Thirty-three doctors. Seven years bedridden. Self-diagnosed. Self-rehabilitated. Then made Patient-in-Residence at two world-class institutions — and started a movement. I know exactly how systems break people. And how to fix them.
Represented by AAE Speakers Bureau →
"Roi doesn't give you the comfortable version. He gives you the true one — and that's exactly what our leadership team needed to hear."
Roi Shternin spent seven years bedridden, saw thirty-three doctors, and eventually self-diagnosed using the same medical literature those doctors had access to. That experience didn't make him bitter. It made him one of the world's most credible voices on what happens when systems fail the people inside them.
Today he's a keynote speaker in 27 countries, the author of 7 books, a former Patient-in-Residence at major healthcare institutions, and an advisor to Fortune 500 companies on empathy, inclusion, and the organizational cost of silence around illness.
His current work sits at the intersection of narrative medicine, psychoneuroimmunology, and organizational culture. He is building a body of work that examines what happens when the body believes the story it's been given — and what it costs when that story is wrong.
He is based in Vienna, available globally, and does not give inspiring talks about resilience.
What happens when the system fails you completely — 33 doctors, 7 years, no answers? You build a new one. This talk on radical self-advocacy, patient power, and why the most dangerous thing you can do is tell the truth became the foundation of everything that followed.
Roi doesn't give you the comfortable version. He gives you the true one — and that's exactly what our leadership team needed to hear.
I've seen hundreds of inclusion keynotes. This was the first time the room went silent in the right way — because everyone recognized the problem was theirs.
The Patient-in-Residence framework changed how we think about patient involvement at an institutional level. Not a consultant — a genuine strategic partner.
Healthcare institutions, technology companies, and Fortune 500 organizations ready to stop performing transformation and start building it. Every engagement is bespoke — no off-the-shelf programs.
A keynote that doesn't let your audience off the hook. Radical honesty about the cost of exclusion, the failure of inclusion theater, and a structural path forward your leadership team can actually use. Available in English, Hebrew, and German.
Podcast appearances, broadcast interviews, and written contributions. Available for serious editorial and media engagements.
From patient rights to healthcare AI to the physiology of narrative — seven books building toward a single, coherent body of work.
Three interconnected platforms — professional practice, media movement, and education. Together they form a single argument: radical honesty about chronic illness and organizational failure is not a niche. It is the future.
Speaking, consulting, and advisory work. You're here.
Book or Enquire →Essays, podcast, YouTube — the radical honest voice for the chronically ill. Anti-inspiration. Pro-truth. Available on all platforms.
Visit chronically.life →Mental health awareness training built for real people. Practical, online, designed for how people actually learn.
Visit tinymha.com →I don't take every engagement. I take the right ones — organizations genuinely ready to transform, not just perform. If that's you, let's talk.
What happens when a person can't tell the truth about being sick — and what it costs medicine, organizations, and every system built around them.
Most keynotes about chronic illness end with inspiration. A triumph. A lesson. Something the audience can take home as proof that suffering has meaning and hard work pays off.
This one doesn't.
This keynote starts where the inspiring version ends — and asks the question most speakers are paid not to ask: what if the performance of recovery is making people sicker? What if the story we require people to tell about illness is itself part of the illness?
And what does it mean — for medicine, for organizations, for the people sitting in this room — if the body doesn't just keep the score, but creates it?
"The body believes the story it's given. Most chronically ill people are being given the wrong one — by medicine, by their employers, by the people who love them, and eventually by themselves. The cost is not metaphorical. It shows up in the labwork."
This is not a self-help claim. It is a scientific one — grounded in psychoneuroimmunology, narrative medicine, and twenty years of one person's documented physiological journey. And it has consequences for every person in the room, whether they have ever been sick or not.
The keynote moves through four beats. The audience doesn't receive information — they undergo a shift.
Not the inspiring version. The true one. The years of performing health while privately deteriorating. The doctors who accused him of creating his own rash. The medication that nearly killed him. The labwork that matched a story he never chose. The audience doesn't know where this is going. That's the point.
