Afleveringen
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Bryce Hanna is an independent nutrition researcher and educational consultant currently studying biochemistry, with a long-term goal of entering physician assistant training. For the past decade, he has been researching nutrition and biochemistry as both a personal obsession and a professional discipline — beginning with pharmacology and consciousness, and expanding into the fundamental role of nutrients in mental health, cellular biology, and chronic disease.
He works at a health food store where his reputation is built not on selling supplements but on helping people understand whether they need them — and more often than not, steering them away from expensive products toward cheaper, more effective, and better-understood alternatives. His online work under the handle @photobiogenesis covers methylation, minerals, soil depletion, fat biochemistry, and the evolutionary context of human nutrition.
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What if the foundational claim of modern infectious disease medicine — that viruses spread between people and cause illness — has never been conclusively demonstrated? That is not a fringe question. It is the question this episode explores in full.
Remnant | MD sits down with Jamie Andrews, an independent researcher who has spent years methodically examining the evidentiary basis of virology — from the controlled human infection studies of the early 20th century, to John Enders' 1954 isolation claim, to the PCR testing infrastructure deployed in 2020. His process: ask the childlike questions that industry insiders are too institutionally embedded to ask. Then follow the evidence.
More specifically, Remnant | MD pushes back on the assertion that viruses do not exist. Jamie's answer was quite surprising.
Topics Covered
The epistemological problem with modern medicine: a tower of unexamined assumptionsWhy virology may be the most pseudoscientific field in medicineThe controlled human infection studies — and why a century of attempts to transmit disease failedJohn Enders 1954: the moment virology changed, and what the control experiment actually showedThe PCR test: what it measures, where it failed, and what 'positive' actually meansTerrain theory, Avicenna, and the Unani medicine framework for infectious diseaseJohn Snow, cholera, and what the Broad Street pump study actually provedPsychological transmission of disease: if fear makes you sick, that is contagionThe 'simplex' model of cellular biology — on/off, charge/discharge, alive/deadWhat was lost when the family doctor was replaced by a pharmaceutical pathwayThe physician as partner — and why patients who feel unseen don't comply -
Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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This conversation delves into the challenges of healthcare, the impact on physicians and patients, and the need for autonomy and purpose in medical practice.
It also explores the role of technology in scaling healthcare innovation and addressing burnout.
Finally, we explore the challenges of physician-patient communication, the importance of empowering patients through logistics, mindset coaching, and readiness for lifestyle changes.
Takeaways
The need for physician autonomy and purpose in medical practiceThe role of technology in scaling healthcare innovation and addressing burnout Effective communication is crucial for empowering patients.Empowering patients through logistics and mindset coaching is essential for lasting lifestyle changes.Chapters
00:00 The Healthcare Dilemma06:31 Challenges in Healthcare Entrepreneurship11:53 Physician Autonomy and Purpose20:54 Scaling Healthcare Innovation33:03 Physician-Patient Communication40:01 Challenges in Lifestyle Modification45:45 Shift in Healthcare Paradigm51:24 Patient Selection and Autonomy01:03:05 Future of Medicine -
In this episode, Dr. Kaveh Kavoosi and I explore the profound challenges and opportunities faced by healthcare professionals, especially in emergency settings. Our discussion emphasizes maintaining humanity amid high-stress environments and integrating spiritual hygiene into medical practice for personal and patient well-being.
Key Topics:
-The dichotomy in healthcare: short appointments vs. emergency demands
-Managing nervous system dysregulation after intense shifts
-Practices for recovery and maintaining emotional resilience, including breathwork and boundaries
-The importance of spiritual hygiene to metabolize stress
-The role of purpose and meaning in sustaining healthcare providers
-How to set effective personal boundaries to preserve vitality
-The impact of societal and systemic influences on medical practice and ego
-The dangers of over-reliance on pharmaceuticals and peptides as shortcuts
-The importance of understanding oneself to foster health and happiness
-The cultural shift needed for medicine to serve with compassion and humility -
Dr. Ahmad Ammous is an internal medicine physician based in Boston, who is trying to escape his hospitalist job by taking his interests, discoveries, and non-mainstream treatment approaches to those who seek to truly improve their health without the use of prescription drugs.
I’ve known him for quite a number of years, and am grateful that he wanted to be the first guest on the new podcast.
Primarily, we focused on Dr. Ammous’ journey through diet, quantum biology, and spirituality.
We also discussed:
Dietary considerations aligning with physiologyFlaws in Medical EducationLimitations of Conventional TreatmentsUnderstanding Disease Beyond SymptomsImpact of Expectations on HealthcareRole of the Internet on Health EducationLearning from PatientsValue of Individual CareLeveraging AI for ResearchDr. Ammous can be found on X (@AmmousMD) and Instagram (@Ammous_MD), as well as on his website https://ammousmd.com/