – Cholesterol drugs with hidden anti-cancer effects. Viagra, Cialis, Levitra – Blood flow enhancers making chemo deadlier against tumors. Disulfiram – Alcoholism drug that destroys cancer’s survival pathways. Ashwagandha – Ancient herb, cuts stress, boosts immunity, halts tumor growth. Itraconazole – Antifungal that blocks cancer’s growth channels. This isn’t speculation. These treatments are backed by research but buried to protect billion-dollar chemotherapy industries. The truth is being censored because a healed population doesn’t make money. There are however no clinical rtrials and little interest by Pharma, because they are all readily available and not covered by health insurance
The world is waking up. The Deep State’s medical machine is cracking. These 18 therapies are weapons of survival, tools of liberation. Cancer was never just a disease—it was a business model. That business model is collapsing. Take this seriously. Share this with those who need it most. This knowledge is power. This knowledge is life.
The American Medical Association represents less than 15% of practicing physicians. It controls the CPT code system that governs how every physician in America gets paid. It receives licensing fees from that system regardless of AMA membership. It lobbies on behalf of positions most physicians actively oppose. It endorsed policies that accelerated consolidation, employment, and the commoditization of physician labor for decades. The AMA doesn’t represent physicians. It licenses the billing infrastructure they’re forced to use.
It controls the CPT code system that governs how every physician in America gets paid.
It receives licensing fees from that system regardless of AMA membership.
It lobbies on behalf of positions most physicians actively oppose. It endorsed policies that accelerated consolidation, employment, and the commoditization of physician labor for decades.
These are different things. The conflation is not accidental.
“Is an AI doctor better than no doctor at all?”
It's the wrong question for a very real problem - healthcare access and capacity. That said, I think the medical training model gives us the best analogy for answering it anyway. Lemme explain...
Medical AI in its current form has "spikey" intelligence - just like a real medical student. Doctor-level quality at some things, but clearly not ready for autonomous patient care at others.
Think about what a medical student does well:
→ More time and patience to take complete medical histories
→ Can look up, synthesize, and summarize diagnosis and treatment plans
→ Often takes more comprehensive notes than their attending
But medical students lack the clinical judgment to connect the dots in every situation. They can't yet navigate the interprofessional complexity of real care. They struggle with the non-clinical dimensions of medicine that no textbook covers.
So what do we do? We let med students work autonomously on those tasks where they're spikey-good, but attendings maintain oversight and own ultimate responsibility for the patient.
We are at a similar stage with AI in healthcare right now.
AI is spikey. Incredibly good at specific tasks - in fact, better than physicians at some of them. It can research and synthesize clinical information faster than any human doctor alive.
Sure, AI hallucinates - but it never gets tired. Let's not forget: physicians make errors too, and more so when they're tired.
Over time, healthcare AI will get less spikey - not because the spikes disappear, but because it will grow more of them. It will reach "doctor-level" autonomy across more and more activities. At some point, for a large range of tasks, it may feel almost resident-like... fairly darn autonomous.
But full medical licensure for AI? Unlikely. Not because it won't have comparable technical skill, but because most people still want humans orchestrating AI, not the other way around (for safety, ethical, and just plain human reasons).
So in reality, the most likely path isn't a fully licensed AI doctor. It's a human physician orchestrating a team of highly skilled AI resident agents - each spikey-good at specific high-value tasks. The human owns liability and gains the leverage to care for more patients with the same time and effort.
Some patients - low-risk, routine - may interact primarily with AI (and this is already happening!). The doctor becomes the manager: watching for deviations, running quality checks, talking directly to the patients they're worried about.
The right question was never "is an AI doctor better than no doctor?"
Because the honest answer is: “yes, but only for specific tasks... which means it's not really a full AI doctor at all.”
So the better question is: how can AI give every clinician more leverage to care for more patients - without burning out the humans who hold the whole system together?
Robert Pearl, M.D.Robert Pearl, M.D.
Will generative AI replace the work of human clinicians?
In the three years since the public rollout of large language models, the official answer from healthcare leaders and technology companies has been the same: No. AI will assist doctors and nurses, but only clinicians can diagnose and treat diseases.
Three key pieces of evidence now reveal a different truth:
1️⃣ At Mass General Brigham, a generative AI system called "Care Connect" already takes patient histories, evaluates symptoms and proposes treatment plans before a clinician enters the conversation. Researchers studying more than 400 urgent-care visits at Cedars-Sinai recently found something surprising: The AI’s recommendations were rated optimal 77% of the time ... compared with 67% for physicians’ final decisions.
