Recent studies show that one in four Emiratis has diabetes in contrast with the world average of 5%. The World Health Organisation has also predicted that diabetes deaths will increase by more than 50% in the next 10 years if no preventive measures are taken. Meanwhile, osteoporosis, a bone-weakening disorder, affects 70% of women over 60 in the GCC. But even with the higher prevalence of these diseases, fewer residents are interested in tackling these life-threatening conditions, with 42% of women putting staying slim as their top health concern.
Such widespread occurrence of chronic illnesses and ignorance of vital health issues among UAE residents has caused authorities to urge residents to seize every available opportunity to live a healthier lifestyle.
CENIGENT’s systems approach differs tremendously from the current modern “reductionist” medical approach, which focuses on treating the end-symptoms of disease, rather than the core causes, and according to the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), “treats disease in isolation, without taking into account the integrative systems in the human body.”
As the first and only medical facility using a systems approach in a clinical setting, California-headquartered CENIGENT delineates itself from modern medicine’s philosophy that aging and age-related chronic diseases inevitably occur and should be accepted. CENIGENT’s view is that age-related health decline occurs due to functional deterioration of the eight CENIGENT systems and can be prevented by restoring the optimal functioning to all eight systems.
To achieve this, CENIGENT follows a systems approach, performing predictive testing and assessments followed by restorative measures to optimise the major systems, avert age-related health decline and achieve peak health. CENIGENT conducts comprehensive predictive and preventive diagnostics for more than 750 biomarkers, as well as screening and total body imaging diagnostics, to assess all aspects of existing and potential health decline.