The science underneath the story. How the body responds to the narrative it lives inside. Why suppression has a physiological cost. Why being disbelieved — by medicine, by employers, by partners — produces measurable damage. The audience begins to recognize this in their own bodies.
The argument expands. This isn't only about chronic illness. It's about every person who has ever edited their honest experience into something more acceptable. Every employee who performs wellness for HR. Every patient who performs recovery for their doctor. The room gets very quiet here.
Not a call to action in the conventional sense. An invitation to honesty — with one's body, with the people around them, with the systems they work inside. What changes when one person decides to stop performing and start telling the true story.
The talk reaches every person differently — but it reaches every person.
"He said the thing I've been trying to say for years and couldn't."
The chaos narrative finally has a name. The performance they've been maintaining has been seen. The relief of recognition is physical.
"I have someone on my team doing exactly this. I didn't know what to do. Now I do."
The mechanism becomes visible. The cost becomes calculable. This is the moment the workshop booking happens.
"I thought this wasn't about me. It was entirely about me."
The talk reaches everyone who has ever suppressed an honest experience for someone else's comfort. Which is everyone.
"I have been the system he's describing. That's going to stay with me."
Not accusation. Recognition. Medical audiences don't leave defensive. They leave changed.
The specific details are medical. The argument is universal. It belongs anywhere people are performing a version of themselves that isn't true.
Narrative medicine, patient experience, clinical empathy. Reframes how clinicians understand patient disclosure, diagnostic delay, and the cost of not being believed.
DEI, wellness, and organizational culture. The performance tax argument translates directly into business language without losing its human core.
Industry audiences who work with patients but rarely hear the honest version of the patient experience. Patient-in-Residence credentials make this uniquely credible.
Reshapes how the next generation of clinicians thinks about the patient narrative before they see their first patient.
One of the rare health talks that works for a completely general audience. The universal argument — everyone performs, everyone pays a cost — makes it land anywhere.
Every engagement is different. These are starting points — book a call and we'll find the right fit.
For multi-speaker events, panel openers, or conference sessions. The central argument stated with maximum precision. Plants an idea that grows in the conversation that follows.
The complete four-beat arc. Story, mechanism, wider truth, invitation. Opens an event by disrupting assumptions or closes one by leaving the room changed. The version that gets shared and remembered.
The keynote opens the day — moves the room emotionally, establishes the argument. The workshop follows — translates the argument into organizational action. The combination that produces the most durable change.
Virtual delivery available. Multi-event packages on request. A 30-minute conversation before any commitment is made.
We are in a cultural moment where the wellness industry has never been larger and chronic illness has never been more prevalent. Something is not working.
The gap between what people are told to feel about their health and what they actually experience is wider than it has ever been — and the cost of performing across that gap is being paid in bodies, in labwork, in the slow erosion of people who simply could not sustain it.
"I spent ten years telling an inspiring story about thriving with chronic illness. I was lying. Not maliciously. The way you lie when the truth is too expensive."
This talk doesn't offer a solution to chronic illness. It offers something more rare and more useful: an honest account of what the illness actually looks like from the inside — and what changes when the people and systems around it finally stop requiring the performance.
Book a 30-minute call → See the workshop →What your organization loses when chronically ill employees can't tell the truth about being sick — and what changes when they can.
One in three of your employees is living with a chronic condition. Most of them are not telling you. Not because they don't need support — but because they've calculated, correctly, that honesty is more expensive than performance.
This calculation is costing your organization far more than any wellness program budget. And it's invisible precisely because it's working as designed.
A precise examination of how your organizational culture is inadvertently requiring sick employees to perform wellness — and what the structural cost of that performance is.
Participants leave with a clear understanding of the mechanism, the cost, and three concrete behavioral changes they can implement immediately. The workshop is built around evidence from narrative medicine, psychoneuroimmunology, and organizational psychology — and grounded in twenty years of the facilitator's own lived experience and labwork.