2️⃣ Meanwhile, with more than 230 million people asking ChatGPT health-related questions every week, major AI companies including Anthropic and Google are building secure repositories for medical records and wearable data. Meaning what? Big Tech is turning its eyes and its tools toward direct patient care, as well.
3️⃣ Utah is launching a pilot that allows generative AI to monitor chronic diseases and renew prescriptions WITHOUT human oversight.
Put these developments together, and the future of medicine starts to look very different than the present.
My take? Generative AI will not eliminate clinicians. But it will take on many of the tasks they perform today. And it will continue to reshape who does what in healthcare: handling routine problems, monitoring chronic disease and answering everyday medical questions.
In the same way many Americans now use an ATM and online banking rather than a bank teller, millions of patients will turn first to a generative AI application for medical advice.
Watch the video below for details and tell me what you think: Will generative AI continue to take on more clinical work or are we overestimating its role?
A History of Medicine, The Last 60 years
Why You Can't Find a Primary Care Doctor: Follow the Money Back to 1966 July 1,1966, I remember the date well. It was the first day of my medical internship at Boston University Medical Center and the very same day the first Medicare patients were admitted to the hospital. I thought I knew my path. Two years of training, my second at the Boston City Hospital, then off to the U.S. Navy as a Lieutenant under the Berry Plan. What I did not know was that I would have a front row seat to a 60-year “project” that would fundamentally transform American medicine. The “Medical Arms Race” It began with reimbursement. When Medicare launched, hospitals were reimbursed based on their reported costs, including capital investments in equipment and facilities, plus a margin. Financial risk for adopting new technology was minimal. The predictable result was a “medical arms race.” Hospitals competed by acquiring advanced imaging, surgical suites, and specialized capabilities. At the same time, the payment structure rewarded procedures more generously than cognitive care. Surgical and interventional services generated higher reimbursement than time spent diagnosing complex, chronic illness. The incentives were clear. Over time, those incentives shaped career decisions. When I graduated from medical school, there were nineteen specialty boards and no subspecialty boards. Today, physicians choose from more than two dozen specialty boards and nearly ninety subspecialties. That expansion did not happen by accident. It followed the money. Current workforce trends tell the rest of the story. The majority of graduating internal medicine residents, 70% now choose hospitalist roles, 20% pursue subspecialty training and a small minority, 10% enter traditional outpatient general internal medicine. We should not be surprised that it is difficult to find a primary care physician. From the beginning, Medicare’s payment structure favored acute intervention over longitudinal cognitive care. Sixty years later, we have built a system that reflects those priorities, technologically advanced, procedurally sophisticated, and economically aligned toward intervention. Preventive and diagnostic medicine, the slow work of thinking, listening, and managing complexity over time remains comparatively undervalued. We did not lose our primary care foundation by accident. We redesigned the incentives. If we were building Medicare today, would we structure it the same way?
A Single 20g Dose of Creatine Increases Cognitive Processing Speed by 24.5% Within 3.5 Hours
A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial found that creatine rapidly enhanced brain bioenergetics and improved cognitive performance during sleep deprivation, with effects lasting up to nine hours.
Creatine has long been regarded as just a muscle supplement — something for the gym that requires weeks of “loading” to saturate muscle stores. A recent randomized trial overturns that assumption.
In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial published in Scientific Reports, researchers gave healthy young adults a single high oral dose of creatine monohydrate (0.35 g/kg — roughly 20 grams for most adults) during 21 hours of sleep deprivation. They then tracked both cognitive performance and real-time brain energy metabolism using advanced MR spectroscopy.
The results were not subtle. At the first post-dose assessment — approximately 3.5 hours after ingestion — participants demonstrated a 24.5% improvement in numeric processing speed (p = 0.0003). When data were pooled across all three overnight assessments (0 a.m., 2 a.m., 4 a.m.), language processing speed improved by 29.1% — the largest cognitive gain observed in the trial. And the effect didn’t fade quickly. Improvements in processing speed and task performance persisted across the next two measurement points — extending roughly nine hours after ingestion.
Just as important, the cognitive findings were mirrored by measurable metabolic shifts inside the brain. Creatine increased cerebral total creatine levels, prevented the typical sleep deprivation–induced drop in the PCr/Pi ratio (a marker of cellular energy stress), stabilized brain pH, and reduced subjective fatigue compared to placebo. In other words, this wasn’t just a behavioral effect — spectroscopy confirmed that high-energy phosphate metabolism itself was altered. The brain’s ATP buffering system appeared more resilient under stress.
