from SmarterArticles

The fax machine in a Florida rheumatologist's office, the least futuristic object in any American clinic, still receives a steady stream of prior authorisation decisions from health insurers. In early April 2026, one of those faxes, addressed to a patient the Palm Beach Post would eventually call only by her first name, Iris, came back in under the time it takes to pour a cup of coffee. The request had been submitted a few minutes earlier. The reply, denying coverage for an injection she had been receiving for years, was generated, signed, and transmitted without any documented human pause in the middle. Iris is 80. Her hands, on the worst mornings, do not open. Her doctor, looking at the timestamp, understood instantly what had happened. The claim had not been reviewed. It had been processed.

The word processed has started to carry a weight it was never designed to hold. In the American health insurance system in 2026, it is the polite term for an event that, in almost any other domain of life, we would call a decision: a binding determination about whether a human being will have access to the medical care their doctor has recommended. Except the entity making the decision is not a person. It is a model. And the model, as anyone who has tried to ask one why it did what it did already knows, does not owe anyone an explanation.

This is the quiet crisis at the centre of the Palm Beach Post investigation published this month, which spent weeks charting how artificial intelligence has begun to deny health insurance claims at a scale and a speed no human reviewer could match. It is also the crisis at the centre of a Stanford study in Health Affairs, which landed in January, warning that the human oversight supposedly wrapped around these systems is too thin, too rushed, and too incentivised by the wrong things to function as a real check. And it is the crisis sitting on top of a three-billion-dollar bet from the largest health insurer in the United States, UnitedHealth Group, that the answer to all of this, after the litigation and the newspaper investigations and a murdered chief executive, is to put more artificial intelligence into the pipeline, not less.

The question the brief for this piece asked is deceptively simple: if the systems making some of the most consequential decisions in people's lives cannot explain their reasoning, and the regulatory framework to challenge them barely exists, what does the right to appeal actually mean in practice? It sounds like a legal question. It turns out to be something stranger. It is a question about whether a civic procedure that assumed a human decision-maker on the other end of the form still works when the other end of the form is a probability distribution.

The Machine That Says No Before You Have Finished Typing

Start with the basic mechanics, because they have moved faster than the public understanding of them. Cigna's now notorious PxDx system, exposed by ProPublica and The Capitol Forum in March 2023, was an early glimpse of the genre. Internal spreadsheets showed Cigna's medical directors spending an average of 1.2 seconds on each of more than 300,000 claim denials over two months. One doctor, Dr Cheryl Dopke, was reported to have signed off on approximately 60,000 denials in a single month. A former Cigna physician told ProPublica's reporters, Patrick Rucker, Maya Miller, and David Armstrong, that the review process was essentially cosmetic: “We literally click and submit. It takes all of 10 seconds to do 50 at a time.”

The revealing word in that sentence is “literally”. It is the language of someone who has realised that the verb “review”, as it appears in the regulatory paperwork, is doing work it cannot possibly do.

Eight months later, a class action lawsuit against UnitedHealth's nH Predict algorithm, operated through its NaviHealth subsidiary, alleged that Medicare Advantage patients in post-acute care were being cut off from rehabilitation services in bad faith, with employees pressured to keep stays within 1 per cent of the length predicted by the model. When federal administrative law judges eventually heard appeals on these denials, roughly 90 per cent were reversed, according to the complaint. Only a tiny fraction of denied patients ever appeal. In February 2025, the federal court in Minnesota denied UnitedHealth's motion to dismiss the breach of contract and bad-faith claims, allowing the case to proceed.

Then, in late 2024, ProPublica and The Capitol Forum turned to EviCore, the utilisation-management arm of Evernorth owned by Cigna, which sells its services to other insurers. EviCore operates what some internal sources called “the dial”, an algorithm that scores each prior authorisation request with a probability of approval. The company can tune the threshold: if it wants more denials, it can lower the bar at which a request gets referred to human reviewers, who are statistically much more likely to deny than to approve. ProPublica reported that EviCore markets itself to insurers on the basis of a three-to-one return, promising three dollars in saved medical costs for every dollar the insurer pays it. Its denial rate in Arkansas, one of the few states that requires publication of the figure, ran at close to 20 per cent, compared with about 7 per cent for Medicare Advantage nationally.

The Palm Beach Post's April 2026 investigation, reported by Anne Geggis, extends this lineage into the near-present. The Post documented how AI tools are now embedded deep inside pre-authorisation workflows in Florida, one of 22 states the paper identified as having adopted no specific rules governing how AI can be used to reject a claim. The figure of 22 is the one that ought to give pause. These are not marginal jurisdictions. They include Florida, Georgia, Minnesota, and Oregon. Roughly half the American population lives in a state where an insurer can, in principle, use an algorithm to deny care without a single statute on the books requiring that algorithm to be explainable, auditable, or subject to human sign-off.

In contrast, California's Physicians Make Decisions Act, signed by Governor Gavin Newsom in September 2024 and in force since January 2025, explicitly requires that a denial, delay, or modification based on medical necessity be made by a licensed physician or competent provider. Arizona, Maryland, Nebraska, and Texas have adopted versions of the same principle. The federal Centres for Medicare and Medicaid Services issued guidance in 2024 restricting the use of algorithmic tools as the sole basis for Medicare Advantage denials. None of this changes the underlying asymmetry. State laws end at state lines. The models are national, their deployments enterprise-wide, and the training data pooled from populations that do not consent to being training data in the first place.

The Stanford Warning and the Myth of the Human in the Loop

Into this landscape, on 6 January 2026, Michelle Mello, Professor of Health Policy and Law at Stanford, and three colleagues (Artem A. Trotsyuk, Abdoul Jalil Djiberou Mahamadou, and Danton Char) published a paper in Health Affairs with the unusually blunt title, “The AI Arms Race in Health Insurance Utilization Review: Promises of Efficiency and Risks of Supercharged Flaws”. The paper is a careful, cold document. It does not call for a ban on AI in insurance. It does something more corrosive. It describes, in sober detail, why the reassurances everyone keeps giving, about human reviewers, about oversight, about governance, do not correspond to anything that is actually happening inside the insurers.

The central finding is that meaningful human oversight of AI-driven prior authorisation is, in Mello's own phrasing, largely a myth. Human reviewers at insurance companies, the paper observes, often lack the time, the relevant clinical expertise, and the incentives to meaningfully interrogate the recommendations produced by a model. The opacity of modern systems compounds this. An adjuster presented with a denial recommendation does not see a chain of reasoning that can be evaluated. They see an output. To push back on the output, they would have to reproduce, from scratch, the analysis that led to it, without access to the training data, the feature weights, or a record of how similar cases were decided in the past. Given production targets, they do not do this. They click.

Mello's paper notes that past flawed coverage decisions become embedded in the training data for the next generation of models, which then reproduce and scale the pattern. The phrase “supercharged flaws” is not rhetorical. It is a description of what happens when a statistical system is trained on a history of denials and then used to generate future denials, with the previous denials as ground truth. Mistakes do not get caught. They get normalised, archived, and re-expressed at volume.

The data on downstream appeals has circulated for a while, but the Stanford paper pulls it into focus. In Medicare Advantage, according to KFF's January 2025 analysis of 2023 figures, insurers made nearly 50 million prior authorisation determinations, denied 3.2 million of them, and saw only 11.7 per cent of those denials appealed. Of those appealed, 81.7 per cent were partially or fully overturned. In an earlier era, overturn rates above 80 per cent on appeal would have prompted a federal reckoning. In the current system, they are published in briefing notes and largely forgotten by the following week.

If the appeal process reverses more than four in five decisions on review, the appeal process is not a safety net bolted onto a functioning decision system. It is the decision system, belatedly engaged, in the small minority of cases where a patient has the time, the literacy, the advocacy, and the stamina to demand it. Everyone else simply absorbs the denial. That is not an operational detail. It is the design.

UnitedHealth's Three Billion and the Logic of Scaling the Problem

On 6 April 2026, STAT News reported that UnitedHealth Group, through its Optum Insight division, plans to spend at least three billion dollars over the next few years embedding AI more deeply into its claims processing, care management, fraud detection, and clinical documentation systems. Sandeep Dadlani, chief executive of Optum Insight, told reporters that the company employs 22,000 software engineers globally, that over 80 per cent of them now use AI to write code or build new agents, and that executives expect to generate a billion dollars in savings this year alone by pushing AI further into operations. Dadlani's framing was the one insurers have settled on: AI, he argued, will speed up decision-making and streamline health insurance's notoriously time-consuming bureaucracy.

