Western biomedicine is an extraordinarily powerful and geographically uneven system — excellent at acute and emergency care, increasingly sophisticated in managing complex diseases, and often less useful for prevention, chronic conditions, and the whole-person dimensions of health. Navigating it well requires understanding how it is organized (primary care, specialists, hospitals, laboratories, pharmacies), what it does well, what it misses, and how to advocate for yourself within it. It is a tool — a very important one — and like any tool it works best when used for the right problems.
Each step builds on the last.