In conclusion, a single ~20g dose of creatine rapidly enhanced brain bioenergetics and significantly improved cognitive performance during sleep deprivation, with effects sustained for up to nine hours.
America is facing a massive physician shortage. But we aren't just losing doctors to burnout or long hours. We are actively driving our most experienced physicians out of medicine. How? The endless, punishing cycle of Maintenance of Certification (MOC). The AAMC projects a shortage of up to 86,000 physicians by 2036. At the same time, nearly half of practicing physicians are over 55. We are on the verge of a massive retirement wave, and our current credentialing system is accelerating it. Here is the reality on the ground: Doctors in their 50s and 60s, clinicians with decades of pristine practice, excellent patient outcomes, and countless hours of CME, are being handed the exact same recertification demands as a newly minted attending. The rigid message the system sends. "You are only as competent as your last exam score." For thousands of mid-to-late-career physicians, this is the final straw. Layered on top of EMRs, prior authorizations, and state-specific mandates, the idea of paying exorbitant fees and taking another standardized test to "prove" their competence is insulting. So, they quietly retire 5 to 10 years early. The ripple effect is devastating: 📉 Hospitals spend up to $1M to replace a single experienced physician. 📉 Rural communities lose their only specialists, causing months-long delays for care. 📉 The medical field loses invaluable mentorship and clinical intuition that cannot be taught in a textbook. To date, there is ZERO evidence linking MOC exams to workforce retention or patient safety. But there is massive evidence linking excessive administrative burden to early retirement. We are draining the physician workforce with no measurable return. It’s time for a structural realignment. We need a rational model that includes: ✅ Tiered maintenance by career stage ✅ Automatic CME integration to eliminate redundant systems ✅ Outcome-based accountability (real patient data, not online quizzes) ✅ A national credentialing platform for easier locums mobility The greatest threat to patient safety isn’t a physician who skipped a multiple-choice quiz. It is the empty exam room where no physician remains at all. What has your experience been with MOC? Is it time to completely overhaul the board certification system?
Cardiology
UnitedHealthcare, the largest Medicare Advantage provider in the United States, is implementing a new policy on May 1, 2026, that will require patients to receive a primary care provider (PCP) referral before seeing a cardiologist. This affects all patients enrolled in the insurer’s HMO and HMO-point of service (POS) Medicare Advantage plans.
The policy, which also covers cardiothoracic surgeons, vascular surgeons and several other specialties, officially went into place on Jan. 1. However, UnitedHealthcare announced at the time it would not start denying claims due to a lack of a referral until May 1. Existing referral policies in California, Nevada and Texas mean that PCP referrals have already been required in those states for all of 2026.
There are several exceptions to this new rule, including cardiac rehabilitation, physical therapy, dialysis and various emergency room/urgent care services. Medical imaging provided by a radiologist is another key exception.
“The referral requirement for specialist visits reflects the core design of HMO plans, which emphasize primary care‑led coordination,” a UnitedHealthcare representative told Cardiovascular Business. “Stronger PCP engagement can support earlier diagnosis, better chronic condition management, and more proactive care—ultimately contributing to improved health outcomes.”
The representative also emphasized that these referrals are effective as soon as they are submitted by the PCP.
Industry reactions to the new policy
There is a fear among many specialists that this added step will result in elderly patients missing out on care altogether. Securing an approval can be confusing for some patients, for instance, especially if they previously did not need a PCP referral to see a specific specialist.
There are also concerns about asking PCPs to take on additional work at a time when burnout is already high and physician shortages are already a significant problem throughout the United States.
“There is a growing trend of hospitals and health systems terminating contracts with Medicare Advantage due to persistent prior authorization denials and delayed reimbursement,” he told Cardiovascular Business. “Over the past three years, approximately 90 health systems have severed ties with some or all Medicare Advantage plans. When hospitals drop plans, patients may face restricted physician access or higher out-of-pocket costs. This recent additional provision (effective May 1) by UnitedHealthcare further increases the barrier to cardiology access for patients.”
Meanwhile, Wendell Potter, a former health insurance executive who became a whistleblower and now advocates for policy reform, wrote about this update at length online. He said requiring these PCP referrals could save UnitedHealthcare “millions, if not billions of dollars” by reducing specialist visits. He also noted that the insurance juggernaut has “doubled down” on its efforts to shed high-cost patients in the wake of the 2024 murder of CEO Brian Thompson, a moment some analysts predicted might result in “kinder, gentler” policies.