He is not wrong about the bureaucracy. The American health insurance system wastes staggering amounts of time, labour, and money on a claims process that no participant, patient, provider, or payer, thinks works. The question is what “speed up decision-making” means when the original slowness was partly functional: the friction of human review was, at its best, the thing that caught errors, gave context, and let claimants be heard. If the friction is engineered out, so is the friction of accountability.

And the three-billion-dollar figure needs to be read alongside the context UnitedHealth is operating in. The company's former chief executive, Brian Thompson, was shot dead in Manhattan in December 2024 in an attack whose alleged perpetrator referenced the company's denial practices in his writings. The class action over nH Predict was allowed to proceed the following February. The Palm Beach Post investigation landed this April. There is, if one wants to read it this way, a choice the insurer has made. It could have used the last eighteen months to make its claims-processing systems more transparent, more accountable, more humane. It has instead committed to scaling them up, and measuring its own success in savings generated rather than denials avoided.

This is the logic that animates everything else in the sector. Under the business model that has built the American managed-care industry, every dollar approved in claims is a dollar of medical-loss ratio, and every dollar denied is, within the limits set by the Affordable Care Act's 80 to 85 per cent floor, a dollar of retained earnings. Any technology that lowers the marginal cost of generating a plausible denial, and raises the barrier to generating a successful appeal, is, from the perspective of the quarterly report, working exactly as intended. This is not a conspiracy theory. It is a reading of the incentives stated on the face of the filings.

Where the Patients and the Nurses Are Keeping the Records

Because the regulators have not, in most states, built the infrastructure to track algorithmic denials systematically, that job has fallen to the patients and clinicians themselves, largely on Reddit. Communities such as r/nursing, r/medicine, and the various state-level and condition-specific subreddits have become, almost by accident, one of the most useful public archives of how AI-driven prior authorisation actually functions at the point of care.

The threads follow a recognisable rhythm. A nurse describes submitting a request for a patient whose case is, clinically, straightforward. A denial returns in seconds or, at most, a couple of minutes. The denial letter cites the insurer's internal clinical guidelines, which are not, in most cases, the same as published medical society guidelines. An appeal is mounted. The appeal takes weeks to resolve. In the interim, the patient either forgoes the treatment, pays out of pocket, or lands in a more expensive emergency setting that the insurer will then, often, cover. The commenters in these threads document the pattern because nobody else does. They are, in effect, doing the work that in a different jurisdiction would be done by an independent audit office.

The sub-two-second denial is not a single documented statistic; it is a folk fact, borne out by the Cigna PxDx data, by screenshots circulated in these communities, by the fax-timestamp evidence that rheumatologists and oncologists have been quietly compiling. A system that returns a denial before the clinical reasoning could plausibly have been read is a system that has, as a matter of physics, not been read. The courts, slowly, are beginning to say so. In the Cigna class action in California and the nH Predict case in Minnesota, the factual allegations that reviews were not meaningfully performed have survived motions to dismiss. Discovery is going to be, in a phrase one plaintiff's lawyer used on background, interesting.

The Reddit record is, of course, anecdotal in a formal evidentiary sense. It is also, collectively, thousands of practitioners with professional licences describing a consistent pattern. When the formal data and the informal data align this closely, and both are saying the same thing that independent investigators and academic researchers are saying, the reasonable assumption is not that the nurses are wrong.

The Florida Bill and the Architecture of Political Failure

If the picture so far suggests that legislators would rush to impose a human signature on AI-generated denials, the story of Florida House Bill 527 is a useful corrective. The bill, introduced by state Representative Hillary Cassel, would have required that every insurance claim denial or reduction be reviewed and signed off by a qualified human professional, with AI output permitted as an input but not as the sole basis for the decision. It was, by the standards of recent American legislative politics, a popular proposal. In early December 2025, a House panel unanimously backed it. It then passed the full Florida House on a 108 to 0 vote, a consensus across parties that is almost unheard of on any contested business-regulation matter.

Cassel was candid about what had moved her. Speaking to reporters, she said: “The genesis of this bill came to me with the murder of the United Healthcare CEO. One of the alleged motives was the denial basis by that company, and there's currently a class action that shows allegedly that 90 per cent of their claims were denied with errors when they utilized AI.” It is an extraordinary quote, because it concedes that the political window for reform opened at the moment a billionaire insurance executive was killed in the street, and that the opening was narrow.

The Senate version, SB 202, sponsored by Senator Don Gaetz, did not survive. Its last action, according to the Florida Senate's public record, was on 13 March 2026, when it died in the Banking and Insurance Committee without a floor vote. Industry representatives from the Florida Insurance Council, the American Property Casualty Insurance Association, and the Personal Insurance Federation of Florida lobbied against it, arguing that mandatory human review would slow the resolution of claims. The Florida Hospital Association and the Florida Medical Association, who represent the entities actually filing claims for patients, lobbied for it. The committee did not bring it up.

Zoom out and the pattern is familiar. A bipartisan legislative majority in a populous, insurance-heavy state backed a minimum procedural protection that almost everyone not in the insurance industry supported. It died in committee, quietly, without a recorded vote. There was no scandal. There was no single villain. There was, instead, the ordinary friction of legislative attention: a bill that had the votes to pass did not have the procedural protection to reach a vote, and a session ended. Multiply this failure across two dozen states and you get, approximately, the current regulatory environment.

What the Right to Appeal Actually Means in an Algorithmic System

Here is the analytic move the whole debate has been circling. The right to appeal, in American administrative and insurance law, is a right that assumes certain things about the original decision. It assumes there was a decision-maker. It assumes the decision-maker had reasons, which can be stated, contested, and either defended or abandoned on review. It assumes the appellant, given adequate time, can understand the basis of the decision well enough to argue against it. It assumes a symmetry of cognition between the original decision-maker and the appellate one.

An algorithmic denial breaks all of these assumptions at once.

It breaks the first because the decision-maker is not an individual but a pipeline. It breaks the second because modern models do not have reasons in any sense a lawyer would recognise; they have weights, activations, and outputs. Even the engineers who built the system cannot generally, for a specific denial, reconstruct why this patient's case tipped into the negative region of the decision surface. They can say what features mattered on average. They cannot say what mattered for Iris.

It breaks the third because the denial letter, drafted as the output of a template populated with a justification selected from a limited menu, tells the appellant something that may not be a true description of the decision. It is a plausible description, designed to be legally defensible and clinically intelligible, but the actual cause, somewhere in the latent space of the model, is not accessible to anyone. To appeal a denial on its stated grounds is to joust with a shadow.

And it breaks the fourth because the appellant is human and the opponent is a statistical system trained on millions of prior cases. The insurer's machinery can generate, cheaply, a thousand variations on why the original denial was sound. The patient has one case, one letter from their doctor, one window of time before the treatment decision becomes moot. The asymmetry is not the small asymmetry of a lay person versus a trained adjuster. It is an asymmetry of cognitive capacity, of parallelism, of cost per round, of a kind the administrative law of the 1970s did not contemplate.

This is why the Stanford group's paper matters more than a straightforward policy critique. Mello and her coauthors are not simply pointing out that AI sometimes gets it wrong. They are pointing out that the institutional scaffolding that was supposed to catch the errors was built for a different kind of decision-maker, and does not scale to the one now making the calls. A patient appealing an algorithmic denial is not, functionally, appealing at all in the sense the word was originally meant. They are triggering a subsequent stage of the same algorithmic process, in which the second layer inherits the priors of the first.

You can see, in the published reform proposals, two broad theories of how to repair this. The first, reflected in California's SB 1120 and the dead Florida HB 527, is to legislate a human signature back into the decision. Require that a named, licensed professional review and sign off on any denial, with documentary evidence that they did so. This is the bluntest and, on current evidence, the only version that insurers can be counted on to resist. It is also the most fragile, because the record of Cigna's medical directors clicking through denials at 1.2 seconds per case shows that “human signature” can be gamed into meaninglessness unless the rules specify what review means in minutes, in content, and in accountability.

The second theory is algorithmic transparency: require insurers to disclose the logic, the training data, the error rates, and the audit trails of the systems they use. This is the preferred framing of academics, regulators, and some of the AI industry itself. Its limits are by now familiar to anyone who has worked on explainable AI. For classical rules-based systems, transparency is straightforward. For modern neural systems, it is a research problem that has not been solved, and may not be solvable in the strong sense. An audit report that says “the model weights were examined” is not a substitute for the ability to say, of a particular denial, why it was made.

