I'd like to see cheap and easy chemical testing-- for example, being able to track what's in your tap water. I expect to see that before I see the sort of cheap and easy medical monitoring you describe. For that matter, tracking the current nutrient value in food would be interesting. Neither one seems to be on the immediate horizon, which makes me wonder if such medical monitoring as you describe is within 10-15 years.
What are the odds of more knowledge of amazingly simple methods for dealing with potentially medical problems? I recently cleared up a case of gastric reflux-- I was waking up with a mouthful of acid fairly often-- just by sleeping on my left side. I don't think that sort of solution exists for every ailment, but I bet there's more of them to be found.
Did a physician inform you about the sleeping-on-side hack?
I personally know of an instance where a person had gastric reflux, went to the doctor, was prescribed a proton pump inhibitor as the sole treatment (Nexum), didn't get any better, went poking around the internet with google, and got non-medicine lifestyle adjustments (elevated bed head, fasting for five hours before bedtime) to fix their reflux problem. Then, later they told the doctor, who said nothing but "oh yeah".
We had no google in 1988 although surely some futurist genius somewhere foresaw it.
In the February and March 1988 issues of Cryonics, Mike Darwin (Wikipedia/LessWrong) and Steve Harris published a two-part article “The Future of Medicine” attempting to forecast the medical state of the art for 2008. Darwin has republished it on the New_Cryonet email list.
Darwin is a pretty savvy forecaster (who you will remember correctly predicting in 1981 in “The High Cost of Cryonics”/part 2 ALCOR’s recent troubles with grandfathering), so given my standing interests in tracking predictions, I read it with great interest; but they still blew most of them, and not the ones we would prefer them to’ve.
The full essay is ~10k words, so I will excerpt roughly half of it below; feel free to skip to the reactions section and other links.
1 The Future of Medicine
1.1 Part 1
1.1.1 Diagnostics
A side-note: genetic associations have been a very fertile field for John Ioannidis, and a big study just blew away a bunch of SNP-IQ correlations.
I recently learned that, besides the usual blame for increasing medical costs, some categories of doctors have been strenuously urged to reduce MRI use as actively harmful.
1.1.2 Resuscitation
1.1.3 Antibiotics
The pharmaceutical industry and antibiotics have been a case-study in stagnation, failure, and diminishing marginal returns. There is only one, highly experimental, anti-viral that I have heard of. In a followup email, Darwin responded to someone else pointing out DRACO:
(This agrees with my own general impressions, which I didn't feel competent to baldly state.)
1.1.4 Immunology and cancer
1.1.5 Atherosclerosis
1.2 Part 2
1.2.1 Anesthesia
1.2.2 Surgery
1.2.3 Geriatrics
We all know how well this has worked out. More troubling is that in some respects, we appear further from any solutions or treatments than before; while resveratrol did well in a recent human trial, the sirtuin research that seemed so promising has been battered by null results and failures to replicate. And anti-aging drugs have their own methodological difficulties; from the followup email:
1.2.4 Psychiatry & Behavior
From the previously quoted followup email:
1.2.5 Implants & Prosthetics
1.2.6 Hemodialysis
1.2.7 Organ Preservation
1.2.8 Other Approaches to Organ Preservation
1.2.9 Genetic therapy
1.2.10 Prevention
1.2.11 The Downside
And on to the economics:
2 Reactions
On reading all the foregoing, I commented: that was a depressing read. As far as I can tell, they were dead on about the dismal economics, somewhat right about the diagnostics, and fairly wrong about everything else. Which is better than the old predictions listed, only one of which struck me as obviously right (but in a useless way, who actually uses perfluorocarbons for liquid breathing?).
To which Darwin said:
See also Fight Aging!’s post, “Overestimating the Near Future”:
Darwin comments there:
3 Further reading
Previous Darwin-related posts:
See also Tyler Cowen's The Great Stagnation and “Peter Thiel warns of upcoming (and current) stagnation”.