THE UNFOLDING THOUGHT PODCAST

Lisa Berry Blackstock: The Five Root Canals That Changed Everything

In this episode, Eric talks with independent patient advocate Lisa Berry Blackstock about a reality few people think about until it is too late: modern healthcare is increasingly difficult to navigate alone.

Lisa’s path into advocacy did not begin in medicine. It began with pain. After experiencing debilitating electric shocks in her face, she spent months searching for answers and ultimately underwent five unnecessary root canals before discovering the true cause: a rare nerve disorder called trigeminal neuralgia. That experience revealed something unsettling. Even intelligent, persistent people can become overwhelmed and vulnerable when they enter a healthcare system during moments of crisis.

The conversation explores the role of patient advocates and the growing complexity of healthcare systems. Lisa explains how insurance structures, hospital incentives, administrative pressures, and fragmented care models create environments where mistakes and missed signals become easier. She argues that advocates are not simply administrative assistants. They can serve as navigators, translators, and safeguards for patients and families during some of life’s most difficult moments.

At its core, this is a conversation about preparation. About vulnerability. And about finding ways to maintain agency in systems that often feel too large and complicated to understand.

Topics Covered

  • Lisa’s misdiagnosis journey and five unnecessary root canals
  • How trigeminal neuralgia changed the course of her life
  • What independent patient advocates actually do
  • Why healthcare has become harder for patients to navigate
  • The difference between hospital advocates and independent advocates
  • Why teaching and research hospitals can matter in complex cases
  • The hidden role incentives play in healthcare systems
  • How insurance structures shape care experiences
  • Why many people delay healthcare planning until crisis hits
  • Defining quality of life before emergencies happen
  • The relationship between aging, isolation, and wellbeing
  • Physician burnout and administrative pressures
  • The unintended consequences of healthcare policy changes
  • Why healthcare preparation should resemble estate planning
  • How advocates help patients maintain agency during crisis

Episode Links

For more episodes: https://unfoldingthought.com

Questions or guest ideas: [email protected]

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