Neither theory, on its own, is sufficient. A mandated human signature without transparency produces fake review at industrial scale. Transparency without a mandated human signature produces elegant documentation of decisions that nobody can be held accountable for. The only versions that might actually work combine both: a human who must sign, a record of what they looked at when they signed, and a genuine, externally audited account of what the model contributed and why. Nothing currently in force in the United States, at the federal level, does this.

The Stakes Underneath the Stakes

It is tempting to frame the whole situation as a fight about artificial intelligence, because AI is the novel element. But the deeper fight is about something older: whether a person subject to a consequential institutional decision has the right to a reasoned account of why the decision went the way it did, and a real chance to change it.

American health insurance, for reasons that long predate generative AI, has been steadily undermining that right for decades, through the proliferation of prior authorisation requirements, through narrow networks, through opaque formulary tiers, through appeals processes designed to exhaust rather than enlighten. The arrival of AI has not created the pathology. It has industrialised it. What used to take an adjuster an hour now takes a model a second, and what used to happen to thousands of patients a year now happens to millions. The scale changes the moral physics.

And the scale will grow. UnitedHealth's three-billion-dollar investment will not sit alone. Every other major insurer will match it, because they must, because the efficiency gains compound and the laggards lose. The Palm Beach Post investigation will be joined by others. The Reddit threads will lengthen. The Florida-style bills will pass in a few more states, and die in committee in many more. Somewhere in the middle of this, the language will drift: the word “review” will come to mean something smaller than it used to, the word “decision” something less personal, the word “appeal” something closer to a ritual than a remedy. This is already happening.

What stops the drift, if anything does, is a reassertion of the civic premise the whole insurance system was supposed to honour: that a claim is not a data point but a moment in a person's life, that a denial is not an output but an act, and that the entity issuing that act owes the person on the other end an intelligible reason and a real chance to be wrong about them. None of that is technologically impossible. Some of it is, in fact, quite cheap. What makes it hard is that the incentives, as currently aligned, reward the opposite: the cheapest plausible denial, issued at scale, defended just well enough to exhaust the appellant's capacity to keep fighting.

Iris, in the Palm Beach Post story, eventually got her medicine. Her doctor appealed on her behalf. It took weeks. She is one of the lucky ones, in that she had a doctor with the time and inclination to wage the fight. Most people do not. They have a denial letter, a phone tree, a model on the other end of the form, and a finite number of mornings on which they can open their hands enough to sign the next appeal. What the right to appeal means in practice, at this moment, is that if you are patient, and articulate, and unusually well-represented, you can sometimes persuade the system to notice you. That is not a right. It is a lottery with a ticket price measured in stamina. Whether it can still be repaired into something that deserves its own name is the question the next decade will answer, and the answer will not be written by the models.

References and Sources

  1. Rucker, Patrick; Miller, Maya; and Armstrong, David. “How Cigna Saves Millions by Having Its Doctors Reject Claims Without Reading Them.” ProPublica, 25 March 2023. https://www.propublica.org/article/cigna-pxdx-medical-health-insurance-rejection-claims
  2. Armstrong, David; Rucker, Patrick; and Miller, Maya. “EviCore, the Company Helping U.S. Health Insurers Deny Coverage for Treatments.” ProPublica, 24 October 2024. https://www.propublica.org/article/evicore-health-insurance-denials-cigna-unitedhealthcare-aetna-prior-authorizations
  3. Mello, Michelle M.; Trotsyuk, Artem A.; Djiberou Mahamadou, Abdoul Jalil; and Char, Danton S. “The AI Arms Race In Health Insurance Utilization Review: Promises Of Efficiency And Risks Of Supercharged Flaws.” Health Affairs, 6 January 2026. https://www.healthaffairs.org/doi/10.1377/hlthaff.2025.00897
  4. Stanford University News. “AI-driven insurance decisions raise concerns about human oversight.” Stanford Report, January 2026. https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2026/01/ai-algorithms-health-insurance-care-risks-research
  5. Stanford Law School. “When AI Algorithms Decide Whether Your Insurance Will Cover Your Care.” 6 January 2026. https://law.stanford.edu/press/when-ai-algorithms-decide-whether-your-insurance-will-cover-your-care/
  6. Ross, Casey, and Herman, Bob. “UnitedHealth Group is making a $3 billion bet on AI. What does it mean for patients?” STAT News, 6 April 2026. https://www.statnews.com/2026/04/06/unitedhealth-group-massive-artificial-intelligence-push-patient-implications/
  7. Napach, Bernice. “UnitedHealth Group is making a $3 billion bet on AI. What does it mean for patients?” HealthLeaders Media, April 2026. https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/payer/unitedhealth-group-making-3-billion-bet-ai-what-does-it-mean-patients
  8. Geggis, Anne. “AI already at work in insurance. Do bots comply with state laws? Are they fair to consumers?” The Palm Beach Post / USA TODAY Florida Network, October 2025, updated April 2026. https://bluewaterhealthyliving.com/news/national-news/florida/ai-already-at-work-in-insurance-do-bots-comply-with-state-laws-are-they-fair-to-consumers/
  9. Ogozalek, Drew. “Insurance Companies Already Deploying AI Systems to Deny Claims Faster Than Ever Before.” Futurism, April 2026. https://futurism.com/future-society/ai-insurance-claims-denial
  10. Florida House of Representatives. “HB 527: Mandatory Human Review of Insurance Claims Denials.” Bill analysis, updated 2 March 2026. https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2026/527/Analyses/h0527c.COM.PDF
  11. Florida Senate. “Senate Bill 202 (2026).” Bill history, last action 13 March 2026. https://www.flsenate.gov/Session/Bill/2026/202
  12. Ogles, Jacob. “House advances bill making humans review insurance claims.” Florida Politics, December 2025. https://floridapolitics.com/archives/768954-cassel-ai-insurance-houseib/
  13. Cassel, Hillary. Public statement on HB 527. X (formerly Twitter), December 2025. https://x.com/RepCassel/status/1998601482661245225
  14. Becker, Josh. “Governor signs Physicians Make Decisions Act, keeping medical decisions between patients and doctors, not AI.” California State Senate, 30 September 2024. https://sd13.senate.ca.gov/news/press-release/september-30-2024/governor-signs-physicians-make-decisions-act-keeping-medical
  15. California Legislative Information. “Senate Bill No. 1120: Health Care Coverage: Utilization Review.” 2023-2024 Regular Session. https://legiscan.com/CA/text/SB1120/id/3023335
  16. Napoli, Anthony. “UnitedHealth AI algorithm allegedly led to Medicare Advantage denials, lawsuit claims.” Healthcare Finance News, November 2023. https://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/unitedhealth-ai-algorithm-allegedly-led-medicare-advantage-denials-lawsuit-claims
  17. Napoli, Anthony. “Class action lawsuit against UnitedHealth's AI claim denials advances.” Healthcare Finance News, February 2025. https://www.healthcarefinancenews.com/news/class-action-lawsuit-against-unitedhealths-ai-claim-denials-advances
  18. DLA Piper. “Lawsuit over AI usage by Medicare Advantage plans allowed to proceed.” AI Outlook, 2025. https://www.dlapiper.com/en/insights/publications/ai-outlook/2025/lawsuit-over-ai-usage-by-medicare-advantage-plans-allowed-to-proceed
  19. Biniek, Jeannie Fuglesten; Sroczynski, Nolan; Cubanski, Juliette; and Neuman, Tricia. “Medicare Advantage Insurers Made Nearly 50 Million Prior Authorization Determinations in 2023.” KFF, 28 January 2025. https://www.kff.org/medicare/nearly-50-million-prior-authorization-requests-were-sent-to-medicare-advantage-insurers-in-2023/
  20. American Medical Association. “How AI is leading to more prior authorization denials.” AMA, 2025. https://www.ama-assn.org/practice-management/prior-authorization/how-ai-leading-more-prior-authorization-denials
  21. Centres for Medicare and Medicaid Services. “Final Rule CMS-4201-F: Medicare Advantage and Part D Prior Authorization Guidance.” 2024.
  22. Manatt Health. “Health AI Policy Tracker.” Manatt, Phelps and Phillips, 2026. https://www.manatt.com/insights/newsletters/health-highlights/manatt-health-health-ai-policy-tracker
  23. Reyes, Shelby. “Fighting AI Driven Insurance Denials: How to Appeal When Algorithms Reject Your Healthcare Claim.” Counterforce Health, 2025. https://www.counterforcehealth.org/post/fighting-ai-driven-insurance-denials-how-to-appeal-when-algorithms-reject-your-healthcare-claim-2025-guide/
  24. Gordon, Noam. “AI Prior Authorization Tools Have an 82% Overturn Rate, And That's the Problem.” AI2Work, 2026. https://ai2.work/blog/ai-prior-authorization-tools-have-an-82-overturn-rate-and-that-s-the-problem
  25. Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP. “Court Allows Discovery Into Insurer's Use of AI to Deny Claims.” Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog, 2025-2026. https://www.hunton.com/hunton-insurance-recovery-blog/court-allows-discovery-into-insurers-use-of-ai-to-deny-claims

Tim Green

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer

Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.

