What the future of Medicine holds for us?

Medicine is the craft, research, and experience of caring for a patient and handling their illness or disease’s diagnosis, prognosis, prevention, recovery, and palliation. Healthcare has now reached the next period of exponential advances, considering the fact that we are just two decades into the twenty-first century. Individual genetic vulnerabilities to chronic and lethal illnesses will now be detected using precision medicine technology, possibly eliminating illness decades later.  

Precision medicine, digital therapeutics, 3D printing, immunotherapy, gene and stem cell therapies, and artificial intelligence are among the new technologies and treatments that have arrived or are on their way. People are living longer and happier lives thanks to modern medicine. Researchers, on the other hand, intend to take wellness changes even further. The future of medicine is promising, thanks to developments in genome editing, technologies to cure blindness, and attempts to address high medication prices.

Modern medicine has greatly improved people’s health. Researchers now want to take this a step further. People are living longer and happier lives than their forefathers and mothers. But, as any medical researcher can testify, dreams are even bigger. With too much money to be made, disease prevention is becoming increasingly important in medicine. Intervention to protect people from long-term illness may start as soon as the baby is born. And, although a deterioration in health in later life of be common, the line between stable ageing and disease is still a point of contention.

Efforts to gain more leverage over rogue immune systems, as well as to create technical alternatives to paralysis, are showing early signs of success.

The future in medicine may be very promising indeed if obstacles to obtaining the latest therapies available can be resolved.