With Steve Hallstrom away, Dr. Jake Schmitz steps behind the mic for a high-energy, provocative exploration of the boundaries between modern medicine and clinical nutrition. A chiropractor with a second doctorate in clinical nutrition, Dr. Jake pulls no punches as he asks a central, "spicy" question: Should medical doctors be giving nutritional advice when they receive almost no formal training in the subject?
Dr. Jake dives deep into medical history to explain why nutrition was stripped from medical school curriculums over a century ago. He challenges the "halo effect" that grants MDs authority over all things health-related and argues that true healthcare requires domain-specific experts. From success stories of reversing "incurable" diseases through lifestyle changes to a breakdown of why some supplements are "nutrient thieves," this episode is an eye-opening look at personal responsibility and the "medicine man" roots of healing.
Key Moments
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The 50x Education Gap: Dr. Jake breaks down the startling reality that the average medical student receives only about 20 to 25 hours of introductory nutrition training—contrasting it with the 1,500+ hours required for a doctorate in clinical nutrition.
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The Flexner Report of 1910: A historical deep dive into how the Rockefeller and Carnegie foundations shifted the focus of medical education away from holistic wellness and toward pharmaceutical-based disease management.
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Curing the "Incurable": Dr. Jake shares the story of a patient who reversed a severe case of ulcerative colitis through therapeutic supplementation and diet, only to have a medical doctor warn that the very things that worked were "dangerous."
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The "Quack" Label: A look at the legal history of the American Medical Association’s "Committee on Quackery" and its original mission to destroy the chiropractic profession.
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Personal Responsibility over Medication: Why Dr. Jake believes you cannot be truly "healthy" while remaining on chronic pharmaceutical medications, and how to reclaim your health through consistent, right actions.
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Legal "Mic Drop": A reading of North Dakota law which suggests practitioners should only practice in areas where they have demonstrated competence—challenging the legal basis for MDs giving nutrition opinions.
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The Carnivore and Whole Foods Move: Listener Ty joins the conversation to discuss how switching to whole foods and "common sense" exercise fixed his hyperthyroidism when pills couldn't.