His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.

ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk

 
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from wystswolf

What is done in love is done well.

Wolfinwool · Long Undress

To draw a woman is to make love to her.

Not with the crude crescendo of sex, but slowly—

through the study of fat and muscle, the way flesh lies over bone.

The stretch of skin. Its surrender. How afternoon light wraps her like a lover’s embrace.

And it cannot be clinical.

Her vulnerability will not allow it.

She disrobes in layers, not only cloth but history—

until she lies as bare as she can bear.

Though the artist wishes to lay open the heart itself, to place upon the dais all the grief, all the love, there is only so much one sitting can hold.

Because this sort of undressing takes years.

And it is done not with fingers, but with trust. With words.

So when he renders the breast, slaving to capture the caress of north light,

it is not merely flesh he paints,

but longing, memory, the armor she built around the fist of muscle beating behind it.

And the eye does not trespass upon her tenderness.

It moves over her like warm water.

And so love is made—

a current passing between the drawer and the drawn,

until they are bound forever in color and light.


#poetry #wyst #art #artist #painting

 
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from TechNewsLit Explores

Photo of a rugby player carrying the ball with two teammates and two opponents in the frame.Photos from Old Glory DC’s first home rugby match of the season are now posted on a gallery at the TechNewsLit portfolio on Smugmug. Old Glory DC, the Washington, D.C. region’s franchise in Major League Rugby, lost the match to California Legion, 36-23.

The team played its initial three matches on the road, first losing to Seattle, then beating New England and Carolina before taking on California Legion, a team from Southern California. It was also Old Glory DC’s first match at George Mason University stadium in Fairfax, Virginia, with fans filling most grandstand seats and touch-line (sideline) boxes and spaces. In previous years, the team played its matches in exurban Maryland, a longer distance from D.C.

Photo of rugby players tackling and upending an opposing ball carrier.

Both DC and California moved the ball up and down the pitch (field) during the match, but California took advantage of DC turnovers to score early and run-up a big lead at halftime. DC scored two tries, like touchdowns in American football, late in the match, but it was not enough to overtake California.

TechNewsLit also covered Old Glory DC’s open practice on 28 March. Photos from both the 26 April match and the open practice carry a Creative Commons – Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license. See usage requirements and specifications at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ .

Copyright © Technology News and Literature. All rights reserved.

 
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from appbrew

Preparing for OET can feel overwhelming at first, especially when most online resources are either too generic or don’t reflect the actual exam format.

One thing that helped me improve was practicing with realistic healthcare-focused mock tests instead of random English exercises.

I recently started using: https://oet.appbrewprojects.com

Android App: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.appbrewprojects.oet

It includes practice for Listening, Reading, Writing, and Speaking, specifically designed for nurses and doctors preparing for OET.

What I found useful:

Simple interface Exam-style practice Profession-focused preparation Easy access to mock tests

If you're preparing for OET, consistent daily practice with realistic materials can make a huge difference.

Good luck to everyone working toward their healthcare career goals.

 
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from M.A.G. blog, signed by Lydia

Lydia's Weekly Lifestyle blog is for today's African girl, so no subject is taboo. My purpose is to share things that may interest today's African girl.

This week's contributors: Lydia, Pépé Pépinière, Titi. This week's subjects: MET fails gone wild, Chanel, and +233 Jazz club and Grill

MET fails gone wild. The Met Gala is an annual fundraising gala held on the first Monday in May to benefit the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute in New York City. It is where fashion is supposed to transcend into art… but every year, a few looks accidentally transcend into confusion instead. And 2026? Oh, it gave us drama, ambition, and a handful of “what exactly am I looking at?” moments that we simply cannot ignore. With stars like Beyoncé and Rihanna gracing the 2026 Met Gala red carpet, Beyoncé's return after nearly a decade away became one of the night's biggest highlights, especially at an event where a single ticket reportedly costs up to $100,000. First up, the “Living Sculpture Gone Rogue” category. You know the look: structured, architectural, and bold—until it starts wearing the celebrity instead of the other way around. One star arrived looking like a walking installation piece, complete with jutting metallic extensions that made sitting, turning, or even waving nearly impossible. Art? Yes. Practical? Absolutely not. The Met steps turned into an obstacle course, and honestly, the security guards deserved an award too. Then there was the “Paint Me Like One of Your French Girls… Literally” moment. A celebrity showed up fully airbrushed in what seemed like a tribute to body-as-canvas artistry. In theory, stunning. In reality? Under the flash photography, the paint read less “ethereal masterpiece” and more “accidentally brushed against a wet mural.” The vision was there… the execution just needed a little less humidity and a little more sealing spray. And then there’s the “Is It Moving or Am I?” category. Kinetic fashion made a bold appearance, with pieces that spun, blinked, inflated, or shifted shape mid-carpet. One dress dramatically expanded like a blooming flower… and then refused to deflate. Iconic entrance? Yes. Smooth exit? Not quite. The after-party logistics must have been a nightmare. But here’s the thing about Met Gala “fails”—they’re rarely boring. In fact, they’re often the most memorable. Chanel. This is an interesting brand, not owned by LVMH or Kering or Dior who own the majority of the big brands amongst themselves. I’ll write about the original founder of Chanel in another blog, quite an intriguing story with lessons for today. Chanel is primarily known for perfumes, though today they do fashion and cosmetics/skincare as well. Chanel Nr 5 is their top performing perfume and also the world‘s top selling perfume. It was created in 1921 by Ernest Beaux, a French Russian national who was the former perfumer for the Russian Tsars (overthrown in 1917, so Beaux was probably looking for a job). And every 30 ml bottle of Chanel Nr 5 perfume (a “small” size bottle) contains about 1000 jasmine flowers, and about 80 other scents. And not just any jasmine, only jasmine from the Grasse area in France. The real connoisseurs claim that every flower partly takes its scent from the soil it is grown on, like wine. So jasmine from Grasse smells different from jasmine grown in Ghana. Jasmine, a tiny flower, opens at night and is harvested as the sun comes up, when the blooms are at their most fragrant. Each one is picked by hand; they're too delicate for machines. The harvest ends before the midday heat can damage the petals, which are kept covered with a wet cloth so they stay cool. The blooms are then rushed to an on-site factory where the fragrance is extracted using a 150-year-old technique developed in Grasse. Speed is essential. If the flowers brown, the scent changes and “they smell of bad fruit”. Jasmine is placed into a vat and steeped overnight, like tea and eventually the concentrated form of jasmine, called absolute, is sent to a factory near Paris where a few drops go into each bottle of Chanel No.5. Today Chanel No.5 is available in five main concentrations, offering variations from the intense, original parfum to lighter, modern interpretations. The primary concentrations include the Parfum (Extrait), Eau de Parfum (EDP), Eau de Toilette (EDT), Eau Première, and L'EAU. These range from rich floral-aldehydic blends to brighter, citrus-forward versions. A 30 ml bottle of Chanel 5 perfume (the concentrated form) sells for about $250-$300, the same but presented as eau de parfum about 10 times less strong goes for $100-$150 and eau de tolette again 10 times weaker goes for $80-$120. Let’s hope that climate change does not affect the Grasse jasmine cultivation as well.
Flower fields in Grasse And careful, Chanel nr 5 perfume stains.

