Functional Medicine

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What is Functional Medicine?

Functional medicine is a personalized form of medicine dealing with primary prevention and underlying causes rather than symptoms of serious, chronic disease. It is a science-based field of health care that is grounded in the following principles:

Functional medicine is anchored in the examination of core clinical imbalances underlying various disease conditions. These imbalances arise as inputs from the environment such as diet; nutrients (including air and water), exercise, and trauma which are processed by the body, mind, and spirit through a unique set of genetic predispositions, attitudes, and beliefs. The fundamental physiological processes include communication, both outside and inside the cell; bioenergetics, or the transformation of food into energy; replication, repair, and maintenance of structural integrity, from the cellular to the whole body level; elimination of waste; protection and defense; and transport and circulation. The core clinical imbalances that arise from malfunctions within this complex system include:

Imbalances such as these are the precursors to the signs and symptoms by which we detect and label (diagnose) organ system disease. Improving balance – in the patient’s environmental inputs and in the body’s fundamental physiological processes – is the precursor to restoring health. This involves much more than just treating the symptoms. Functional medicine is dedicated to improving the management of complex, chronic disease by intervening at multiple levels to address these core clinical imbalances and to restore functionality and health. Functional medicine is not a unique and separate body of knowledge but is grounded in scientific principles and information widely available in medicine today. It combines research from various disciplines with highly detailed yet clinically relevant disease models and effective clinical management.

Functional medicine emphasizes integrating different treatments for different levels of conditions in the body, rather than a single treatment for a single diagnosis. Functional medicine uses the patient’s story as a key tool for integrating diagnosis, signs and symptoms, and evidence of clinical imbalances into a comprehensive approach to improve both the patient’s environmental inputs and his or her physiological function. It is a clinician’s discipline, and it directly addresses the need to transform the practice of primary care.