Optional 3-minute audio: why sequencing beats more information.
                                                                                                                                                            

 

Dear Colleague,

 

Over the past few days, I’ve shared individual cases—GI, immune, and hormone/fatigue—to show how FMU approaches complexity differently.

 

Today I want to zoom out.

 

Because once clinicians see that FMU is different, the next question is almost always this:

 

““Will this make my outcomes more consistent?”

 

That question matters.

 

Unpredictable outcomes don’t just frustrate patients.
 

They exhaust clinicians.

 

And most of the time, that unpredictability isn’t because cases are impossible.

It’s because biology is being treated out of order.

What starts to change when cases are sequenced correctly

When clinicians begin applying FMU’s sequencing discipline, a pattern emerges across many cases—not just one:

  • GI cases flare less often
  • Immune cases calm without constant escalation
  • Hormone/fatigue cases stop cycling between “better” and “crashed”
  • Interventions hold instead of unraveling
  • Patients tolerate care instead of reacting to it

Different systems.
Same underlying logic.