+233 Jazz club and Grill. Dr. Isert Street, North Ridge, Accra, may be going over its top. They recently extended the seating and parking area and have more and more entrance fee events, (150 per person in our case). One could say currently it is the place to be. I like their sound system which is clear and never too loud to block your conversation. But their kitchen starts to suffer. The jollof beef fish was ok, but their beef kebab was over marinated and not juicy again, the pina colada (rhum, cream of coconut, and pineapple juice) is not that creamy any more and the bora bora cocktail (typically passion fruit juice, pineapple juice, lemon juice, and grenadine) tasted more like watermelon, apple and pineapple, and was watery. And though they have 2 vodkas at 25 GHC on the menu they don’t have these, prices start at 35 GHC (which is quite reasonable compared with other places). Their cocktails ranges from GHS 80-120 for a glass of Mojito, GHS 100-150 for their special cocktails and GHS 120-180 for their brandy-based Espresso Martini.

Lydia...

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from Micro essais

Étymologiquement, l’existence est un surgissement. Une apparition hors de l’invisible, dans le visible.

Creusons un peu la question. On dit parfois : « Il n’y a pas d’amour, il n’y a que des preuves d’amour ».

Retournons la formule : que vaudraient ces « preuves d’amour », sans l’amour lui même ?

Que serait la connaissance, sans l’apprentissage ? Et plus encore, sans le désir d’apprendre ? Que serait la sagesse, sans l’expérience ?

Que vaut l’œuvre, sans l’acte de créer ? Le poème sans les ratures ? Le roman sans les pages déchirées ?

On devine, à travers ces exemples, que la question n’est pas tant de savoir s’il faut croire ou non en quelque chose d’invisible, que de savoir si le monde visible que nous connaissons pourrait exister sans lui.

C’est l’invisible qui tient le visible.

Appelons le désir, passion ou amour. Appelons le lien, liaison, relation. Qu’importe. C’est cet invisible là qui tient le monde, le rend possible et le fait ex(s)iter.

Or, on voudrait nous faire croire aujourd’hui, par culte du rendement, ou de la performance, que seul le résultat compterait.

On voudrait nous pousser, au nom de l’efficacité, à sacrifier, sur l’autel du résultat, le processus invisible qui l’a rendu possible.

Alors que, dans bien des cas, c’est le processus lui même qui constitue l’essentiel.

Voilà pourquoi les gains d’efficacité ne sont jamais neutres. Voilà pourquoi toute production générée par intelligence artificielle ne peut en aucun cas prétendre au statut d’œuvre. Parce qu’elle accélère au point de l’effacer presque entièrement tout le processus nécessaire à sa production, elle passe à côté de l’essentiel.

Je ne suis pas en train de dire qu’il faut définitivement renoncer à l’IA, pas plus qu’à d’autres moyens d’augmenter notre puissance d’agir. Mais il est urgent de réfléchir à ses implications profondes. S’il s’agit avec elle d’accélérer toujours plus, alors nous sacrifierons l’essentiel : la relation et tout ce qu’elle implique.

Contrairement à ce qu’affirment aujourd’hui les penseurs de l’IApocalypse, ce n’est pas l’humanité qui est menacée par l’IA à court terme. Mais plutôt ce qui fait que nous sommes humains. Cela inclut nos faiblesses, nos limites, mais aussi ce que avons de meilleur : le désir de créer, le désir d’aimer, le besoin d’être en relation les uns avec les autres.

 
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from Micro essais

Il y a deux questions derrière ce « pourquoi ? » :

La première est celle de l’utilité, questionnable en effet. À quoi sert la poésie ?

La seconde est celle de l’impulsion, qui vient de soi, ne répond à aucune sollicitation extérieure et peut naître indépendamment de toute utilité, réelle ou perçue.

Alors, la poésie, ça sert à quoi ? À faire son intéressant ? À sauver le monde, ou du moins à essayer de le rendre un peu meilleur qu’il ne l’est ? À soigner les cœurs et les âmes ? À mettre un peu de beauté dans nos quotidiens ? À s’évader ? À prendre du recul ? À aider à vivre ? À vivre, tout simplement, mais vraiment, c'est-à-dire ne pas seulement survivre ?

Un peu de tout cela, sans doute. Chacune et chacun d’entre nous pourra trouver, parmi les propositions ci-dessus, celle ou celles qui lui conviendront le mieux, et pourra bien sûr se sentir libre d’en ajouter d’autres.

Je reviendrai sur deux d’entre elles :

La première, c’est la vertu thérapeutique de la poésie. Écrire de la poésie, ou lire de la poésie nous fait du bien. Lorsque mon père était malade, je lui envoyais régulièrement des poèmes, et il me disait que cela lui faisait du bien. Lorsque nous souffrons, la poésie, comme la musique, la littérature ou d’autres formes d’expression artistique, nous apaise.

Mais est-ce vraiment pour cela qu’on se décide, un jour, à écrire ?

Pour rendre le monde meilleur alors ? Quelle prétention ! Et pourtant, deux constats : le premier est que chaque poète en engendre d’autres. Écrire, c’est susciter d’autres vocations. C’est ouvrir pour beaucoup un nouveau champ des possibles. C’est révéler à soi et ouvrir à d’autres la possibilité de découvrir une facette de leur personnalité qu’elles n’avaient jamais exploré jusqu’alors. Il y a donc, par la poésie, une puissance de propagation dont l’ampleur est sans doute bien plus large que ce qui est perceptible, un peu comme un courant de profondeur indétectable depuis la surface.

Voilà qui m’amène au second constat : aucune lutte, aucun soulèvement, aucune mobilisation n’est possible s’il n’y a pas, quelque part enfoui profondément en nous une petite lueur qui nous dit que d’autres possibles sont possibles. Rien ne façonne plus profondément le monde réel que les mondes imaginaires. J’en veux pour preuve l’obsession des despotes pour l’appauvrissement des désirs. Ce qu’avait si bien démontré Orwell dans « 1984 » avec la « novlangue » a été appliqué pratiquement à la lettre par Goebbels : une propagande efficace suppose d’appauvrir la langue, la pensée et donc les désirs, afin de mieux soumettre les populations, avec leur consentement de surcroît.

Aussi modeste que soit la poésie, du moins en apparence, elle est un moyen de lutte. Elle est un ferment à préserver, une braise à entretenir à tout prix, un relai à transmettre entre les individus, les peuples et les générations.

Mais est-ce vraiment pour cela qu’on se décide, un jour, à écrire ?

Peut être. Mais peut-être pas. Je ne peux ici parler que pour moi.

J’ai d’abord écrit des essais, puis des poèmes. Les premiers répondent à une logique « fonctionnelle » : transmettre des savoirs, des analyses, émettre des propositions et faire circuler des idées. J’ai toutefois très tôt ressenti le besoin d’y ajouter une note personnelle, plus sensible, un peu comme des respirations.

Mais à mesure que je me suis orienté vers des textes plus poétiques, j’ai bien senti que j'étais face à une nécessité. Un impulsion, profonde, irrépressible, qui répondait à quelque chose qui montait de plus en plus fort en moi : de l’angoisse, de la colère, de la tristesse, face à la destruction systématique de ce que notre monde recèle de plus beau. De la consternation face à l’incurie de nos dirigeants, leur incompétence ou leur mauvaise foi, je ne sais, et donc leur incapacité à discerner ce qui est essentiel, vital, de ce qui ne sont que des moyens. J'étais submergé par une profonde détresse et un sentiment d’impuissance face à ce glissement progressif, ce « crash mou » du socle sinon d’une civilisation, du moins d’une capacité de vivre ensemble, de vivre vraiment, pleinement et épanouis.

Alors, que faire ?

Devenir fou. En crever.

Ou fuir.

Et s’il existait une autre voie ?

Écrire. Créer. Ne pas laisser l’angoisse, la colère, la tristesse, la consternation et l’aigreur gagner et tout emporter. En faire quelque chose, même si c’est peu.

Entretenir la flamme, pour pouvoir un jour la transmettre.

Vivre.

