A System That Devours Its Own: Why Patients Are Set Up to Fail
Even the most organized patients struggle to get answers, refills, or follow-ups—not because they’re doing something wrong, but because the system wasn’t built to help them succeed. In this first of a two-part series, we explore how healthcare sets patients up to fail—and what to do about it.
Phone-A-Friend Care Isn’t A System (but It’s the System We’ve Got)
When people can’t get answers from their provider, they text a friend. Sometimes that friend is a nurse. And sometimes, that’s the only reason they get clarity. This post explores how that became our default—and how Storyline began by filling in the gap with time, trust, and translation.
When Silence Isn’t Neutral
Silence can be powerful—but not always healing. This post explores how silence harms in healthcare: through language barriers, clinical avoidance, and systemic design. Featuring data on patient dismissal, interpreter access, and memory gaps in care—grounded in the lyrics of The Sound of Silence.
Measured Care, Missed Moments: What Pooh Can Teach Us About Value-Based Healthcare
In a world obsessed with doing more, faster, Pooh reminds us that being still and paying attention might just be the most important work of all.
As patients, we often feel the pace of modern medicine—short visits, rushed decisions, more screen than face time. Behind the buzzwords of “value-based care” lies a deeper tension: we want healthcare to focus on real outcomes, but the system still rewards volume. What if the wisdom we need isn’t in doing more, but in noticing more?