Renal infarction in COVID-19 patient
PMID 33119839 · DOI 10.1007/s40620-020-00866-2
Internal Medicine · Plymouth, MA
Root-cause medicine through nutrition, quantum biology, and natural therapies — built on a foundation of rigorous internal-medicine training.
Physician, educator, and advocate for medicine that addresses causes rather than symptoms.
Dr. Ahmad Ammous is an Assistant Professor at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, where he holds a faculty appointment in the Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine. He also serves as an Internal Medicine Hospitalist at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital–Plymouth in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
He completed his medical training in internal medicine in the United States, but was unsatisfied with modern medicine's focus on treatments rather than cures. He therefore chose to study nutrition, quantum biology, and natural medicine — disciplines that address the root cause of disease rather than simply hide symptoms.
His work focuses on metabolic health, circadian biology, ancestral nutrition, and the deeper environmental and systemic factors behind chronic disease. He is also an advocate for decentralized healthcare and frequently discusses the intersection of medicine, economics, and patient sovereignty.
The disciplines and clinical interests that shape how I practice and what I teach.
Long-form podcast interviews on medicine, nutrition, quantum biology, and decentralized health.
Selected scientific work, indexed in PubMed and published in peer-reviewed medical journals.
PMID 33119839 · DOI 10.1007/s40620-020-00866-2
PMID 30145204 · DOI 10.1016/j.acra.2018.07.014
PMID 28363922 · DOI 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-013041
A foundation in chemistry and medicine, from Swarthmore to Beirut to New York.
Staten Island University Hospital, NY
American University of Beirut, Lebanon
Swarthmore College, PA
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