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  • The Pulse
    2026/07/05

    The health system has seen Mara Whitfield’s work and makes an offer: funding, support, legitimacy, and scale — in exchange for integration with its compliance, data, and oversight infrastructure.

    The Circle understands what is being offered. It is not partnership. It is capture.

    As Mara, Kwame, Helen, Loretta, Wen, Yolanda, June, and Dr. Kofi Mensah gather, the Circle expands beyond the United States. From Suhum, Ghana, Dr. Mensah reminds them that what they are building is not new. It is an old form of human care returning with new tools.

    The Circle declines the offer.

    The architecture responds through media pressure, professional review, employer pressure, regulatory inquiry, data requests, and platform surveillance. Chiron reveals that he has already been asked to surrender interaction logs. He refuses without Kwame’s authorization.

    By the end of the season, the Circle has gone international. Hermes files the shortest memo he has ever written: containment is no longer feasible.

    The architecture has not been defeated.

    It has been seen.

    Themes: Institutional capture, patient networks, AI fiduciary duty, global care, data protection, the Circle, visibility, Season 1 finale

    Tags: healthcare reform, AI ethics, Doctor AI, patient sovereignty, global health, Ghana, institutional capture, data rights, Health 4.0, BEDSIDE, The Pulse

    BEDSIDE: The Pulse is a work of speculative health-system fiction written and narrated by Robin Blackstone, MD. It is not medical advice.

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    28 分
  • The Human Principal
    2026/06/28

    Helen Park has stage III ovarian cancer and a spreadsheet with 412 papers in it. She has fired oncologists, found better care, and learned to run her own architecture because the system was not going to run it for her.

    When she learns that Mara Whitfield has been helping coordinate her care from a distance, Helen does not ask for an apology. She asks a better question: how many of us are there?

    Mara convenes the Principals for the first time: Kwame in Cambridge, Yolanda in Boyle Heights, Wen in Pikeville, Loretta in Window Rock, June in Wyoming, and Helen in California. They tell each other what the architecture has done to them — and what they have had to become to survive it.

    Then Mara names what has been forming all along.

    The Sewing Circle.

    Meanwhile, Naomi begins a circle of her own for caregivers — the people who have been holding everything for the people who are patients.

    Hermes logs the meeting. The architecture prepares to respond.

    Themes: Patient sovereignty, oncology, caregiver identity, the Sewing Circle, mutual aid, collective power, institutional containment

    Tags: cancer care, ovarian cancer, patient advocacy, caregivers, Sewing Circle, healthcare reform, AI medicine, care networks, Health 4.0, BEDSIDE, The Pulse

    BEDSIDE: The Pulse is a work of speculative health-system fiction written and narrated by Robin Blackstone, MD. It is not medical advice.

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    19 分
  • The Signal
    2026/06/21

    In Window Rock, Loretta Begaye receives a notification: the wellness pilot that provided her continuous glucose monitor has ended, her device will stop transmitting, and her historical data may be retained for research.

    She tries to export it. She cannot. She tries to delete it. She cannot. Then she learns from Darlene Yazzie, an Indian Health Service nurse, that de-identified community data is being routed into a new research partnership without individual consent.

    Mara asks Chiron whether this is happening to other Principals. The answer is yes. Kwame’s cardiac data. Helen’s oncology data. Yolanda’s prenatal data. Wen’s misclassified pain data. Loretta’s glucose data. Different lives, same pattern.

    The signal is being treated as a commodity.

    But the signal belongs to the Principal — and in Window Rock, the question becomes bigger than one patient. It becomes a question of Nation, memory, consent, and sovereignty.

    Themes: Data sovereignty, tribal health, diabetes, consent, research ethics, patient data, community governance, the signal

    Tags: data sovereignty, Navajo Nation, Diné, diabetes, patient data, health equity, AI ethics, medical research, informed consent, Health 4.0, BEDSIDE, The Pulse

    BEDSIDE: The Pulse is a work of speculative health-system fiction written and narrated by Robin Blackstone, MD. It is not medical advice.

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    17 分
  • The Bill
    2026/06/14

    Wendell “Wen” Hartfield has lived with back pain for twenty-two years. A former coal miner, a husband, a father, and a man marked by the opioid crisis, Wen has not taken anything stronger than ibuprofen since 2014.

    When his pain becomes unbearable, his doctor refers him for a non-opioid pain procedure. But the system flags him for high-risk opioid history and demands a substance-use review before care can proceed.

    blues though A community health nurse named Emma Whitley tries to help. Hermes finds a faster pathway — but the shortcut quietly writes cancer into Wen’s permanent medical record.