« Mieux vaut allumer une bougie que de maudire les ténèbres »

 
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from The happy place

Today I saw a little girl carefully balancing through the train car with a small box of strawberry jam clutched to her heart, a frown of deep concentration was on her little face as she passed me by

Walking the same path some time later: a big bald man, a miniature whiskey bottle in his giant fist, clutched also

And I got word of a dead relative through SMS from my mum (who I don’t talk to much no more, we’ve run out of things to say to each other)

And I quit my old job, as the new one is lined up finally

And lastly, I saw a man with a big butt crack walking by, wearing black jeans jacket and black jeans. There was something sad I couldn’t put my finger on, his eyes maybe, about his kind face. (I saw this as I went for a stroll to stretch my weary legs …)

An eventful journey indeed

 
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from Chemin tournant

On entend la corne d'une locomotive rouge qui traine avec lenteur à travers le multicorps de la ville soixante wagons de marchandises. Puis le souffle de l'eau contre le béton de l'abattoir général, où l’on verse annuellement le sang de quatre-vingt-dix-mille bœufs. Éclate le cri des bouchers à l'adresse d'une bête tremblante. On entend : Tue-le ! et le train, sa voix, ses yeux qui chassent des fantômes marchant sur son chemin de fer. Entrent par vent du sud le relent des vidures, et plus tard du nord, aussi longue à durer dans l'air qu'un sermon de pasteur, l’âcreté des ordures qui flambent encore, du plastique, des herbes à demi sèches qui ne demandaient rien.

#Fenêtresurville #Didascalies

Fenêtre sur ville

 
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from EpicMind

Philippe de Champaigne: Vanitas

Ich kenne kaum jemanden, der keine To-do-Liste führt. Manche arbeiten mit Apps, andere mit Notizbüchern, Haftzetteln oder ausgeklügelten Produktivitätssystemen. Trotzdem bleibt am Ende vieler Tage ein ähnliches Gefühl zurück: Man war beschäftigt, hat zahlreiche kleine Dinge erledigt – und dennoch scheint das Wesentliche liegen geblieben zu sein. Genau diese Erfahrung hat mich dazu gebracht, mich intensiver mit einer Methode auseinanderzusetzen, die bei agilen Methoden oft angewendet wird: Time Boxing.

Was ist Time Boxing?

Die Grundidee ist einfach. Aufgaben werden nicht nur gesammelt oder priorisiert, sondern erhalten einen konkreten Platz im Kalender. Statt bloss festzuhalten, was erledigt werden soll, wird auch definiert, wann und wie lange daran gearbeitet wird. Eine Aufgabe wird damit zu einem verbindlichen Termin – ähnlich wie ein Meeting oder ein Arztbesuch.

Statt lediglich aufzuschreiben, dass die Steuererklärung erledigt werden muss, reservierst Du beispielsweise am Dienstag von 19:00 bis 20:00 Uhr Zeit für das Sortieren der Unterlagen. Statt „Präsentation vorbereiten“ steht im Kalender: „Mittwoch, 14:00 bis 15:30 Uhr: Folien finalisieren“. Aufgaben bleiben dadurch nicht abstrakt oder unverbindlich, sondern erhalten einen festen Platz im Alltag.

Warum klassische To-do-Listen oft nicht ausreichen

To-do-Listen haben durchaus ihre Berechtigung – sie helfen dabei, Aufgaben nicht zu vergessen und Mental Load auszulagern. Das Problem beginnt dort, wo Listen immer länger werden und dabei jede Aufgabe scheinbar denselben Stellenwert erhält.

Ich beobachte bei mir selbst immer wieder einen typischen Effekt: Kleine, einfache Aufgaben werden bevorzugt erledigt, weil sie schnell ein Gefühl von Fortschritt vermitteln. Schliesslich kann ich so schnell viele Dinge abhaken. Schwierige oder langfristige Aufgaben dagegen werden aufschoben – oft tagelang, obwohl sie eigentlich wichtiger wären.

Hinzu kommt, dass To-do-Listen selten realistisch mit der verfügbaren Zeit abgeglichen werden. Viele Menschen planen an einem einzigen Tag Aufgaben für zehn oder zwölf Stunden konzentrierter Arbeit ein, obwohl gleichzeitig Sitzungen, Unterbrechungen und spontane Anfragen stattfinden. Das führt fast zwangsläufig zu Frustration.

Time Boxing zwingt zu einer anderen Perspektive. Die zentrale Frage lautet nicht mehr nur: „Was muss ich tun?“, sondern auch: „Wann genau tue ich es – und wie viel Zeit ist mir diese Aufgabe tatsächlich wert?“

Wie ich die Methode im Alltag anwende

In der Praxis funktioniert Time Boxing vor allem dann gut, wenn Aufgaben möglichst konkret formuliert und in kleinere Einheiten zerlegt werden. „Wohnung putzen“ ist eine schlechte Timebox. „20 Minuten Küche reinigen“ oder „15 Minuten Unterlagen sortieren“ funktioniert deutlich besser. Dasselbe gilt beruflich: „Projekt vorbereiten“ bleibt zu vage. Präziser sind Zeitfenster wie „45 Minuten Konzept skizzieren“ oder „30 Minuten Offerten prüfen“.

Wichtig ist ausserdem, den Zeitbedarf realistisch einzuschätzen. Analytische oder kreative Arbeiten dauern häufig länger als zunächst gedacht, und konzentrierte Arbeit ist anstrengender als ein Tag voller kleiner Aufgaben und Unterbrechungen. Ich plane deshalb bewusst Reserven und freie Zwischenräume ein. Ein lückenlos gefüllter Kalender sieht zwar effizient aus, funktioniert in der Realität aber selten. Time Boxing wird erst dann wirklich nützlich, wenn es nicht als starres Korsett verstanden wird, sondern als flexible Struktur das eigene #Zeitmanagement unterstützt.

Der eigentliche Vorteil: Konzentration statt Dauerreaktion

Der grösste Nutzen liegt für mich weniger in besserer Planung als in besserer Konzentration. Viele Menschen verbringen ihre Tage in einem Zustand permanenter Reaktion: E-Mails beantworten, Nachrichten lesen, kurz etwas prüfen, auf einen Anruf reagieren – und dann wieder zurück zur eigentlichen Aufgabe, bis die nächste Unterbrechung folgt.

Das Problem dabei ist nicht nur die verlorene Zeit. Ständige Unterbrechungen erschweren tiefere Konzentration. Komplexe Aufgaben benötigen oft eine gewisse Anlaufzeit, bevor produktives Arbeiten überhaupt möglich wird. Während einer klar definierten Timebox versuche ich deshalb möglichst konsequent, Ablenkungen auszuschalten: kein offener Messenger, keine E-Mails nebenbei, keine „kurzen“ Kontrollblicke aufs Smartphone. Selbst Fokusblöcke von 30 bis 60 Minuten können dabei erstaunlich wirksam sein.

Diese Methode funktioniert übrigens auch im Privatleben. Viele Vorhaben scheitern nicht an mangelnder Motivation, sondern daran, dass sie keinen festen Platz im Alltag erhalten. Lesen, Sport oder persönliche Projekte bleiben diffus und werden auf später verschoben. Wer bewusst Zeitfenster dafür reserviert, erhöht die Wahrscheinlichkeit deutlich, dass diese Dinge tatsächlich stattfinden.

Die Grenzen der Methode

Trotz ihrer Vorteile ist Time Boxing keine universelle Lösung. Kreative Prozesse verlaufen selten linear, und nicht jedes Problem löst sich innerhalb von exakt 45 Minuten. Übertriebene Planung kann schnell ins Gegenteil kippen: Wer jede Viertelstunde kontrollieren und optimieren möchte, produziert zusätzlichen #Stress statt mehr Klarheit. Time Boxing funktioniert aus meiner Sicht am besten als pragmatische Orientierungshilfe – nicht als Versuch, jeden Moment maximal effizient auszunutzen.

Ein einfacher Einstieg

Wer die Methode ausprobieren möchte, muss dafür nicht den gesamten Alltag umstellen. Oft genügt es, zwei oder drei wichtige Aufgaben pro Tag bewusst als Timebox im Kalender zu reservieren – besonders solche, die sonst gerne aufgeschoben oder von Unterbrechungen verdrängt werden. Hilfreich ist, die Zeitfenster eher etwas kürzer zu halten und bewusst Puffer einzuplanen. Viele Menschen stellen nach kurzer Zeit fest, dass sie nicht unbedingt mehr arbeiten, aber klarer und konzentrierter. Time Boxing funktioniert übrigens besonders gut im Kontext des Task-Batchings, eine Methode, die ich auch schon vorgestellt habe.

Time Boxing hilft letztlich nicht nur dabei, produktiver zu werden. Es schafft vor allem ein bewussteres Verhältnis zur eigenen Zeit – und damit auch zur Frage, womit man seine Aufmerksamkeit überhaupt verbringen möchte.


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Bildquelle Philippe de Champaigne (1602–1674): Vanitas, Musée de Tessé, Le Mans, Public Domain.

