meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
The People's Pharmacy

Show 1474: Treating the Cause, Not Just the Symptoms, with Functional Medicine

The People's Pharmacy

Joe and Terry Graedon

Kids & Family, Alternative Health, Health & Fitness, Medicine

4.61.2K Ratings

🗓️ 29 May 2026

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Over the years, we have spoken with scores of healthcare experts about chronic illness. Many of them attribute the problems to inflammation, which is after all a natural response to infection or injury. But not everyone has a system for locating and addressing the source of the inflammation. If you want to treat the cause, not just the symptoms of your disease, you might want to consider functional medicine.

At The People’s Pharmacy, we strive to bring you up to date, rigorously researched insights and conversations about health, medicine, wellness and health policies and health systems. While these conversations intend to offer insight and perspective, the content is provided solely for informational and educational purposes. Please consult your healthcare provider before making any changes to your medical care or treatment.

How You Can Listen:

You could listen through your local public radio station or get the live stream at 7 am EST on Saturday, May 30, 2026, through your computer or smart phone (wunc.org).  Here is a link so you can find which stations carry our broadcast. If you can’t listen to the broadcast, you may wish to hear the podcast later. You can subscribe through your favorite podcast provider, download the mp3 using the link at the bottom of the page, or listen to the stream on this post starting on June 1, 2026.

What Is Functional Medicine?

Many people have heard of integrative medicine. We asked our guest, Dr. Susan Payrovi, how this differs from functional medicine. (She practices both.) According to Dr. Payrovi, while both approaches embrace lifestyle therapies, integrative medicine may focus on individual organ systems, just as conventional medicine does. Functional medicine, on the other hand, is more likely to focus on how the body works. What functional systems are involved when a person experiences fatigue, for example? If there is a problem with the way the body produces energy, how could that be resolved?

If you are dealing with a problem caused by underlying inflammation, you could prescribe a potent anti-inflammatory or even a medicine that counteracts the immune system’s response to danger by blocking interleukins, for example. Or you could search upstream for the disturbance that is causing the immune system to overreact. Going upstream to find the cause is the functional medicine approach.

Sending the Body Safety Signals

If inflammation is a response to a danger signal, how can we let the immune system know that the body is safe? Lifestyle therapies offer some powerful interventions, even though they may sound very ordinary. Getting adequate sleep can make a huge difference for the immune system and lower inflammation dramatically. Stress management is another potent non-pharmaceutical approach. Consuming a diet rich in anti-inflammatory foods or even medicinal herbs could also contribute to a sense of safety and reduced inflammation.

The Silo Problem of Modern Medicine

We have spoken with many people who have struggled with a disease that manifests in multiple symptoms. They end up seeing a variety of specialists who don’t seem to communicate with each other. NO tool manages every condition. Too often, specialists pay attention only to the specific organ that they are assigned, and as a result, nobody puts the big picture together for a long time. The hope is that functional medicine would do a much better job for such patients, including those whose suffering has an emotional, psychological or spiritual aspect.

Functional Medicine and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

One example where patients are demanding more of their medical care is chronic fatigue syndrome. Conventional medicine has a notoriously difficult time treating such patients. Coaching patients on small but important lifestyle changes is one approach that functional medicine can offer. Pacing and learning to prioritize are vital skills for such patients. Dr. Payrovi learned a lot about the value of such approaches in dealing with her own illness, multiple sclerosis.

Finding a Functional Medicine Practitioner

People looking for a functional medicine practitioner can consult the Institute for Functional Medicine. The organization lists practitioners on its website, ifm.org. So does the Academy of Integrative Health and Medicine, aihm.org.

This Week’s Guest

Susan Payrovi, MD, is a physician practicing Integrative and Functional Medicine at Stanford’s Center for Integrative Medicine. Dr. Payrovi is board certified in Anesthesiology, Hospice and Palliative Medicine, as well as Integrative Medicine. She has additional training in Functional Medicine and acupuncture.
https://med.stanford.edu/profiles/susan-payrovi. Her website is drsusanpayrovi.com.

Dr. Susan Payrovi, Stanford University Center for Integrative Medicine

Susan Payrovi, MD

Listen to the Podcast

The podcast of this program will be available Monday, June 1, 2026, after broadcast on May 30. You can stream the show from this site and download the podcast for free.

Download the mp3, or listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I'm Joe Graydon.

0:01.5

And I'm Terry Graydon.

0:03.0

Welcome to this podcast of the People's Pharmacy.

0:06.1

You can find previous podcasts and more information on a range of health topics at

0:11.5

People's Pharmacy.com.

0:15.2

Inflammation is a natural reaction to injury or infection, but when it becomes chronic,

0:22.7

the result can be devastating.

0:27.1

This is the People's Pharmacy with Terry and Joe Graydon.

0:38.6

Many of the chronic diseases that end initis are caused by inflammation.

0:42.2

They're often treated by suppressing the inflammation.

0:45.6

Would it be better to find the source of the inflammation?

0:51.2

Functional medicine focuses on going upstream to find the cause.

0:55.9

Then it looks to address that cause with adaptations to sleep, diet, and other lifestyle issues as well as medication. Coming up on the people's pharmacy, treating the cause,

1:02.3

not just the symptoms, with functional medicine. In the P's Pharmacy Health Headlines, a study in the New England Journal of Medicine this week

1:20.6

suggests a novel way of lowering LDL cholesterol that could be permanent.

1:26.2

The drug works by changing gene function in the liver.

1:30.3

This study is small involving only 35 patients. It's more a proof of concept rather than a real

1:37.9

clinical trial. The target of this gene therapy is PCSK-9, which is crucial to the body's production of LDL cholesterol.

1:48.8

After one infusion at the highest dose, LDL cholesterol dropped by 62%.

1:55.3

This was maintained for up to a year.

1:58.9

Cardiologists have been trying for decades to get LDL cholesterol as low as

2:03.8

possible with statins and more recently with drugs called PCSK-9 inhibitors. This study was not designed

...

Transcript will be available on the free plan in 19 days. Upgrade to see the full transcript now.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Joe and Terry Graedon, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Joe and Terry Graedon and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2026.