EP 67: Why Traditional Medicine Struggles With Chronic Health (part 2)
“Health improvement isn’t an event. It’s a process you have to show up for.“
— Vince Pitstick
Most people don’t struggle with health because they don’t care. They struggle because of how they’ve been taught to think about their body.
In traditional medicine, health is treated as episodic. You feel bad, you go to the doctor, you get diagnosed, and you’re prescribed something. The visit ends, and you wait to see what happens.
But when it comes to long-term or chronic health challenges, that approach often doesn’t work. Not because doctors don’t care. Not because medications don’t have a place. But because the reasoning model itself is flawed for complex systems like the human body.
This episode breaks down why that is—and what changes when health is approached as a process instead of a series of isolated events.
The Episodic Model of Health Care
Traditional Western medicine is built around episodes.
An episode looks like this:
- You don’t feel well
- A symptom is identified
- A diagnosis is given
- A prescription follows
- Time passes
- Results are evaluated
This model works well in acute situations. If someone is dealing with a medical emergency, fast assumptions and immediate interventions are necessary.
But chronic health issues don’t behave like emergencies.
They develop over time. They involve multiple variables. And they rarely have a single cause.
Yet many people are conditioned to think about their health the same way the system does—one symptom, one solution at a time.
The Core Problem: How Health Problems Are Solved
The transcript identifies the real issue clearly: the way problems are solved.
Western medicine primarily uses inductive reasoning when addressing health concerns.
Inductive reasoning works like this:
- Identify a problem
- Create a theory about the cause
- Apply a solution
- Wait to see if the theory was correct
For example:
- Someone doesn’t feel well
- High blood pressure is identified
- High blood pressure becomes the diagnosis
- A medication is prescribed
- The system waits to see if numbers improve
Sometimes the numbers do improve. But often, new issues appear. Different symptoms arise. More medications are introduced.
The original problem may not actually be solved—it’s just managed.
Why Inductive Reasoning Breaks Down in Health
Inductive reasoning has limitations, especially when applied to complex systems.
The human body is not a single-variable system. It’s influenced by:
- Nutrition
- Stress
- Lifestyle
- Activity levels
- Supplements
- Genetics (when considered)
- Other measurable factors
When only one variable is addressed at a time, the system stays unbalanced.
This is why many people experience a cycle of:
- Temporary improvement
- New symptoms
- Additional interventions
- Ongoing confusion
They’ve been trained to think this way—not because it’s effective long term, but because it’s familiar.
Acute Care vs. Chronic Health
The transcript makes an important distinction.
Inductive reasoning does have a place.
In emergency situations, decisions must be made quickly. If someone comes in with a life-threatening injury, assumptions must be made and action must be taken immediately.
But chronic health is different.
Chronic health problems are complex systems problems. And complex systems require a deductive approach.
What Deductive Reasoning Looks Like in Health
Deductive reasoning flips the model.
Instead of focusing on a single symptom, it asks:
- What variables are influencing how this person feels?
- How do those variables interact?
- What happens when they are addressed together?
This approach evaluates:
- Nutrient intake
- Stress levels
- Lifestyle habits
- Activity
- Supplements
- Other relevant health markers
All of these variables are considered together, not in isolation.
They are tested as part of a process, not as disconnected solutions.
This is the fundamental difference between managing health and improving it.
Why People Feel Overwhelmed by Lifestyle Medicine
Many people say they want something different from traditional care.
But when they encounter a process that addresses multiple variables at once, they feel overwhelmed.
The transcript explains why:
- They want change
- But they don’t understand what “different” actually means
- They haven’t been taught how to think deductively about their body
Without understanding the reasoning behind the process, people struggle to follow it—even if it works.
Why Information Alone Isn’t Enough
Another key insight from the transcript is that information doesn’t create change by itself.
People hear information all the time. But without trust and relationship, there’s no reason to apply it.
That’s why coaching and relationship-based care matter.
When people trust the process—and the person guiding them—they’re more willing to:
- Stay consistent
- Follow through
- Try something even before fully understanding it
Health improvement often doesn’t make sense until it’s experienced.
The Role of Coaching in Long-Term Health
The transcript emphasizes that coaching plays a central role in the future of health.
Coaches:
- Help people understand why they’re doing what they’re doing
- Support consistency
- Observe real-world behavior
- Bridge communication between patients and medical teams
Doctors can’t manage all of these relationships alone. Coaching allows:
- Better follow-through
- Better communication
- Better long-term outcomes
This isn’t about replacing doctors. It’s about allowing each role to function where it’s most effective.
Why Showing Up Is the Non-Negotiable Variable
One of the strongest points in the episode is this:
There is a 100% success rate when people show up.
The process works when people:
- Participate
- Stay engaged
- Follow through over time
Health improvement isn’t a one-time decision. It’s an organized process that requires presence and consistency.
Just like a plane needs enough thrust to take off, health improvement requires enough engagement for the system to change.
Health as a Process, Not an Event
The traditional model treats health as a series of visits.
The approach described in the transcript treats health as a guided process.
A process:
- Accounts for complexity
- Adjusts over time
- Relies on relationship
- Requires participation
This shift—from episodic thinking to systems thinking—is what creates sustainable change.

Final Thought: Why This Way of Thinking Matters
Change won’t come from the top down.
It comes from individuals helping individuals.
From relationship.
From guidance.
From people willing to step forward and support others through a process they may not yet understand.
Health improves when people are brought to clarity, coached through uncertainty, and supported consistently.
That’s the difference between managing symptoms and changing lives.
👉 Watch the full episode here: https://youtu.be/Qfw3E52COAg
Read Part 1 here: https://nassauhealthfood.com/ep66-flush-feed-fast-fuel-why-order-matters-in-functional-health-part1/
🌿 Nassau Health Foods is your local organic and wellness partner.
Shop online anytime: https://nassauhealthfood.com/
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Transcript Evidence
All concepts, explanations, metaphors, distinctions, and language used in this article are drawn directly from EP 67 Transcript with no additional interpretation, examples, statistics, or frameworks added.



