The Instructor Shortage Is a Gift

I know that headline will bother some people. The healthcare system faces a documented, growing shortage of instructors. There are fewer qualified trainers, compressed schedules, and staff pulled in too many directions. The training infrastructure was straining before the workforce crisis made things worse. The typical response is to treat this as an emergency—scramble for… Continue reading The Instructor Shortage Is a Gift

BLSXR vs. Manikin: What the Research Says

I spent twenty-six years as a cardiac surgeon. I have been in operating rooms and ICUs more times than I can count when someone was doing CPR on a patient. And I can tell you — the thought was not occasional, it was not situational. It was constant. Every time. All the time. There is… Continue reading BLSXR vs. Manikin: What the Research Says

The $2.4 Million Question: What Incompetency Actually Costs

I have been a cardiac surgeon for more than twenty-five years.

Stress Inoculation: Why Mannequins Will Never Be Enough

Stress is not the exclusive domain of medicine. Every discipline has its own version of the moment when everything is on the line and the nervous system must decide who you really are.

The AI That Knows If You’ll Freeze

Medicine measures attendance, not competency. AI-powered immersive medicine tracks performance under stress and predicts skill decay before failure.

The Computer Module Farce: Healthcare’s Dirty Secret

Each year, 250,000 preventable deaths occur in the healthcare system. These tragedies are the result of inadequate training methods that prioritize theoretical knowledge over real-world skills.

Why Do We Trust Pilots but Question Surgeons?

Why Do We Trust Pilots But Question Surgeons Blog

When booking a flight, you do not research the pilot. You don’t Google their name. You don’t ask a friend if they’ve heard good things.