Stephen W. Rex, MD
Family Medicine
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About Stephen W. Rex, MD
I strive to identify opportunities where my patients and I can intervene to help attain their health and wellness goals. This can only happen after listening carefully to the patient's story and then explaining my advice in detail. I believe that when I take the time to understand the patient as a whole person I am in the best position to offer meaningful advice.
Philadelphia, PA
1991-1993
Philadelphia, PA
1990-1991
Columbus, OH
Doctorate of Medicine 1990
Oxford, OH
Bachelor of Science, Physics 1985
Top Doctors, Washingtonian Magazine 2008, 2015, 2017
Top Doctors, Consumer Checkbooks 2004
Benefits of joining Dr. Rex's practice with MDVIP
The office of Stephen W. Rex, MD
| Mon | 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM |
| Tue | 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM |
| Wed | 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM |
| Thu | 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM |
| Fri | 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM |
| Sat | Closed |
| Sun | Closed |
What our members are saying
I think that MDVIP is a wonderful concept for providing outstanding healthcare.
Dr. Rex has been my family doctor for many years. I had always been very pleased with my healthcare during those years and I was happy to make the transition to MDVIP with him. Things have even got better since his change over to MDVIP. Access to his care has been excellent. When I call…
Reviews from the web
(A Bayesian Rebuttal to “The Hidden Risk in Your Glass” by Dr. Wendy Walker)
The article by Dr. Wendy Walker correctly points out that alcohol can contribute to several forms of cancer. Where it falls short, however, is in how it presents the numbers. The statistics cited are conditional risks — percentages that describe how much more likely a cancer is among drinkers than nondrinkers — but they don’t account for the base probability of developing each cancer in the first place. That omission exaggerates the apparent danger and leads readers to misjudge the magnitude of the real risk.
A more rigorous way to look at this issue is through Bayesian analysis, which multiplies the prior probability (the baseline lifetime risk) by the likelihood ratio (the relative risk increase). Doing so preserves the real-world context.
1. Why Relative Risk Misleads
Saying a certain behavior “raises cancer risk by 46%” sounds alarming — until you realize it’s 46% of a small number. If a woman’s baseline lifetime risk of breast cancer is about 13%, a 46% increase doesn’t mean nearly half of drinkers will develop cancer. It raises her lifetime risk from 13% to about 19% — a 6-point increase, not 46.
That is not trivial, but it’s far less dramatic than the headline suggests. The same holds true for most other alcohol-related cancers.
2. The Bayesian Perspective
Using the same relative risks cited in the article, but applying them to U.S. baseline lifetime probabilities, the results look like this:
Cancer Type Baseline Risk Relative Risk (from article) Bayesian-Adjusted Lifetime Risk Absolute Increase
Breast (F) 13% ×1.32 (3–4 drinks/day) ≈ 17% +4 pts
×1.46 (>4/day) ≈ 19% +6 pts
Colorectal (M+F) 4.1% ×1.63 (AUD) ≈ 6.7% +2.6 pts
×2.67 (11 yrs AUD) ≈ 10.9% +6.8 pts
×0.92 (≤2 drinks/day) ≈ 3.8% –0.3 pts
Esophageal 0.5% ×1.3 (1–2 drinks/day) ≈ 0.65% +0.15 pts
×5.0 (>4/day) ≈ 2.5% +2 pts
Laryngeal 0.3% ×2 (moderate drinker) ≈ 0.6% +0.3 pts
×5 (heavy + smoke) ≈ 1.5% +1.2 pts
Liver 1.1% ×2 (heavy) ≈ 2.2% +1.1 pts
Mouth/Throat 0.7% ×30 (heavy + smoke) ≈ 21% +20 pts (synergy dominates)
Notice how most absolute increases are just a few percentage points.
The truly dangerous outlier is alcohol + smoking, which creates a synergistic jump — not a simple multiple.
3. Context Matters
Cancer risk from alcohol is real but must be seen in proportion.
Moderate drinking (one drink per day) slightly affects risk, while heavy and chronic consumption, especially with tobacco use or poor nutrition, produces substantial harm.
For most people:
A glass of wine at dinner adds fractions of a percent to lifetime risk.
A bottle of whiskey every week adds several percent.
Smoking while drinking multiplies the danger dramatically.
Without these distinctions, risk reporting becomes more fear-based than fact-based.
4. Why Bayesian Framing Is More Honest
It preserves priors — baseline probabilities grounded in population data.
It shows scale — the real difference between “relative” and “absolute” risk.
It respects causality — distinguishing correlation from confounding lifestyle factors (diet, obesity, smoking, genetics).
It avoids moralizing — empowering people with informed, quantitative understanding.
5. A Responsible Conclusion
There is no question that excessive alcohol harms the body, and moderation — or abstinence — is always a healthy choice. But scientific honesty requires that we distinguish between doubling a 1% risk and doubling a 20% risk.
Presenting conditional percentages without context makes small risks look large and undermines public trust in health communication.
A Bayesian approach restores that trust by showing how much risk actually changes in absolute terms — usually, by just a few points.
Frequently Asked Questions
Doctors who operate in the MDVIP models typically see far fewer patients than traditional primary care doctors. That gives them more time to develop deeper doctor-patient relationships that can lead to better outcomes. They can also offer conveniences that most primary care doctors can’t, including same- and next-day appointments. They’re available after hours for urgent matters. And they have time to focus on prevention. That focus begins with the MDVIP Wellness Program, which patients pay for with their annual membership fee.
Most MDVIP-affiliated primary care practices accept insurance (your physician can tell you whether they accept your specific insurance plan). Your annual fee pays for preventive care medical services that insurance usually doesn’t cover (e.g., advanced diagnostic testing and screenings). Your MDVIP-affiliated physician will continue to bill your insurance and charge copays, co-insurances and deductibles as he or she currently does for other medical services like sick visits.
MDVIP makes wellness and prevention easier by providing your physician with innovative tools and technology. MDVIP supports your physician’s practice and seeks to eliminate barriers to a positive healthcare experience. Your doctor will determine whether and how to incorporate these tools at his/her discretion.
**The message above is a personal introduction from the physician, intended to help you get to know them better. The views, opinions, and statements expressed above are solely those of the physician and do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of MDVIP. This content is intended for general background purposes only and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Any mentions of expertise or quality of care are personal expressions and should not be interpreted as guarantees of performance or outcomes.