Many clinicians know what is wrong. Far fewer know what deserves attention first.
                                                                                                                                                            

 

 

 

Hello Friends and Colleagues,

 

Most clinicians think the hard part is figuring out what is wrong.

 

In complex chronic illness, that is often not the hardest part.

 

The hardest part is knowing what deserves attention first.

 

That is the difference between:

 

having information
and
having order

 

Between:

building plans
and
getting outcomes that last

 

That is one of the reasons FMU was built.

 

I also want to share a white paper I recently wrote called The Rise of the Sequence-Based Clinician.

 

It explains why so many well-designed plans still fail, why some patients stall despite doing everything right, and why knowing what must happen first may be the missing skill that changes outcomes.

 

If this is the kind of clinical thinking you have been missing, start here. If you already know FMU is right for you, you can reserve your seat today with a $150 deposit.

 

[Read the White Paper]
[Learn More About FMU]
[Reserve Your Seat with a $150 Deposit]

 

To your growth and success,

Dr. Ron Grisanti
Founder, Functional Medicine University

 

P.S. If you have ever built what seemed like the right plan and still watched the patient stall, this white paper will show you why. The missing issue is often not knowledge. It is knowing what must happen first.