The workshop opens not with frameworks but with a story. Roi's account of spending years performing health for employers, doctors, and colleagues while privately deteriorating — and the measurable physiological cost of that performance. By the end of the opening, every participant has viscerally understood what the performance feels like from the inside. This is not a warm-up. This is the intervention.
Why employees perform wellness at work. The neuroscience of psychological safety and what happens in the body when disclosure feels unsafe. The specific cognitive and physiological cost of sustained concealment — drawing from Pennebaker's expressive writing research, polyvagal theory, and the ACE studies. This section establishes the scientific basis for why this is a structural problem, not an individual one.
The data made real. Presenteeism figures, retention costs, the specific ways chronic illness stays invisible inside organizations until it becomes a crisis. Participants calculate what the performance tax is costing their specific organization. This is where wellness theater becomes a business problem with a calculable price tag.
Three specific, observable behavioral changes that leaders and HR teams can implement starting Monday. Not values statements. Not policy documents. Concrete actions that signal to chronically ill employees that honest disclosure is safer than performance. Each shift is accompanied by language, examples, and a way to know if it's working.
A precise understanding of where in their organization the performance tax is being paid — and by whom.
Evidence-based understanding of why psychological safety around illness is not soft but physiological and organizational.
Specific behavioral changes with language, implementation guidance, and measurable indicators.
A single employee moving from concealment to supported disclosure — and from presenteeism to sustainable performance — represents a measurable return. The workshop pays for itself when it changes the trajectory of one person.
Every engagement is different. These are starting points.
Non-profit and academic pricing available on request. Virtual delivery available. A 30-minute conversation before any commitment is made.
This workshop is not for organizations doing performative wellness. It's for the CHRO who has lost their third high-performer this year and cannot identify why. The DEI lead who knows their disability numbers are wrong but doesn't know what question to ask.
If that's you, let's talk. The first conversation is 30 minutes. No commitment required.
Book a 30-minute call → See the keynote →"I study the stories bodies tell — and the systems that refuse to listen to them."
"The room went completely still. That doesn't happen at healthcare conferences. He said the thing nobody had been willing to say, and it changed the conversation for the rest of the day."
— Conference Director, European Patient Forum
Roi Shternin spent seven years bedridden, saw thirty-three doctors, and eventually self-diagnosed using the same medical literature those doctors had access to. Today he turns that experience into one of the most unusual bodies of expertise in organizational consulting.
He is a keynote speaker in 27 countries, the author of 7 books including Revolution From My Bed and The Algorithm Will See You Now, a former Patient-in-Residence at major healthcare institutions, and an advisor to Fortune 500 companies on empathy, inclusion, and the organizational cost of silence around illness.
His current work sits at the intersection of narrative medicine, psychoneuroimmunology, and organizational culture — examining what happens when the body believes the story it's been given, and what it costs when that story is wrong. He is building a body of work that positions him alongside Gabor Maté and Bessel van der Kolk in the field of how narrative becomes biology.
He is based in Vienna, available globally, and does not give inspiring talks about resilience.
Different rooms need different things. These are the three current offerings.
What happens when a person can't tell the truth about being sick — and what it costs medicine, organizations, and every system built around them. Story, mechanism, wider truth, invitation. The talk that reaches every person in the room differently, but reaches every person.
What organizations lose when chronically ill employees can't tell the truth about being sick — and three concrete behavioral shifts that change it. Evidence-based, operationally focused, built for decision-makers.
How the stories told to and around patients become physiological reality — and what changes when clinicians understand themselves as participants in the patient's narrative. Grounded in narrative medicine, psychoneuroimmunology, and lived experience with 20 years of documented labwork.
Keynote + Workshop day programs from €9,500. Virtual delivery available. Multi-event packages on request.
"He didn't feel like a stranger giving a talk. He felt like a brother who finally said the thing I'd been trying to say for ten years."
"I left thinking about three people on my team differently. That's not what I expected from a keynote. That's what I needed."
"The room went completely still. That doesn't happen at healthcare conferences. He said the thing nobody had been willing to say."
"I've been naming the performance of recovery for years in my clinical work. He named it in 45 minutes for an audience of 400 people. That's a different skill."