Click here for additional information about the referral requirements for UnitedHealthcare’s Medicare Advantage HMO and HMO-POS plans.
CVS bars transparency
This was on X from Insurance Oligopoly. The amendment now classifies MAC lists, reimbursement rates, and pricing terms as “Confidential Caremark Information.” It also states that providers cannot disclose, publish, distribute, or share this information without CVS Caremark’s permission. The Consolidated Appropriations Act (CAA) specifically addressed gag clauses that restrict transparency around healthcare pricing and contract terms. Yet we continue to see language that appears designed to limit visibility into how drugs are priced and reimbursed. If employers are fiduciaries under ERISA, how are they supposed to ensure prudent oversight when critical pricing information is treated as confidential? Transparency in healthcare cannot exist without seeing the actual data. When will we ENFORCE laws, words passed to act like you worked for the American people means NOTHING! Enforce the laws in place!!!
My bill from my January total reverse shoulder replacement. A personal record. $226,000 in billed charges outpatient at University Community Hospital in Tampa. The doctors and staff were great, but this is absurd. Medicare paid $16,420. Works out to 7% of billed charges. Medicare ignores all the nonsense of the bill and pay a bundled APC rate.
What if this was my pre-Medicare days and I was on Aetna?Deerhold Ltd.'shashtag#PRIZMshows a 33.9% of billed charges rate. It sounds like a great rate (66% discount) until you realize that's still $76,000. 460% of actual Medicare. Probably 300% of Medicare the way RBP vendors do it. My doctor would have received about $2K under Aetna. Doctors are not the problem. All the transparency posts on this site are about professional fees. That's fine, but that's not where the money is. Why a not-for-profit hospital owned by the Adventists are charging 1200% of Medicare is another question.
The AHA board chairman's hospital sued patients 8,000 times in one year for unpaid bills.
The AHA board said nothing. Ask yourself:Who wins when the board chairman's hospital system sues thousands of vulnerable people for not being able to pay? The board chairman. And the AHA board knows it. Ask yourself:Who loses? The patients. The credibility of the "nonprofit" label. Everyone except the cartel. In life, we choose sides.Right is one side, and wrong is the other.
“The problem with what’s happening in healthcare is that it’s like a silent, slow apocalypse.” — Dr.Linda Peenoin Suck It Up, Buttercup Dr. Peeno is a physician and ethicist who became one of the most well-known whistleblowers on the managed care industry. In 1996, she testified before the U.S. Congress and made a statement that stunned the room. She described denying a patient a life-saving heart transplant while working as a medical reviewer for an insurance company. A decision driven by cost and the patient died. Since then, she has spoken publicly about how systems built around financial incentives can quietly shape life-and-death decisions in healthcare. She reflects that medical care is something every one of us will need. We are imperfect. We are vulnerable. We are mortal. That is why her description of our system as a “silent, slow apocalypse” is so alarming. The erosion of trust, access, and moral clarity has been unfolding for decades, often out of sight. It is no longer out of sight. Healthcare should ultimately serve one purpose: Caring for human beings when they need it most.
Are we willing to redesign the system so that purpose comes before profit?
A live Webinar Discussion. The Healthcare Reinvention Collaborative is hosting a live watch partyOn March 19, there will be a special screening of Suck It Up, Buttercup. Learn more here:https://lnkd.in/gbsFDvzr The Healthcare Reinvention Collaborative is hosting a live watch party, and we’d love to have you join us. Register here:https://lnkd.in/gVMbXSmi
Join us for a powerful, special screening experience as we gather around this bold documentary examining the pressures, dysfunction, and human cost embedded in today’s healthcare system.
This is more than a film showing. It’s a shared moment of reflection and activation.
We Are Joining the Virtual Premiere Experience The filmmakers are hosting simultaneous in-person and virtual screenings for this early release. HRC will join the virtual event, which has been intentionally designed so online participants receive a fully engaging experience.
Here’s what to expect: 🔸 Each audience will have its own dedicated MC to guide the experience and create space for engagement. 🔸 As attendees arrive, both audiences will view “red carpet–style” interviews with cast and crew. 🔸 The film will begin simultaneously for both groups. 🔸 After the screening, each audience will participate in its own facilitated Q&A discussion session. 🔸 Online participants will enjoy exclusive short interviews with cast and crew as they leave the in-person event, creating a special closing experience that feels intentional and dynamic.