Disclaimer Teile dieses Texts wurden mit Deepl Write (Korrektorat und Lektorat) überarbeitet. Für die Recherche in den erwähnten Werken/Quellen und in meinen Notizen wurde NotebookLM von Google verwendet.

Topic #ProductivityPorn

 
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from The Poet Sky

A white girl with brown and blue-green hair down to her shoulders.  She's wearing glasses and has sparkly pink cheeks, along with blue eyeshadow.  Her glasses have a blue and white cloudy sky pattern on them.  She's wearing a black, sleeveless dress, just visible as the picture is focused on her head.  She has a blue pendant on. Photo by IMMAGINÉ PHOTOGRAPHY

Listen to Your Mother 2026 is TOMORROW! We've got a talented cast bringing a lot of heartfelt stories to the event, and I still can't believe I'm one of them. It's from 7:30pm to 9:30pm tomorrow, May 9th, and I highly encourage everyone to attend.

Tickets are here. The show will be streamed on YouTube if you can't be there in person, and available after the show if you can't afford $15 for a livestream ticket (which I understand, I'm unemployed). All proceeds go to the Teen Empowerment Center in Rochester, NY.

I'm so honored to be a part of this cast. I cannot overstate how powerful and emotional every story is. We each have a different experience, no two of us are alike. It's wild to think that I auditioned for this with no dream that I'd be chosen, then yesterday I was rehearsing with the rest of the cast at Hochstein.

I hope everyone can make it. Love you all!

#ListenToYourMother2026

 
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from bios

8: The Rehabilitation Of Necessity


He escapes from the clinic. Weeks of complaining about his feet, aching, sore to walk on, walking around the rehab wincing. There were discussions, in the three years he's been in rehab he has tried to run twice before – but now his feet are so sore. He walks barefoot around the rehab, wincing when anyone looks at him.

His job is to scrape the pap off the bottom of the pot, the giant pot for forty five people, every morning and night, and he complains that he can no longer do it. No one else will scrape the pot. And so they took Sbuda to the clinic. Just before he leaves he asks that they get his sneakers from the clothes he has locked up in the office.

It takes them five days to find him. They look for him by waiting. He returns shoeless, in an openbacked hospital gown and a medicated daze. He had tried to walk to home and gotten half way, to the city centre, where after three days of walking, he had smoked. Passed out from hunger, exhaustion and nyaope he was found and taken to a hospital. Identified. They phoned his people, who had the rehab pick him up. Another six months they said. Three years six months in the rehab. They have never once visited him, they do not want him home, they do not want to deal with him. They pay for him to stay here. Scraping the pap from the pot, sleeping in the drone of the stepwork, frustrated by endless repeated viewings of the John Wicks, the Transporters, Despicable Mes.

“Wrestling,” he says, “why can't we ever watch the wrestling.” Whenever he asks, someone says, “Hey Sbuda, where are your shoes?”

The TV is cracked. There is one USB stick. No wifi. No way to download new things to watch. No staff in the office to do it if there was.

Sbuda has spent most of his life living under a bridge near the airport, hustling for money at the entrances, stealing scrap, smoking. He does not imagine any other life.

Someone else escapes during a football match against another rehab. He scores a goal and then vanishes. He told everyone he was going to do it in the afternoon meeting the day before, after he had led us in the third step prayer. His girlfriend is pregnant he has heard, he needs to know if he is the father. Soccer is banned from then on.

Scofield is so named because he has broken out of this rehab eight times, once by setting it on fire. One section of the dorms was rendered uninhabitable and so many sleep on the floor of the common area -the squatters, the rest packed into bunks three high, welded by inmates, the admitted, whoever. Badly welded. Often breaking under the movement of a skommel. Scofield was bought here in chains by the green beans. He has been in thirty two rehabs in his life. He is twenty six years old. Willingness.

Another arrives on a pole, strung up as if to slaughter, hashtagged by his own people, ranting that if he closes his eyes the world will end. He cuts his foot open on the broken tiles in the shower while dancing and trying to keep his eyes open. There are no bandages, he waits bleeding into toilet paper for a day until one of the staff can take him to the clinic. This is his third time here.

The dorm and clinic visits are managed by two former attendees of the rehab. No homes that will take them back, they have been absorbed into ebb and return. No way to navigate any discernible future. At least they are not using. One clean for two years, one going on eight.

He's 20 maybe and comes in willing and then soon confesses he is doing this not for himself but for his people. He will smoke as soon as he leaves. He spends large portions of his time talking to the ancestors, or the wall. After two weeks he tries to escape through the roof, is pulled back in by his feet, and chained to his bed for three days. After that is two weeks of short steps and dishes duty. It makes for so much happiness when people are punished with dishes, then everyone else gets to take a break.

“It's not so bad, two weeks,” he says. His previous rehab, somewhere in the forest, everyone was on short steps, the whole six months, and chained to your bed every night. “Only church, no stepwork, prayer and garden work, and ntwala. Not like these small ones here, big ones, you could never sleep, so we slept away from the beds, standing up.”

He is enthusiastic in step class, always vocal about finding recovery, after three months he leaves and is in hospital after three days — caught smoking, his brother has beaten him into intensive care.

A youngster, maybe 16 comes in for meth, hashtagged in reported fervour by the dorm managers, in his own bathroom, at his father's place, he thought his father loved him, but here? He still wants to party, he is after all, young. His people want him to stop cigarettes as well, they are not allowed to give him smokes from his tuckshop, he trades duties for two gwaai, will sweep, mop, do dishes, anything for gwaai. There is an established informal economy around these situations. Trading crips, goslows, stoksweets, eleven rand mylife, anything from the ten rand a day tuckshop to get out of duties. A system of privilege has formed around those who get sugar, coffee, tea smuggled in by the dorm managers. The two dorm managers are barely paid -their lodging and food and a small stipend of R2500 a month for the most senior, who has maintenance and debt, nothing for the junior – they extract a percentage of these smokkels for themselves, for control. Three months in a meal can be sent to you by your people, KFC and shoprite cakes mostly. Building up to a three month mark is a plague of begging, “what duties can I do for you?”

A handyman is bought in to start repairing the fire damaged dorm. He is outside working on a door when the kid spots his chance to escape. Over the back wall. He makes for the freeway. The family next door shriek, “Faithy go tell the Uncle one of his people is getting out!”. There is a scramble for the chains and the car, as they head out. They find him three blocks away, lost, he does not know the area and everyone he passes is running back to the rehab, whatsapping, telling him to go back, for his own good. They pull up and he gets in, they hashtag him anyway, he'll be in short steps for two weeks.

There are no medical professionals here. It is handled by the dorm managers, sometimes they forget. Methadone is for five days maximum and the withdrawals kicking convulsively in the night are surrounded by threats, to shut the fuck up and stop crying. Those who snore are woken up, those who dream loudly are told to stop dreaming. Everyone sleeps on their own particular precipice.

Three months in being kept awake by the shadows of these kicks, still inhabiting my bones, unwilling to let me sleep, when I hear a bird in the night, I look up at the crumbling chipboard of the bunk above me, and try to trace its flight across the unimaginable sky. Closing my eyes its cries are bright pin pricks in a line against the darkness.

In the spasms of the night the shadow of a cat, the rustling of a crips packet under a bed somewhere.

“It's the ancestors!”

“Cat's are evil, get it out, get it out!”

“It's the mouse, you guys must clean up your snacks man.”

In the bathroom sometime in the hushed rhythm of other people's breathing, re-reading again The Eagle Has Landed – the only book on the fucked shelves that has it's ending intact, most are ripped out to use as dustpans for morning duties – addicts, man. Here is where I escape the no-sleep of three months in, the bathroom door has a hole in it, the stalls no doors at all, the toilets no seats or broken seats, the shower handles no handles, the mirror is scraps of reflection after an ancient tantrum, my legs kick unbidden while balancing on a three legged plastic chair trying to quiet a mind awake with regret and the opportunities I must grasp when I get out, for I have a life to rebuild, occasionally punctuated by the shitting of someone, half asleep, trying not to catch my eye.

