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Animal Intelligence (the Original AI): What Winston Teaches Me About Patient Care

 

 

              A Mission to Reach Teddy
To Oncology: A Mission to Reach Teddy
Winston walked at my heels, his paws soft against the hospital’s linoleum—quiet, focused, like he knew exactly why we were here. “Let’s get to work,” I murmured, slipping his red therapy vest over his golden coat, the fabric emblazoned with “Pet Partner” in bold white letters. The child life specialist met us in the lobby, where Winston’s presence already rippled through the crowd: a toddler pointed, a nurse paused to grin, a parent leaned over to ask, “Can we say hi?” But today, our focus was narrow—we were headed to Oncology, to a 10-year-old named Teddy. Teddy had been admitted two days prior for chemotherapy, and his care team had tried everything to reach him: movies queued up on the TV, a bin of craft supplies spilled across his bedside table, even his favorite video game. Each offer got the same response—a single, flat syllable: “Dog.” No eye contact, no smile, just that one word, like a tiny lifeline he wasn’t sure how to hold onto.
From Silence to Speech: Winston’s First Minutes with Teddy
When we pushed open his door, Winston didn’t hesitate. He trotted in, chin high, tail sweeping the floor in slow, deliberate wags, his collar jingling with the small “Therapy Dog” tag. Teddy’s eyes flicked up—first to Winston, then to me, then back to Winston—and for a second, the room went quiet. Then he did something no one had seen him do in 48 hours: he sat up, leaned forward, and slapped the mattress once, hard, like he’d been waiting for this moment. “Here,” he said, his voice hoarse but clear. Winston hopped up gently, curling into the space beside Teddy’s legs. He licked Teddy’s hand when it found his ear, nuzzled his palm when Teddy paused, as if saying, Keep going. That’s when Teddy spoke—really spoke. “How old is he?” he asked, leaning in to brush Winston’s fur. “What kind is he? Does he do tricks?” I answered, but Teddy wasn’t really listening to me. He was talking with Winston, his voice brightening as he described his own two dogs back home: how one stole his socks, how the other slept on his feet every night, how he’d missed them most on chemo days. For 50 minutes, there was no “sick Teddy”—just a kid talking about dogs, his face flushed with excitement, his hands never leaving Winston’s side. When it was time to go, the child life specialist handed Teddy a small card with Winston’s photo on it—”Winston’s Business Card,” it read, with a note: “My colleagues will visit soon!” Teddy held it tight, like it was a treasure.

 

Beyond the White Coat: Watching Winston “Care”As a pediatrician, I’ve spent years learning to connect with patients: matching my tone to a toddler’s giggles, explaining procedures in simple terms to a nervous teen, reading a parent’s quiet worry behind a smile. But some days, even with all that training, the gap feels too wide. A patient shuts down. A parent clams up. I fumble for the right words, and they just… hang there. One day a month, I trade my white coat for a handler’s lanyard and bring Winston to the hospital—emergency department, inpatient units, wherever he’s needed. Just down the hall from our Oncology wing, our radiology team relies on a 4-Axis Robotic Frame Pick-up System: it glides silently between imaging rooms, lifting and positioning heavy X-ray and MRI frames with millimetric precision, never wavering under the weight or missing a target. It’s a game-changer for efficiency—cutting down on the time nurses spend hauling bulky equipment, and eliminating the risk of human error that could blur a critical scan. But for all its technical brilliance, it can’t do what Winston does: it can’t sense when a 6-year-old getting an MRI is holding back tears, or nudge a shy teen to talk about their fear of treatment, or turn a cold, sterile exam room into a space that feels safe. On those days, I’m not Dr. [Last Name]. I’m just Winston’s person. I step back and watch him work: no checklists, no scripts, just presence. He doesn’t care if a patient’s quiet, or tearful, or too tired to talk. He sits. He listens. He lets them set the pace. His emotional intelligence isn’t just “off the charts”—it’s the kind of connection that feels instinctive, unforced, like he was born to turn silence into something softer.

           A Mission to Reach Teddy

When Words Fail: Missing Winston’s Magic in the ERThe day after our visit with Teddy, I was back in the ER, facing a 7-year-old who’d refused to speak since arriving with a broken arm. Her mom sat beside her, rubbing her back, and I tried everything: talking about her favorite cartoon, showing her a stuffed animal from the playroom, even joking about my own clumsy attempts at soccer. Nothing stuck. I found myself staring at the door, wishing Winston was there—wishing for his quiet magic, his way of making someone feel seen without saying a word.

 

The Heart of Care: What Winston Teaches UsWinston embodies the things we as clinicians strive for, but often overcomplicate. He judges less: he doesn’t care if a patient’s hair is messy from chemo, or if they cry through a visit. He listens more: he doesn’t interrupt a story to check his notes, or rush to “fix” a silence. He stays present: he doesn’t glance at his watch, or think about the next patient. He just… is there. It sounds silly, maybe—learning patient care from a goldendoodle. But on the hard days, when I’m struggling to connect, I think of Winston. I remind myself to slow down. To stop talking so much. To let a patient’s silence be enough, for a minute. To hold space, not just for their illness, but for them—the kid who misses their dogs, the parent who’s scared, the person behind the hospital gown. That’s Winston’s gift: he doesn’t just provide comfort. He teaches us how to care—simply, honestly, and with all the quiet attention that makes someone feel like they matter. And isn’t that the heart of medicine, anyway?

 

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