J The film begins at 4:00 PM PT (7:00 PM ET).
About the Film Suck It Up, Buttercup is an investigative, emotionally grounded documentary that examines corporate influence, systemic dysfunction, clinician burnout, and patient harm within U.S. healthcare while also spotlighting voices calling for change.
Why HRC Is Hosting This At HRC, we believe meaningful reinvention begins with courageous truth-telling followed by connection, dialogue, and action. This evening creates space to: 🔸 Reflect on what we’re seeing and living 🔸 Deepen relationships across roles and sectors 🔸 Move from frustration to forward momentum And join us the next day for a deeper conversation about what comes next. Register here:https://lnkd.in/gkn2Kmbj
I HOPE YOU WILL JOIN US FOR A VERY INTERESTING DISCUSSION
Emergency departments are where medicine meets uncertainty. Decisions are made quickly, often with incomplete information, and the consequences of those decisions may only become clear much later. A recent South African case, A.L.S v MEC for Health, Western Cape, provides a powerful teaching example for both doctors and lawyers. The matter arose after a trauma patient presented to a public hospital emergency department with an injury involving the kidney and renal pelvis. The allegation was that the injury was not properly recognised at the time of the initial emergency assessment and that imaging and specialist management were delayed. By the time the injury was fully appreciated and reconstructive surgery attempted weeks later, the kidney could not be salvaged. The claim was therefore framed in the familiar way: inadequate assessment, delayed diagnosis and delayed treatment. Proceedings were brought against the MEC for Health, Western Cape, reflecting the principle that the state carries vicarious liability for clinicians working in public hospitals. The decisive issue at trial, however, was causation. After hearing expert evidence, the court concluded that the plaintiff had not proven on a balance of probabilities that earlier diagnosis would have saved the kidney. Even if the injury had been recognised sooner, the evidence did not convincingly establish that the outcome would probably have been different. The claim was therefore dismissed. Read the judgment here: https://lnkd.in/gbhByqBR For doctors, the lesson is simple but important: a poor outcome does not equal negligence. For lawyers, the reminder is equally clear: medical negligence litigation often turns on causation rather than criticism of care. Having spent many years working at the intersection of medicine and law, I am constantly reminded that emergency medicine happens in real time under pressure. Courts, by contrast, analyse those moments years later with the benefit of hindsight. Understanding that gap is essential if we are to learn from cases like this rather than simply litigate them. — Dr/Adv Navin Naidoo Medico-Legally Speaking
But we aren't just losing doctors to burnout or long hours. We are actively driving our most experienced physicians out of medicine.
How? The endless, punishing cycle of Maintenance of Certification (MOC).
The AAMC projects a shortage of up to 86,000 physicians by 2036. At the same time, nearly half of practicing physicians are over 55.
We are on the verge of a massive retirement wave, and our current credentialing system is accelerating it.
Here is the reality on the ground: Doctors in their 50s and 60s, clinicians with decades of pristine practice, excellent patient outcomes, and countless hours of CME, are being handed the exact same recertification demands as a newly minted attending.
The rigid message the system sends.
"You are only as competent as your last exam score."
For thousands of mid-to-late-career physicians, this is the final straw. Layered on top of EMRs, prior authorizations, and state-specific mandates, the idea of paying exorbitant fees and taking another standardized test to "prove" their competence is insulting.
So, they quietly retire 5 to 10 years early.
The ripple effect is devastating:
📉 Hospitals spend up to $1M to replace a single experienced physician.
📉 Rural communities lose their only specialists, causing months-long delays for care.
📉 The medical field loses invaluable mentorship and clinical intuition that cannot be taught in a textbook.
To date, there is ZERO evidence linking MOC exams to workforce retention or patient safety. But there is massive evidence linking excessive administrative burden to early retirement.
We are draining the physician workforce with no measurable return.
It’s time for a structural realignment. We need a rational model that includes:
✅ Tiered maintenance by career stage
✅ Automatic CME integration to eliminate redundant systems
✅ Outcome-based accountability (real patient data, not online quizzes)
✅ A national credentialing platform for easier locums mobility
The greatest threat to patient safety isn’t a physician who skipped a multiple-choice quiz.
It is the empty exam room where no physician remains at all.
What has your experience been with MOC? Is it time to completely overhaul the board certification system?