If you have ever given or received shift report — really given it, in those eight to ten minutes between handovers when one nurse hands the lives of twelve patients across to the next — you already know something most healthcare technology projects do not. You know how to compress a complex, high-stakes situation into…
It is 9:47 in the evening and you are still at the workstation. The shift ended four hours ago. The patients are sleeping, your colleagues have gone home, and you are alone with a screen full of half-finished notes — a chart-closing ritual you have repeated almost every night of your professional life. You are…
If you have ever sat in the staff car park after a long shift, opened your banking app, and realised that another year of brutally hard clinical work has somehow added almost nothing to your bottom line — this post is for you.
If you have ever finished a twelve-hour shift, sat in your car for ten minutes before driving home because you could not face moving yet, and then opened your phone to find another patient question waiting for you — this post is for you.
If you have spent more than five years on a hospital floor, you already know the feeling. The medication is sitting in the cabinet. The order is signed. The patient is in front of you. And somewhere between those three points there is a digital wall that should not be there — a checkbox, an…
You know the gap I am talking about. A physician enters an order. A nurse is standing at the bedside, needing to act. And in between those two moments sits a stack of digital systems that were designed, implemented, and signed off without a single person in the room who understood what actually happens in…
Four percent. After another year of rotating shifts, missed weekends, and the kind of exhaustion that doesn’t go away with a good night’s sleep. Four percent on a salary that was already stretched thin. I sat with that letter in my hand and did the maths. After tax. After the cost of childcare running over…