![]() Death by Telehealth. Plus. . . Douglas Murray on the travails of a gay cruise ship in the Middle East. Tyler Cowen on ‘AI maniacs.’ Will Democrats try to impeach Trump for the third time? And more.
Conor Hylton died after a night in the ICU with no physician at his bedside. (Illustration by The Free Press; photo courtesy of Hylton family)
It’s Wednesday, July 15. This is The Front Page, your daily window into the world of The Free Press—and our take on the world at large. Today: Douglas Murray on what happened when a gay cruise ship tried to dock in Egypt. Will Democrats try to impeach Trump for the third time? Tyler Cowen on the rise of the “AI maniacs.” Kat Rosenfield on “The Invite.” And much more. But first: The ICU without a doctor. In August 2024, 26-year-old Conor Hylton was about to begin his second year of dental school when he came down with what his family assumed was a particularly nasty stomach bug. That night, he checked into the hospital. The following morning, he was dead. Later, state and federal investigators reached a striking conclusion: From the time Conor was transferred to the ICU until he went into cardiac arrest roughly four hours later, no physician ever examined him at his bedside. How is that possible? The search for an answer led me deep into one of the most consequential transformations of American healthcare today: the rise of the tele-ICU, where critically ill patients are monitored by physicians working from remote command centers, sometimes hundreds of miles away. Over the past few months, I have spoken with the architects of the tele-ICU program at the hospital where Conor died as well as leading advocates and critics of remote critical care, to understand just what this transformation means. In the process, I have been able to reconstruct, minute by minute, exactly what happened inside the hospital that night. This isn’t only a story about one grieving family—it’s about a healthcare system under financial strain, and what is lost when the doctors responsible for the sickest patients in the hospital are nowhere near their bedsides. —Tanya Lukyanova |