Medicine often operates blindly between measurements.
Today, most healthcare decisions are made with very limited information.
A few lab results. An occasional scan. A short clinical visit every few months or years.
Between those moments, there is almost no visibility into what is happening inside the human body.
In practice, medicine often operates blindly between measurements.
This lack of continuous data is one of the fundamental limitations in modern healthcare. It leads to:
Many of the world's most serious diseases do not become deadly because they are untreatable, but because they are not seen early enough, or not tracked continuously enough to understand what is happening in time.
We are trying to manage dynamic biological systems with static, infrequent snapshots.
Human health is not a moment-in-time problem. It is a continuous process.
Yet most of medicine is built on intermittent observation.
This creates a gap between:
That gap is where much of preventable harm occurs.