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OverviewTHE PULSE OF THE PEARL A Novel of Heritage, Healing, and the Shadow of the Machine by Richard Logro In an era when healthcare increasingly relies on algorithms, automation, and predictive certainty, The Pulse of the Pearl asks an urgent question: what happens when machines are trusted more than the people trained to care? Blending literary fiction with clinical realism and ethical inquiry, the novel follows Lydia Reyes, RN, a Filipino nurse shaped by scarcity, intuition, and ancestral wisdom. Trained in the crowded public wards of Manila-where vigilance matters more than technology-Lydia migrates to the United States seeking professional security and modern medicine. What she finds instead is a system governed by data, compliance, and artificial intelligence. In her new hospital, electronic records capture every action, predictive tools promise safety, and responsibility is distributed so widely that accountability quietly disappears. Lydia is praised for her ""human touch,"" yet her judgment is constrained by metrics. Intuition is tolerated only when it aligns with the system. Silence becomes compliance. At the center of the story is the hospital's adoption of an advanced clinical decision-support platform designed to optimize outcomes and reduce error. For many clinicians, it offers protection. For Lydia, it reveals a dangerous gap between what can be measured and what is true. Patients deteriorate while screens remain green. Fear, dignity, and hesitation go unrecorded. The most damaging failures are not dramatic-they are compliant. Interwoven with Lydia's professional struggle is a deeply personal story of migration and loss. Distance from home brings the slow fading of her mother's memory and the quiet cost borne by families left behind. Lydia's identity as a Filipino nurse-shaped by culture, history, and collective memory-is not incidental but foundational. The novel explores how Western healthcare systems depend on immigrant labor while suppressing the perspectives that make it exceptional. In break rooms and informal networks of fellow immigrant nurses, Lydia finds community, truth, and resistance. These unseen spaces become places where judgment is reclaimed and care is remembered. When data falls silent and certainty dissolves, someone must still be listening. This novel insists that someone is the nurse. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Richard C LogroPublisher: Richard Logro Publishing Imprint: Richard Logro Publishing Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.603kg ISBN: 9798295616693Pages: 454 Publication Date: 14 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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