And ever since that shift, the world has been a little more prepared — not because of better reports, but because less time was spent polishing words and more time was spent listening to actual experience.… In 2028, the Global Health & Resilience Agency (GHRA) — an international body created after the pandemic years — was tasked with coordinating early warning systems for infectious disease outbreaks. Hundreds of analysts, epidemiologists, and diplomats worked behind layers of interlocking committees. And yet, something strange kept happening: alerts that should’ve triggered rapid responses didn’t. Reports moved up the chain, then got “optimized” for clarity. After weeks of revision, each alert looked perfect on paper — but by then, the virus had spread across borders. The problem wasn’t lack of data. The real issue was that the people who felt the outbreaks first — frontline nurses in Nairobi, community health vo...