Dr. Will Blake

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Dr. Will Blake

Dr. Will Blake

@drwillblake

Economist at heart. Physician by trade. CEO by necessity. Mission-minded by nature. Educator by serendipity.

Salt Lake City, UT Bergabung Eylül 2016
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
The day I realized I was spending more time going to conferences to learn how to be Medicare compliant than I was spending on how to be a better surgeon was the day I started planning my clinical retirement. That was 11 years ago. Regulating doctors kills patients.
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Reading Horizons
Reading Horizons@ReadingHorizons·
We’re celebrating a truly special milestone at Reading Horizons 🎉 Please join us in congratulating Dr. Shantell Blake on earning her doctorate! Congratulations, Dr. Blake—we’re so lucky to learn from and work alongside you! #LiteracyLeaders #WomenInEducation
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Brandon Luu, MD
Brandon Luu, MD@BrandonLuuMD·
iPad reading before bed (vs printed books) caused: 1) 55% melatonin suppression 2) 1.5-hour circadian delay 3) 10 minutes longer to fall asleep 4) Less REM sleep 5) Groggier next morning
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
@thenewmexican Sure. Let’s try the spend more money to make things more affordable approach. None of this will move the needle for New Mexicans.
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Santa Fe New Mexican
Santa Fe New Mexican@thenewmexican·
Wellness Wire: The legislative session is officially over — and it was a big one for health care policy. Here are five things lawmakers did aimed at making health care more accessible and affordable for New Mexico residents. sfnm.co/4kOSshN
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Bernie Sanders
Bernie Sanders@BernieSanders·
Net worth of the billionaires opposing California's wealth tax: Elon Musk: $844 billion Larry Page: $262 billion Sergey Brin: $243 billion Mark Zuckerberg: $228 billion Larry Ellison: $209 billion Yes. We must tax billionaires. And it starts in California.
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LynLight Literacy
LynLight Literacy@LynLightLit·
If your child is struggling to read, it does not mean they are behind in intelligence. Reading is a learned skill. When the instruction matches how the brain builds word recognition, growth is possible at any age.
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
@Deseret Don’t blame tech on poor instruction. Blame improper implementation of tech. Targeted, high-quality tech can help when properly used as a tool to support effective explicit instruction. Broad banning could result in just as much harm. Tech is an easy scapegoat. Look deeper.
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Deseret News
Deseret News@Deseret·
"Much of educational technology is deliberately engineered for addiction and actually worsens learning outcomes. The SAFE Act and the Balance Act offer a solution," Jared Cooney Horvath writes. deseret.com/opinion/2026/0…
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
Confusion and chaos are effective because they keep our eyes down and our attention scattered. The mists of darkness don’t have to convince us of a lie. They just have to keep us distracted long enough to stop looking toward the light.
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Neil Floch MD
Neil Floch MD@NeilFlochMD·
The one point that the general public must understand is that the cost of medicine, the rise of hospitals systems, and the fall of private practice has occurred largely because government has allowed hospital systems to be paid a “facility fee” that independent physicians cannot collect. pgpf.org/article/what-i…
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
@saylor Says the man who has the most to lose when you stop buying bitcoin. This will go down in history as one of the biggest Ponzi schemes ever.
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Michael Saylor
Michael Saylor@saylor·
The Rules of Bitcoin 1. Buy Bitcoin 2. Don't Sell the Bitcoin
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
@TheBTCTherapist Ever notice the loudest crypto bulls are the ones most exposed if it fails? That’s not conviction. That’s incentive alignment.
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The ₿itcoin Therapist
The ₿itcoin Therapist@TheBTCTherapist·
POV: It’s 2030, the Bitcoin you bought at $75,000 is now worth $750,000. Everyone else sold but you never did.
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
@CryptoMikli Any asset whose value depends on resale depends on shared participation. Bitcoin just makes that explicit. Gold survives gaps in participation. Speed of settlement doesn’t change that.
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
Loyalty belongs to principles, not people. People will fail. Truth should not.
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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
The real story is how many people stayed silent while personally or professionally benefiting. That kind of quiet is how harm persists.
Peter Attia@PeterAttiaMD

