I believe it is our choice to stay in an era that is significantly reliant on medicine primarily and intensive reactionary procedures in the absence of a significant focus on genuine holistic health. I believe the preferred alternative ought to be to transform to a more preventative, integrated, holistic health perspective that includes important prioritization on natural Earth striving behaviors, focus on ecological health, preventable holistic health of the individual, holistic epidemiology, nutrition, fitness, strength and conditioning, and quality of life. The last resort ought to be medical intervention with medications. We ought to strive to minimize side effects or use medications closer to natural substances and perform more minimally invasive techniques if possible. As I have suggested in previous papers, maybe we ought to turn hospitals into integrated, holistic community health that considers the needs of the region rather than just traditional standard structure and functioning. Each should be planned to meet the integrated, holistic needs of the area. At the same time, we should have regional specialty hospitals for those remnants of our “way things are world” illnesses until they are holistically eradicated over time. Hopefully, this will happen sooner than later. A higher focus should be on ESH and prioritization of human health and environmental ecogeosystematic health mitigation and prevention. We ought to use holistic diagnostic methods that create indicators of potential risk. EMS capability at increased density (preferably doctors or close to doctors at a little broader density) ought to be an essential skill for as many people as possible with the aptitude and ability to learn such basic skills.
I believe we ought to have a location-based connectivity system where not only people know where our health people are at all times to respond to essential life-threatening situations and emergencies. We ought to incentivize people to live and hang out in certain places relative to need and ecogeorelative prioritization. This depends on characteristics, population, special events with high numbers of people, or higher-risk events like skiing. All healthcare people ought to ski for free anywhere, and everywhere they would like in a well-planned way. Likewise, skiing lessons ought to be provided for free for everyone. The same goes for any other higher-risk event, sport, or area where increased need or risk may occur. Incentives to have more EMS, Paramedics, and health care experts, including Doctors in rural areas, especially those further away from trauma hospitals, is a must. It’s our choice.