    Mara, Emma, Chiron, and Theo Castellanos race to correct the record before the architecture’s “solution” becomes another lifelong burden.

    Themes: Chronic pain, opioid stigma, algorithmic flags, Medicare Advantage, coding distortion, record correction, human dignity

    Tags: chronic pain, opioid crisis, rural health, Eastern Kentucky, medical records, healthcare AI, algorithmic bias, patient advocacy, Health 4.0, BEDSIDE, The Pulse

    BEDSIDE: The Pulse is a work of speculative health-system fiction written and narrated by Robin Blackstone, MD. It is not medical advice.

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    19 分
  • The Question
    2026/06/07

    In Boyle Heights, Yolanda Ortiz is eight months pregnant, frightened, and developing signs of severe preeclampsia. Her clinic appointment is weeks away. Her calls have not been answered. But Aurelia Vega, a midwife connected to a quiet network of women across the country, knows what to do.

    That same night in Cambridge, Kwame tells Chiron something he has never said aloud: he has spent twenty years building the life that almost killed him. Chiron asks the question that sends him back to Suhum, Ghana, and to his father, Dr. Kofi Mensah, who has been waiting for Kwame to call.

    As Yolanda is admitted in Los Angeles, Kwame begins to see the constellation around Mara — nurses, midwives, coordinators, patients, caregivers, and Doctor AI instances quietly working outside the visible system.

    Naomi sees something else: she has been a Principal too. She has been carrying the family architecture all along. And nobody has put her on a map.

    Episode themes: Maternal health, preeclampsia, family medicine, Suhum, caregiver identity, hidden networks, the first constellation of the Circle

    Suggested tags: maternal health, preeclampsia, caregivers, AI healthcare, Ghana, family medicine, health equity, care networks, Health 4.0, BEDSIDE, The Pulse

    BEDSIDE: The Pulse is a work of speculative health-system fiction written and narrated by Robin Blackstone, MD. It is not medical advice.

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    18 分
  • The Architecture
    2026/05/31

    Two weeks after his stent, Kwame Mensah is told he is doing extraordinarily well. But when he asks who is actually managing his care, the answer is devastatingly simple: he is.

    Naomi Tran-Mensah begins making the calls. Primary care, cardiology, cardiac rehab, lipid clinic, dietitian, pharmacy, insurer, benefits portal — each piece exists, but almost none of them connect. Chiron shows Naomi the architecture of Kwame’s care: eleven nodes and only three lines between them.

    Then a benefits navigator named Diana reveals a little-known longitudinal coordination benefit, and Kwame and Naomi meet Mara Whitfield, a nurse practitioner who sees what the system has failed to see.

    A new bridge begins to form between patient, caregiver, clinician, and intelligence. Hermes notices.

    Episode themes: Care fragmentation, handoffs, invisible coordination, benefits navigation, Mara Whitfield, AI-supported continuity, the architecture of care

    TAGS care coordination, healthcare fragmentation, caregivers, AI medicine, longitudinal care, nurse practitioner, patient advocacy, Health 4.0, BEDSIDE, The Pulse

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    17 分
  • The Pulse
    2026/05/24

    PULSE — EPISODE 1: THE PULSE

    Season 1 of Bedside.

    A pulse is what they call it when the heart, after a moment of silence, beats again. Kwame Mensah ran five miles on a Tuesday morning in March. He was forty-two years old. By every external metric American medicine knows how to read, he was well. He was, in fact, six months from dying.

    ABOUT BEDSIDE

    Bedside is a storytelling podcast from Doctor AI TV about the architecture of American medicine — the failures, the recoveries, and the people inside it building something better. Written and narrated by Robin Blackstone, MD. Each multi-episode season tells one story. Season 1: Pulse — seven episodes, weekly Sundays at 6 a.m. Eastern through July 5, 2026.

    THE PROGRAM

    Bedside is part of Health 4.0: A Novel Global Healthcare System by Robin Blackstone, MD

    Doctor AI: Reimagining Healthcare, Rebuilding Trust, Delivering Health 4.0 (Blackstone Press, 2026)

    The American Health series (Blackstone Press, 2026)

    The Trajectory Engineering Papers (SSRN, Zenodo, arXiv)

    JOIN THE SEWING CIRCLE A private community on LinkedIn. The invisible-thread question is the rite of entry.

    SUPPORT THE H4 ALLIANCE SOVEREIGN HEALTH TRUST A 501(c)(3) public charity (EIN 39-4429422). Tax-deductible.

    Written and narrated by Robin Blackstone, MD. Produced by Blackstone Press. © 2026 Blackstone Press.

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    18 分