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DAVID LEJEUNE: Root Cause Medicine Vital To Reforming American Healthcare

Nothing is more frustrating than having your doctor tell you that the physical ailments you are experiencing can only be managed, not healed. Yet that is what countless Americans are told by hospital systems across the nation, which too often prioritize profits and bureaucratic control over health.

It does not have to be this way.

Fortunately, the Trump Administration is taking steps to reinforce personalized, holistic approaches to medical treatments as a part of its Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) initiative. These efforts present a unique opportunity to align federal healthcare policy with time-tested, Root Cause approaches to medicine that help prevent disease, reverse chronic conditions, and lower healthcare costs for patients struggling to protect their health.(RELATED: Vast Majority Of Americans Support National MAHA-Backed Food Labeling, Poll Finds)

The moment for serious reform is now.

Root Cause medicine shifts the focus from masking symptoms to identifying and treating the underlying drivers of disease, including genetic, environmental, infectious, nutritional, and lifestyle factors. In my experience as a healthshare CEO, I’ve seen people with cancer, hypothyroidism, neurological Lyme disease, autoimmune disease, and even infertility obtain tangible healing and restored function. If pursued on a national scale, this approach could transform lives across the country.

There is no question that Root Cause medicine can begin to reverse a “Woke,” broken healthcare system. Currently, millions of Americans are victims of a healthcare model that does not have their best interests at heart.

In today’s overly politicized medical landscape, for example, children questioning their biological gender are often put on puberty blockers and other hormonal interventions, encouraged to undergo surgical procedures to alter their appearance and even told to go by other names and pronouns.

Such “treatments” reveal the deeper failures of a politicized healthcare system, one that too often bypasses meaningful diagnostics in favor of ideologically driven protocols. Countless “de-transitioners” insist that had they simply received comprehensive counseling and a deeper medical evaluation in the first place, they could have avoided the turmoil and irreversible procedures inflicted upon them.

This is exactly where Root Cause medicine offers a better path forward. Rather than rushing to treat surface level symptoms or appease political pressures, it urges physicians to investigate what’s really going on biologically, psychologically, and environmentally.

That’s the kind of care millions of Americans deserve but can’t access under the current system. For decades, federal regulations and insurance mandates have locked doctors and patients into one-size-fits-all treatment plans. These rules often dictate which tests, prescriptions, and procedures are covered, discouraging physicians from pursuing individualized care or alternative therapies.

Federal lawmakers and policy experts should roll back the policies that force this standardized model and instead embrace efficient, private-sector models such as health sharing ministries and businesses that offer personalized healthcare with far more transparency in pricing.

Adopting Root Cause treatment methods also aligns with many patients’ religious and ethical principles about healthcare, protecting their conscience rights.

The good news is that lawmakers are empowered with ample historical and scientific support for Root Cause medicine. Already, the Trump Administration has begun addressing what years of mainstream medicine has ignored: research showing a potential link between acetaminophen (the painkiller in Tylenol) and autism spectrum disorder, which now affects one in 36 eight-year-olds in the United States.

One such study, published in 2024, shows how targeted interventions reversed autism symptoms in twins, showing yet again how effective Root Cause diagnosis and treatment can be. A 2016 study identifying acetaminophen as a likely contributor to autism spectrum disorders, medical experts began urging caution — especially when prescribing it to pregnant women and young children – and encouraged their colleagues to consider alternatives. Now, nearly a decade later, policy experts are offering warnings about this too.

We must also ask: why do oncologists not run environmental toxicology tests on carcinogens after identifying cancer in patients, especially when so many Americans are concerned about the effects of carcinogens in our environment?

When treating cancer patients, one of many tests that should be run is toxicology screenings to determine if their cancer could have stemmed from environmental chemicals. Doing this kind of investigative testing can be the key to successful treatment and prevention of cancer and other chronic diseases such as autism spectrum disorders and autoimmune conditions.

If we as a society genuinely want patients to thrive from youth to old age, a Root Cause approach to healing must govern healthcare policy priorities. Americans deserve such options.

Together, federal lawmakers, policy experts and private innovators can “Make America Healthy Again” by doing everything in our power to heal from the inside out.

David LeJeune is the President of America’s Healthshare

The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.

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