HeadWise HeadWise: Volume 7, Issue 1 | Page 22

the world’s greatest thinkers including the writer Aldous Huxley and the biochemist Linus Pauling, PhD (the only person to win two unshared Nobel prizes) 3 . And today, more than 50 years later, the medical community lacks the tools to embrace the “everybody is unique” paradigm. The current state of the industry prompts three questions. Where did our current medical “one size fits all” approach come from? How effective is it if we develop medicines for Mr. or Ms. Average? And if it is not, how could we move on to a more effective approach? The answer to the first question revolves around the tendency to aggregate populations of people and average things into a single number (or set of numbers) that may not be representative of any individual. If other industries used this approach they would go out of business fairly rapidly. Imagine if the clothing industry only offered one size fits all. The time in Western history when we became interested in dealing with populations of people and stamping Here are pictures of 12 real stomachs in contrast to the “textbook” stomach at the top of the page. The real stomachs neither look alike nor do they operate alike. This figure from You Are Extraordinary by Roger J. Williams, PhD. (1967) originally taken from An Atlas of Human Anatomy, Barry J. Anson, PhD (1957) W.B. Saunders Company. 22 HeadW ise ® | Volume 7, Issue 1 • 2018 out something that could be sold to entire populations was of course the Industrial Age. Perhaps by no small coincidence, the field of modern statistics also was born around the same time – roughly 300 hundred years ago. In medicine, an average representing an aggregate population would allow one to scale and manufacture therapies for everyone. For this reason, virtually all clinical trials for therapies including drugs and medical devices, are still analyzed on aggregate populations. However, the paradigm of Mr. Average has had enormous clinical (as well as social and behavioral) consequences for humans who are outliers. If the population contains a high degree of individual variation, then any average number that is close, but maybe not close enough to be clinically useful to any given individual, is obviously a problem. For this reason a high degree of individual variation poses a serious problem for the healthcare industry. 4 For example, discovering and developing custom-made pharmaceuticals targeted to a single individual’s biochemistry and that person’s particular variation of a disease is not as simple as