On the frontline, you learn quickly:
Care isn’t just what gets documented.
It’s what happens in between
when no one is measuring it.
That’s where outcomes change.
Systems still don’t see it.
Yet.
Healthcare doesn��t have a data problem.
It has a priority problem.
When everything feels urgent,
what actually matters right now?
That’s where AI fits.
From what I see on the frontline, if the system depends this much on people adapting under pressure,
then we should be designing systems around real decision-making — not assuming perfect conditions.
A strike doesn’t break the system — it exposes the truth.
There’s no backup plan.
Just people stepping in.
Covering gaps.
Making it work.
The system doesn’t run on process.
It runs on people.
The work doesn’t stop during a strike.
But time does.
So you decide:
Who first
What waits
What can’t
Here’s the part people don’t say:
You can’t give the same level of care to everyone at once.
Not because you don’t want to.
Because you can’t.
A strike doesn’t feel political on the frontline.
It feels physical.
Fewer people.
Same patients.
More to carry.
Nothing stops.
You just feel the gaps.
That’s the part most people don’t see.
AI in healthcare doesn’t need to be complex.
Sometimes it’s just:
• Spotting deterioration earlier
• Highlighting priorities
• Flagging what might be missed
Not making decisions —
supporting them.
The real challenge?
Making it work when there’s no time to think.
You don’t get time to think on the NHS frontline.
You decide.
And you live with the outcome.
That’s why AI in healthcare can’t be built for perfect conditions —
it has to work in real ones.
@RadoRaddel@ShockatAdam I understand the point about contribution.
But that contribution already starts from day one through taxes, visa fees, and the NHS surcharge.
ILR is meant to provide stability.
Extending restrictions risks people contributing for years without ever feeling fully settled.
I’ve worked in corporate and on the NHS frontline.
One runs on targets.
The other on constant prioritisation.
Different systems —
same reality:
If it doesn’t work in practice,
it doesn’t work at all.
@labourlewis Rising costs are real — people feel it every day.
But it’s not just about ownership.
From what I see on the frontline, the real question is simple — does the system actually deliver for people?
Because if it doesn’t work, it doesn’t matter who runs it.
On the NHS frontline, most of the real work isn’t visible.
Staff stepping in for each other.
Making quick decisions.
Keeping things moving even when resources are limited.
That’s what keeps the system running day to day.
Not just processes, but people.