Modern healthcare systems are designed to deliver services efficiently, safely, and at scale. On paper, many of these systems work exactly as intended.Yet for the people moving through them, care often feels rushed, confusing, and emotionally unprotected.What Healthcare Misses examines the gap between how care is delivered and how it is experienced. Through real-world observation and lived insight, this book explores the quiet moments where systems fall short-not because of a lack of expertise or effort, but because experience is treated as secondary to process.From emergency rooms and hospital stays to everyday interactions with care systems, the book reveals how policies, workflows, and design decisions shape how people feel long after services are rendered. It also looks at how the same experience gap affects providers, staff, and leaders working within these systems.This is not a critique of individuals or institutions. It is a reflection on what modern care overlooks-and why experience is essential to trust, engagement, and meaningful support.Written in a clear, thoughtful voice, What Healthcare Misses is for anyone who has ever given care, received care, or wondered why systems designed to help can feel so hard to move through.