Signalling it could be time to try get some actual sleep, around three thirty am the seekers of hot water start whispering in to the bathroom – where there is no bath – lining up and otherwising. There are shouts of shutthefuckup walking back through the common area, a double volume cold space, maybe fifteen by fifteen and ten high, where we eat, watch TV, have meetings, step classes, and where some sleep. This was once a mortuary, then a church, then a gym, apparently the guy who ran the gym needed to get clean, so he started a rehab. Passing the just waking dorm guy, who is up to start the porridge, three hours of stirring a pot that is three times too big for the only plate that is working on the stove that strains under the weight of the stirring. Between stirs he sleeps on a thin sponge in a former coldroom and scrolls through chattering upbeat tiktok motivationals, how to get that money yo, how to get that bitch yo.

Sleep comes just in time for Sekunjalo, the six am call and the bashing of feet for the slow to get up, Se! Kun! Jaloooo! Often self appointed kings of the rehab will try to do this five minutes earlier than the dorm guy, he lets them – mostly they are tolerated, ignored.

Morning meeting, readings from the NA Daily Reflections, identifications, airing of issues, then din pap, two sugars, no milk, no butter, fights break out daily over who gets the few extra bowls. Standing in the three by fifteen concrete yard, crowding around those who might let go of a sip coffee, eating pap before it gets cold, sitting on upended old paint buckets, the chipboard comes out and good natured arguments break out over who gets to play with the single set of dominoes. Milling, milling.

A scuttled together kennel of sorts houses Bullet, black dog, grey in years, the longest inmate here, shuffles, wobbles out to the pap pot scrapings Sbuda dutifully shovels into an icecream bak. The bored tease Bullet until he lashes out, too old to actually bite. Step class is at eight thirty. It's enough to just stand in the dust and feel the sun, until it's time to peel off to mop, to move the room around, bring in the desk and chairs.

Step class is given by someone who was here, is now years clean, about eight pay attention, the rest sleep on the side benches. The diligent copy out the questions, third time round, fourth time around they'll also be sleeping. The person giving class is often too beset with all the admin of the place, organising gwaai, toiletries, visits, intake, etc, that step class is given by other people, sometimes those who've been longest in this place, sometimes people who've passed through, live in the area, have free time. There are lots of those, there is a cycle of months clean, years clean, success stories, with free time. Sometimes one of them simply no longer appears..

Tea is a quarter loaf of powder bread, margarine and thin juice. After step class lunch is a quarter loaf of bread and gravy, sometimes three tins of fish divided, sometimes dahl, sometimes salted carrots but always the packet gravy. After lunch the rush to rearrange the room to set up the TV to be in front to re-watch John Wick or Power Book: Ghost, all of it. A mishmash of din sponges and threadbare blankets and sleep and bravado.

By two pm in the dusty yard we are circling the tuckshop door, it is just punctuation. Something that happens in the midst of all this nothing that happens. There is step work but there is no sense of the outside. Of what to do when you get out, and it translates into a sort of listlessness, a tired impatience with everything. “Tuckshop must open now. These guys are fucking around.” The dorm guy arrives back with packet crips that must be repackaged and someone gets that privilege. Bullet digs in the 30cm square attempt at a vegetable patch, from seeds hustled from kitchen duties preparing the supper, stywe pap with gravy, some boiled down vegetables, maybe a russian, sometimes chicken pieces, cut in two, half per person.

There is space out back to grow a proper vegetable garden and it's a common thing to want, but it will never happen, if allowed out there someone might try to escape.

Faith appears on the roof of the house next to the rehab, punctually as tuck shop is open, whatever time it is open, and she always calls out, “Het iemand seep?”

She is maybe ten, and her parents smoke – at night we smell the indanda seeping into the dorm window, the smell of plastic burning, copper being mined from the broken appliances mined from other people's discards – but fresh from school she is on the roof asking for soap, for rollons, for crips, for stoksweets. She only takes toiletries that are still sealed. She will take anything from the tuckshop, even the smallest leftovers of a goslows. She will talk for hours with anyone, any conversation always abbreviated into wants, needs, but also long enjambements about her friends and her brother, and what shit they caught on at school. She disappears when other opportunities present. “Okay, bye, but tomorrow as jy he' seep.”

Just before supper is the afternoon meeting, on hot days out in the yard, and never is there anyone willing to share, there is a list and generally when it's time there is an excuse and a battle to get someone anyone but not the same perpetually willing who share the same story over and over. On lucky days someone from outside who has free time, clean time and free time, and will fire everyone up with hope.

After dinner, the seeds saved from the whatever vegetables are taken outside in darkness, and we plant them in the dust of Bullet's diggings. The sky is sodium orange light from the nearby factories and security zones, barely a star is visible. I point to the evening star.

“That's a satellite”, I am told, “they're all satellites.”

“How can there be so many satellites?”

“I only see two.”

I cup my hands into a sort of shield against the orange miasma and ask him to do the same and look directly up.

“Oh no, yassis, those can't all be satellites”.

There is thumping music from just, it feels just next door, friday, saturday, sundays. Sundays is slow jams, nineties RnB. I start to anticipate my Janet Jackson moment as soon as the thumping starts on Fridays nine pm, just before weekend lights out. On the first night I hear it I imagine a two story building, a nightclub above some sort of shopping centre, a dancefloor, booths. I imagine wrong.

Dreaming of being out one slow jam sunday in the dark, there is the occasional “Jirre daai nommer!” from the bed above me. I say something about wanting to go dancing there, at that place. It is not a place for dancing. What I am hearing is a car wash. An open area where on weekends one guy parks his car and pumps tunes, other people pull up in their cars to listen, and to smoke, and assumingly buy, meth. Sure there is dancing, but it is not a club.

In a two kilometre square radius from the rehab there are nine other rehabs. In this area, a grid of streets, of falling down smartly kept houses, a merchant is in walking distance on any road. The local economy is spazas and meth – two giant supermarket chains suck money out of the community, employing few. There is little here to do with time.

The rehab prepares for bed in the same settling way night after night, everyone slowly peeling off to bed, small conversations. Just before this, lights not quite out, an argument. Muffled shouts and suddenly someone is on the floor and everyone is piling in on the beating. It takes the junior dorm manager to stop it, he separates the other dorm manager from the relapse patient. An old disagreement, an insult. The patient is punished, chained to his bed, given duties. The dorm manager is verbally disciplined the next day, but who else will wake up at three to make the din pap, and manage the tuckshop and cook all the meals and keep the peace.

The food is shit because this rehab costs R2800 a month, the services are limited, the counselling is limited, there is no preparedness for finding work, or even getting your ID or going back to school because this rehab costs R2800 a month.

R2800 a month is more than a third of the average monthly salary in this area. It is an entire pension. But it is cheaper than having an addict in the house.

This place is an organic response to a need. It is not registered, filling in a gap, cannot apply for funding, must stay under the radar. Kunjalo, nje.

Woken by mumbling underneath the symphony of uneasy breathing, Sbuda at the window, clutching at the bars, mumbling and crying. Touching him on the arm starts him awake. Dazed, he says, “I thought I was at my grandmom's house.” Behind him, beyond the shadow of Faith's roof, a night bird cries it's path beyond the sodium haze, against an invisible sky. .

He makes his way back to his bed, lying down in a crackling of forgotten crips packets.

“Is that the cat,” shouts from the other room.

“Ek sal dit vrek maak, oor de muur gooi!”

“Skommel jy Sbuda?”

“Hey, Sbuda, where are your shoes?”

 
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from Shared Visions

This May, in Nikšić, we gather to do something we have been working toward for two years: the founding of a international cooperative of visual artists, headquartered in Belgrade and built across the region. From 16 to 20 May 2026, the Shared Visions network travels to Montenegro for its founding assembly. Five days of working sessions on cooperativism, organising in culture, art market research, solidarity economies and digital tools to build more just and equitable art infrastructures.

Three sessions are specifically crafted for public:

→ 17 May, 10:00-12:00 at City Museum Nikšić — Mapping the Visual Arts Market. A presentation of comparative research across Serbia, Bulgaria, Montenegro and North Macedonia, alongside reports from the Netherlands, Belgium, Portugal and Ukraine.

→ 18 May, 20:00-21:30 at Black Metallurgy Institute Nikšić — Archiving the Ungovernable. A talk and convivium with Landscape Choreography and MACAO (Milan), drawing on more than a decade of self-organised cultural practice and fight for the commons.

→ 20 May, 14:00-17:00 at Black Metallurgy Institute Nikšić — Founding Assembly. The day we formally constitute the cooperative and celebrate! Come for one session, come for all of them. The questions we keep returning to, for whom are we producing art, whose is the art infrastructure, how do we sustain artistic work outside extractive logics — are not ones we can answer alone.

 
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