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The ACES Model

ACES Model White Paper

Executive Summary

A Health Declaration Grounded in Humanity, Science, and Wisdom

American healthcare is at a crossroads. While science and technology have enabled remarkable breakthroughs in diagnosis and treatment, chronic disease, emotional suffering, medical overreach, and public mistrust have never been more widespread.

Our nation is over-medicated, under-nourished, and spiritually depleted — not for lack of knowledge, but for lack of a guiding model that sees the whole person.

Overarching model

The ACES model offers a comprehensive framework for understanding and reclaiming human health.

Bringing sciences together

ACES brings together conventional biomedical science, traditional healing systems, and emerging evidence in neuroscience, nutrition, and spirituality.

Active approach

ACES restores the individual as an active participant in their health, rather than a passive recipient of fragmented interventions.

About

The ACES model offers a unified framework

The U.S. spends more than any other nation on healthcare, yet ranks poorly in metrics of chronic disease, life expectancy, and well-being. Rates of obesity, anxiety, autoimmune illness, infertility, and neurodevelopmental disorders are rising. Our system excels at acute crisis management, but fails to prevent illness, promote resilience, or support the human experience of healing.

ACES is a new model – one that integrates structure, biochemistry, bioenergetics, and consciousness into a coherent system of prevention, treatment, and transformation.
New Model

ACES Framework

Doctors

Elevate Your Practice. Expand Your Impact.

Researchers

Professional Training Rooted in Wisdom and Science

Organizations

Redesigning Systems Around People, Not Protocols

Patients

Your Health is Your Wealth. Take it Back.
Policy Proposal

Implementing ACES in Community Health

We propose a federally supported pilot program to implement the ACES model across diverse community health centers, particularly in underserved areas.

  • Integrate the ACES model into physician and nurse training.
  • Track outcomes across physical, emotional, biochemical, and social health domains.
  • Study cost-effectiveness, patient satisfaction, medication use, and hospitalization rates.
  • Develop data for CMS, NIH, and HHS to evaluate future national scaling.
Case Study

What the doctors say

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Jennifer Lewis

Jennifer Lewis

Boston

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Janice Moore

Janice Moore

Tampa

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Laura Richi

Laura Richi

New York

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