The following email is what I sent my team last night. I sent a similar version to my patients, also. *** You’ve put your trust, your credibility, and your hard work into what we have built together, and I take that responsibility seriously. You deserve a complete and honest account of what did and did not happen. I apologize that I did not get this out sooner, but I want to be thorough. The purpose of the DOJ releasing these documents is clear: to identify individuals who participated in criminal activity, enabled it, or witnessed it. I am not in any of those categories, and there is no evidence to the contrary. To be clear: 1. I was not involved in any criminal activity. 2. My interactions with Epstein had nothing to do with his sexual abuse or exploitation of anyone. 3. I was never on his plane, never on his island, and never present at any sex parties. That said, I apologize and regret putting myself in a position where emails, some of them embarrassing, tasteless, and indefensible, are now public, and that is on me. I accept that reality and the humiliation that comes with it. *** I want to start by directly addressing the email thread that I’ve been asked about the most. In June 2015, I sent Epstein an email with the subject line “Got a fresh shipment.” The email contained a photograph of bottles of metformin, a medication I had just received from the pharmacy for my own use. The subject line referred to the picture of the bottles of medication. He replied with the words “me too” and attached a photograph of an adult woman. I responded with crude, tasteless banter. Reading that exchange now is very embarrassing, and I will not defend it. I’m ashamed of myself for everything about this. At the time, I understood this exchange as juvenile, not a reference to anything dark or harmful. At that point in my career, I had little exposure to prominent people, and that level of access was novel to me. Everything about him seemed excessive and exclusive, including the fact that he lived in the largest home in all of Manhattan, owned a Boeing 727, and hosted parties with the most powerful and prominent leaders in business and politics. I treated that access as something to be quiet about rather than discussed freely with others. One line in that exchange, about his life being outrageous and me not being able to tell anyone, is being interpreted as awareness of wrongdoing. That is not how I meant it at all. What I was referring to, poorly and flippantly, was the discretion commanded by those social and professional circles–the idea that you don’t talk about who you meet, the dinners you attend and the power and influence of the people in those settings. What I wrote in that email reads terribly, and I own that. *** I met Epstein in 2014 through a prominent female healthcare leader while I was raising funds for scientific research. At that time, he was widely known in academic and philanthropic circles as a funder of science and moved openly among credible institutions and public figures. Between summer 2014 and spring 2019, I met with him on approximately seven or eight occasions at his New York City home, regarding research studies and to meet others he introduced me to. I never visited his island or ranch, and I never flew on any of his planes. When I was at his home, it was either meeting with him directly, meeting with small groups of scientists, doctors, or business leaders, and once at a dinner in 2015 with a number of guests including prominent heads of state. In retrospect, the presence and credibility of such venerable people in different orbits led me to make assumptions about him that clouded my judgment in ways it shouldn’t have. I was not his doctor, though several times I answered general medical questions and recommended other providers to him. Shortly after we met, I asked him directly about his 2008 conviction. He characterized it as prostitution-related charges. In 2018, I came to learn this was grossly minimized (more on this below). I was incredibly naïve to believe him. I mistook his social acceptance in the eyes of the credible people I saw him with for acceptability, and that was a serious error in my judgment. To be clear, I never witnessed illegal behavior and never saw anyone who appeared underage in his presence. *** In November 2018 I read the Miami Herald investigative article. I was repulsed by what I learned. Nauseated. It marked a clear and irreversible line between what I knew before and what I understood afterward. At that point, I told him directly he needed to accept responsibility for what he did. Hoping to provide the victims from the Herald piece with support, I contacted a residential trauma facility to understand what funding comprehensive care for many victims would require. (Those communications were between me and the facility and were therefore not part of the document release.) I spoke with him and shared that information and insisted that he fund their care, beginning with residential treatment and followed by lifelong therapy. In hindsight, even attempting to facilitate accountability was a mistake and once again reflected just how naïve I was at the time. Once the full scope of his actions was clear, disengagement should have been the only appropriate response. My intent does not change that, and I regret not drawing that boundary immediately. *** Nothing in this letter is meant to minimize the harm suffered by the young women Epstein abused. Their trauma is permanent. I am not asking for a pass from you. I am not asking anyone to ignore the emails or pretend they aren’t ugly. They simply are. The man I am today, roughly ten years later, would not write them and would not associate with Epstein at all. Whatever growth I’ve had over the past decade does not erase the emails I wrote then. I recognize that my actions and words have consequences for the people I care deeply about, including all of you. I regret the cost this has placed on you, and I take responsibility for it. I won’t ask anyone to defend me or explain this on my behalf. If you have questions or concerns, I’ll address them directly with you, my team.

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Dr. Will Blake
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake·
You can be pro-immigration and anti-crime. You can support peaceful protest and reject violence and hate. You can uphold the law while leading with compassion and humanity. You can protect dignity and insist on accountability. This is not a contradiction. It is moral clarity.
Dr. Will Blake@drwillblake

When fear is high, we’re offered false choices: pick a side or be the enemy. That may feel safe, but it isn’t true. The work of healing lives beyond the binary.

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Heidi Hatch KUTV
Heidi Hatch KUTV@tvheidihatch·
BREAKING: Former KUTV Chief Meteorologist Roland Steadham dies in plane crash. Condolenes to his wife, children and work family in Boise, Idaho. Steadham also worked at ABC 4 here in Utah and most recently as chief at KBOI in Boise, Idaho.
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