The air has been heavy with pollen these past few days.
Even with medication, many people seem to be struggling with persistent symptoms.
This annual discomfort led me to reflect on a more fundamental question:
what exactly do we call a “disease,” and what is the true role of a doctor?
Sneezing can be heard everywhere. I am no exception.
Even those taking anti-allergic medications seem to find little relief.
Hay fever is a troublesome condition—whether we call it a disease or merely a symptom—and it returns every year without fail.
But what exactly do we mean by “disease”?
And what word stands in contrast to it?
I used to think that doctors exist to cure diseases.
In reality, however, the number of truly curable diseases is quite limited.
Most diseases are defined as conditions in which structural or functional abnormalities of the body cause discomfort or suffering, interfering with daily life.
If that is the case, can aging—the greatest source of discomfort and decline—be considered a disease?
One might say that without symptoms, one is healthy.
Yet as we live, that is, as we age, irreversible dysfunctions inevitably emerge throughout the body.
It may sound like a sophism, but human beings are, in a sense, patients moving inevitably toward death.
Within the broad process of aging, various conditions such as infections and cancer arise.
The role of a doctor is to manage these conditions as they appear.
There is very little medicine can do against aging itself.
Exercise, mental activity, and dietary care—these are things one can choose to do without ever seeing a doctor.
Doctors do not possess a cure for aging, this incurable condition.
At best, we can respond to and control the abnormalities that occur along the way.
Human life, if well cared for, can extend to around a hundred years.
The task of medicine is to correct deviations that arise during that long process.
When this is done well, patients can live more comfortably, and perhaps more happily.
Whether a hundred years is long or short depends on the individual.
Yet considering that we are only some twenty generations removed from the time of Christ, it may not be so short after all.
Each life, in its own way, is longer than we tend to think.
As physicians, we must continue striving—day by day—to support that time as best we can.
Each life is longer than we think—and worth quietly sustaining.
















