Ten years ill. Seven bedridden. The medical system didn't know what to do with me — so it made me invisible. I became obsessed with that invisibility. Now I spend my life making it visible.
I was sick for ten years. Seven of them bedridden. The medical system didn't know what to do with me. So it did what systems do with things they can't categorize: it made me invisible.
I became obsessed with that. Not bitterly — curiously. Why do people with something real to say go unheard? What actually happens in the gap between what someone feels and what they can say out loud, in a room that has power over them?
Fifteen years inside that question. Training 20,000 healthcare professionals across 27 countries. Teaching 15,000 patients — most of them exhausted, dismissed, invisible — how to speak when everything is working against them. Advising pharma on what patient voice actually means. Writing seven books. Being the first patient placed inside a medical research institute — at Ludwig Boltzmann Institute and Sheba Medical Center — not as a subject, but as a voice.
I still have ME/CFS. I still have POTS. I still know what it is to perform wellness you don't feel, in rooms that need you to be fine. The work is always the same: find the gap. Name it. Build inside it.
Healthcare AI is being built on data that was never designed to describe the most complex patients — people with chronic illness, invisible disability, or a history of being dismissed by the system. We are encoding our failures into the tools we think will fix us. This talk asks what it would take to build AI that can actually see the patients it's supposed to help — and what we lose if we don't.
Watch on TED.com →Healthcare AI learns from data that systematically excludes the most complex patients. What are we optimizing for? What gets left behind? A talk for healthcare organizations, health tech companies, and anyone building systems that are supposed to serve people they can't see.
What do healthcare systems know how to see — and what do they structurally cannot see? The gap between patient experience and system measurement isn't a bug. It's a design decision. This talk names it, and then asks what changes when you stop pretending it isn't there.
For clinicians, patients, and anyone trying to be heard inside an institution that wasn't built to hear them. A talk and workshop on narrative, power, and the specific courage it takes to say what you actually think in rooms that have power over you.
What do you do when you can't operate at full capacity — and you never could? How do you lead, create, and build when your energy is genuinely limited? A talk about constraint-based thinking, sustainable innovation, and why limitation is often the clearest path to clarity. Built from ten years of living it.
I write about chronic illness, healthcare, and what it means to build something real when you're not okay. Not for algorithms. Not for platforms. Honest essays about the invisible things that matter — the gap between what people feel and what systems let them say.
rois.life is where I think out loud. Chronically is where the essays live. They're different — but they're the same voice.
Read at rois.life →I'm available for keynotes, workshops, advisory work, and consulting with healthcare organizations, patient advocacy groups, pharma, and health tech. I work from Vienna and speak globally. I'm also honest about capacity — if energy is limited, I'll say so.
hello@roishternin.com