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The Man with the Invisible Pom-Poms: Why the First 6 Minutes Matter
There’s a moment in healthcare that quietly shapes everything that comes after. I’ve lived it. It isn’t the test result, the gradient numbers, or even the final diagnosis. It’s the first contact. The first look. The first tone of voice. For me, that moment of safety didn't happen in a consultation room, it happened in a hallway during a 6-minute walk test. The Voice I Already Knew I remember my initial visit with the clinical trial doctors. It was during the height of COVID,
6 hours ago3 min read


Why “Mild” Heart Valve Leaks Matter: A Guide for Patients
Tricuspid Valve Regurgitation, Explained in Plain Language I’m listening to a non-invasive cardiologist explain tricuspid valve regurgitation (TR) grades, and I hear this a lot: “Mild” and “trace” are clinically irrelevant.They don’t matter. I understand what that means medically .But here’s the truth — it still matters to patients. Let me explain why 👇 🩺 What Doctors Are Taught In medical training and guidelines: Trace or mild TR is very common Many healthy people have i
Jan 133 min read


The Cost of Silence: Why Clinical Trial Coordination Needs a Human Touch
You may remember I wrote about a scheduling " snafu " earlier this year. I wish I were writing to say things have improved. Instead, I am posting this update because the same communication problems continue to affect my clinical trial care. This isn’t just about one missed appointment or a simple mistake. It is an ongoing pattern—a systemic problem that places the burden of coordination directly on the patient. It is creating stress that doesn’t need to exist—for me or
Jan 83 min read
"If no one else was telling their story, then maybe I needed to tell mine. And maybe, just maybe, that would give others permission to share theirs too."
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