We were not there yet. We still are not. But every complaint filed, every board that acts, every nurse who charts the truth, every administrator forced to answer for silence, every protocol rewritten, every young doctor taught that bias is not intuition and assumption is not clinical judgment—each of those things moves the line. Ethan’s near-death experience exposed one corrupt physician and forced one hospital to confront what it had protected. That mattered. It was not enough, but it mattered. And for as long as I remained a surgeon, a father, and a man who had once driven through the dark toward an emergency room where his son was being told his pain was imaginary, I knew I would keep fighting for the day when no patient’s survival depended on who happened to answer the phone at 3:47 in the morning.
My son called from the emergency room before dawn and said, “Dad, the doctor is refusing to treat me. He says I’m faking it for drugs.” When I got there, the doctor’s s…
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