The Patients Moved First

Cedar Valley News
May 16, 2026
The Patients Moved First
By Aisha Khalid

He set the bottle on my desk Tuesday, next to a lab report folded into quarters.

He was sixty-four. His previous doctor had moved out of town. He had been taking two capsules a day of a red yeast rice supplement, on his own, for six months. He turned the lab report so I could read it. His total cholesterol had dropped forty points. His LDL was inside the range his previous doctor had spent three years trying to reach.

He asked whether he should keep taking the supplement.

I told him red yeast rice is a statin.

He looked at me for a moment. He had not been told this. The bottle did not say it. The internet had told him red yeast rice was the natural alternative to the drug.

So I explained it to him, and I will explain it to you.

Red yeast rice has been used in traditional Chinese medicine for centuries. Its active ingredient, monacolin K, is chemically identical to lovastatin, the first FDA-approved statin. The drug is a supplement, isolated and put into a tablet. Studies show red yeast rice lowers LDL cholesterol fifteen to thirty-four percent, comparable to a prescription statin. His cholesterol came down because he had been taking a statin for six months. He had not known what to call it.

He asked me how he was supposed to know.

I told him the truth. He was not supposed to have known. He figured it out anyway, the way patients have been figuring things out for twenty years.

When I started practicing, patients waited for me to tell them what to do. They handed me their symptoms and trusted me to hand back a prescription. The patients who walk in now bring lab reports they ordered themselves and questions about studies they have read. The man on Tuesday was the ordinary patient of 2026.

I told him what I have watched. In 2002, twelve percent of American adults practiced yoga for pain. By 2022, it was almost twenty-nine. The complementary and alternative medicine market is projected to reach $229 billion by 2033. Mayo Clinic and Johns Hopkins have integrative medicine departments. The National Institutes of Health funds supplement research. The country has been moving for two decades. The patients moved first. The hospitals and doctors are catching up.

Not all of them. I told him he had probably met both kinds who have not. The doctor who will not discuss a supplement because the agency has not approved it. The doctor who tells you everything natural is safe, and everything from a pharmacy is poison. Both have stopped doing the work.

The work is not hard to describe. You ask what is in the bottle. You look at the lab report. You watch the numbers. You do it again in three months. The supplement is not the enemy. The prescription is not the enemy. The categories are the enemy. They let a doctor stop looking at the person in front of him.

I told him his statin was working. I told him the trouble with his bottle is the label cannot promise next month’s capsules will match this month’s, because supplements are not tested the way drugs are. I told him to keep what was working, switch to a brand an independent laboratory had checked, and come back in three months.

He said something as he folded the lab report back up. He said he had not led anything. He had just been watching his own cholesterol.

Then I told him the thing I want to tell you.

He was right. He had not set out to lead anything. Neither had the woman who took up yoga in 2003 to help her back, nor the millions of patients who walked into exam rooms over twenty years and asked one more question than their parents would have asked. Not one of them set out to move American medicine. Together, they moved it more in twenty years than the medical schools moved it in fifty.

You have been the ones moving this. Keep moving it. Read what you can find. Watch what works. Trust what your own numbers tell you.

Cedar Valley News has a Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. What you have read, tried, and learned about your own health is welcome too. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, Publication Consultants, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, the yoga participation figures, the complementary and alternative medicine market projection, the Mayo Clinic and Johns Hopkins integrative medicine departments, and the chemistry of red yeast rice and lovastatin are real.

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