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"Don't forget to take your pill," Mary's visiting mother says, and both Mary and her father answer, "I won't".
From his office here, a doctor asks a woman on the computer screen before him one final question: Are you ready to take your pill?
For those on birth control, she'll say, "Take out your cellphone and put in a daily alarm about when to take your pill.
So if you take your pill at 9 a.m. in D.C., you should take it at 3 p.m. in Spain".
If it's the next day, take your pill from the day before as well as the current day's dose.
"If you do not take your pill for three or more days, you are starting from scratch," Schell said.
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"What time do you take your pills?" she asks.
"Where am I going?" "Did you take your pills?" "I took them.
So take your pills, get thin, and lose all sense of style, taste and good sense.
Instead, make those prescriptions free and use technology to remind them to take their medicine, either with a text message or a pillbox that starts beeping if you forget to take your pills.
According to this new paradigm of preference-sensitive decision-making, doctors like me shouldn't tell patients what to do (Take your pills! Stop smoking!), but rather should educate our patients about the risks and benefits of their options.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com