Who We Are: Translators of Tomorrow’s Medicine
Mission Statement
The Personalized Medicine Initiative advances public understanding of emerging medical technologies through clear,
accessible education that empowers individuals and communities to make informed decisions about their health future.
Our Purpose
Healthcare is undergoing the most significant transformation in decades. Artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and
genomic analysis are redefining diagnosis, treatment development, and health prediction. Yet most people are left with questions, uncertainty, or misinformation.
PMI exists to close this gap by providing clarity, context, and scientific literacy—without sensationalism or hype.
Our Approach
1. Clear Translation
We break down complex medical and computational concepts into straightforward, reliable explanations.
2. Evidence-Based Guidance
Every resource is grounded in scientific rigor and critical evaluation.
3. Accessibility for All Communities
We believe that knowledge should not be limited by background, income, or education level.
4. Independence and Transparency
Our teaching is nonpartisan, unbiased, and free from commercial influence.
Our Founder
Who I am:
I’m Steven Borron, founder of The Personalized Medicine Initiative (PMI). I’m a cancer survivor and engineering
geologist with a graduate degree who’s spent a career making complex science accessible to non-technical audiences.
What I’m building:
A nationwide grassroots movement ensuring quantum-AI healthcare serves everyone, not just the wealthy. Think of it
as the civil rights movement for medical breakthroughs—demanding that publicly-funded innovations benefit the
public.
Why it matters:
Right now, Stanford, Harvard, and tech companies are investing billions in quantum-AI medicine—treatments that could cure cancer, prevent Alzheimer’s, and design drugs for your exact biology in hours instead of years. But a majority of Americans have never heard of it. The access policies being set in the next 3-5 years will determine who benefits for the next 50. Without public pressure, we default to a two-tier system: breakthrough treatments for the wealthy, high cost trial-and-error medicine for everyone else.
Why me:
I watched both my parents die in a reactive healthcare system that treats diseases too late. I survived cancer. I know firsthand what’s broken, and what could be fixed with the medicine being developed right now. But I’m not a doctor. I’m a geologist who’s presented complex research on three continents and has been told I have a knack for making difficult concepts understandable. That’s exactly what this movement needs—someone who can translate breakthrough science for the 72% who’ve been left behind.
The opportunity:
This crosses political lines. I’ve developed messaging that works for both conservatives (American leadership,reduced costs, medical freedom) and progressives (healthcare equity, public investment accountability). Healthcare is one of the few issues where genuine bipartisan support is possible.
What I need:
Partners, amplifiers, and people who see what I see: a narrow window to influence how transformative technology gets deployed. In 5-10 years, or the infrastructure will be too entrenched to change. We act now, or we lose the chance.
Where we are:
Early stage building of educational content, booking presentations, forming partnerships and preparing our 501(c)(3). This is grassroots work, and it’s how every successful movement starts with one person deciding it matters enough to act. That’s The Personalized Medicine Initiative. And I’d love to know if this resonates with you.
Our Values
• Clarity
• Scientific Integrity
• Accessibility
• Equity
• Critical Thinking
