Allies Voice: Trusera - an answer for everybody!

If you haven't yet heard about a community sharing the power of been there - I'm honored to be the first one to tell you about it. I speak of the new community called Trusera - the brainchild of former Amazon.com executive Keith Schorsch. A man after my own ambitions - Keith found himself in a lonesome situation when a battalion of doctors had no answer for an exhausting array of symptoms he had developed. After chewing through the expertise of more than 10 doctors - a friend reached out and gave Keith a diagnosis. Not just any diagnosis -- it was the right diagnosis. With a "try this on for size" friendly suggestion - Keith surmised he's not the only person stuck in a black hole of medical unfamiliarity. Hold on to your keyboards, ladies and gentleman. Pull up a chair, sit-down and outreach to get relevant, relative and reliable medical communications from a rapid-growing Seattle-based startup called Trusera.

As a blogging baracuda, myself - there is a lot to be said for unbridled freedom of speech. When I first heard about Trusera - I said it sounded a lot like a modern day party line for medical conditions (not local neighborhoods). What's up doc? The concept of Trusera forages beyond the day old peanuts on the bar of most establishments and rocks out the full-on catered spread. C'mon people - we're talking about a culmination of Expedia, Amazon.com, Washington Mutual at work here. What would you expect from a collaboration of corporate genius like that?

Trusera is an online health network where you can find and share real-world experiences with others who've been through it. By connecting with others, you can find valuable insights that will help you take control of your health and educate you on the health conditions of others. At Trusera, you get relevant, credible and useful health information from others who've been through it. You've heard the saying been there done that? Here's what it looks like in URL form: http://www.trusera.com

Keith Schorsch founded the company after realizing that it is way too hard for people to find credible health insights from other people. It took a phone call from one friend to diagnose what eleven doctors couldn't collectively identify. Defeats the power in numbers theory, doesn't it? Well that remains true until you collaborate with the power of truth and numbers on Trusera!

Trusera extends an open invitation to share as little or as much as you want about yourself while browsing (or sharing) other stories. So, you can learn about as many health topics as you want in one place; autism, breast cancer, depression, IBS, glaucoma, diabetes, weight loss, etc.

As we meet new people, or learn of old friends, or hire new employees and accidentally find-out they have some health issue - Trusera could be your anonymous sherpa to conquer your mountain of curiosity. Avoid the awkward, uncomfortable, or inappropriate questions - everything about the Trusera community is an open door policy of real world enlightenment.

Since we're tight - I am happy to reveal a magical link for friends OF "Allies Voice" who want to join Trusera. Trusera administration says if you're cool with Allie - you're cool with us! Open sesame to experience the power of been there!

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  • 5/31/2008 2:57 AM tony villar wrote:
    i like this article.
    Reply to this
  • 5/31/2008 11:58 AM Sanktpauli wrote:
    In ancient Babylon, the most advanced medical center of its time, there was a temple where patients suffering from various diseases lay in the corridors and gave advice to others who had the same symptoms. It seems that the world is now returning to that ancient wisdom.
    Reply to this
    1. 5/31/2008 2:11 PM BetterCell wrote:
      Advice or/and Wisdom whether ancient or present, is only workable if the recipient is able to critically think for himself and is receptive.
      Unfortunately, there are far too many that do not have that gift.
      Reply to this
    2. 6/1/2008 5:56 PM Allie Beatty wrote:
      Hey Sanktpauli – thanks for refreshing my memory about a blog I did for AOL a year or so ago. It reported on the fact that people nowadays are looking for medical information online before going to their primary care physician or walk-in clinics. I suppose this report concurs with your statement. Thanks for the confirmation! The cost of time is precious and NOT refundable. Why not begin your query online and save the time (and money)?
      Reply to this
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