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Good Life Project

Why Can’t Anyone Tell Me What’s Wrong? | Alexandra Sifferlin

Good Life Project

Jonathan Fields / Acast

Education, Wellness, Self-improvement, Midlife, Health & Fitness, Intentional Living, Personal Growth, Living Well, How To

4.53.4K Ratings

🗓️ 28 May 2026

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Ever have something clearly wrong, and yet no expert can tell you what’s causing it? Or, worse, they DO tell you, but they’re wrong?


Nearly everyone will experience at least one diagnostic error in their lifetime. Not a minor mix-up, but a missed, delayed, or wrong diagnosis that shapes how long you suffer, what treatment you receive, and whether anyone believes something is actually wrong with you. For people in midlife, when the body starts sending new signals and the stakes of getting it right feel higher, that statistic carries a particular weight.


Alexandra Sifferlin is a science and health journalist and the author of The Elusive Body: Patients, Doctors, and the Diagnosis Crisis. She spent years inside hospital systems, talking with leading diagnosticians, tracing families who waited decades for answers, and mapping the structural gaps that let real suffering fall through. Her book is dedicated to her sister, who spent years being told her severe hip pain was a pillow-placement problem, until imaging revealed torn cartilage that required surgery.


In this conversation, you will explore:

  • Why receiving a diagnosis is more than a medical event, and how a diagnosis gives you permission to be ill (in the best of ways)
  • How physicians actually build a diagnosis in real time, and what gets lost when appointments shrink to seven minutes 
  • The case of the Proctor family, five siblings from rural Kentucky who spent decades with a mysterious, painful condition before becoming the first diagnosed case of the NIH's Undiagnosed Diseases Program 
  • Why the best diagnosticians in the country share one habit that has nothing to do with medical genius 
  • How AI note-taking in the exam room is making some appointments more human, not less 
  • What to do when you've seen four practitioners and nobody can tell you what's wrong


If you've ever walked out of a doctor's office with more questions than you arrived with, this conversation is for it.


You can find Alexandra at: Website | InstagramEpisode Transcript


Next week, we're sharing a really meaningful conversation with Tom Rath, whose books have shaped how millions of people think about their work and lives. His new book makes a direct challenge to the whole "find your passion, follow your purpose" framework, and argues that the source of real fulfillment isn't looking deeper inside yourself. It's what you contribute to other people every day. Be sure to follow Good Life Project wherever you get your podcasts so you don’t miss any upcoming episodes!


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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I am not saying that physicians are bad at diagnosing. They get it right 90% of the time. However,

0:06.5

if you have one billion doctor's office visits a year, 155 million visits to the emergency room a

0:13.5

year, you can quickly see how even a low rate of error can still affect a large number of people.

0:20.4

So that 10% adds up to millions of people

0:23.4

every year living with a missed, a delayed, or a wrong diagnosis. Maybe you're even one of them.

0:29.5

Maybe someone you know or you love is one of them. Well, my guest, Alexander Sifflin, spent years

0:34.7

inside this problem, talking to the country's best diagnosticians,

0:39.3

tracing families who waited decades sometimes for answers and mapping exactly where the

0:44.7

system is breaking down and what to do about it. Her book, The Illusive Body, Patients,

0:49.3

Doctors, and the Diagnosis Crisis, is the most clear-eyed account that I've read of what's actually

0:55.5

happening when medicine can't tell you what's wrong and what you can do about it. I'm Jonathan

1:01.6

Fields and this is Good Life Project. And I want to start with a phrase that stopped me cold.

1:06.6

We'll jump right into that after the short break.

1:17.2

So we're having this conversation, I think, a really interesting time.

1:22.8

We're a couple of years on the tail end of this big global pandemic where a lot of people were deeply acquainted with their own physical and psychological well-being. A lot of people

1:28.6

suffered. And a lot of people started asking big questions. And also a lot of people, I think,

1:34.9

became a lot more attuned to what was going on in their body. They kind of, you know, any little

1:41.1

thing that was happening, they started asking, what is this?

1:49.6

You talk about something that you describe as a diagnosis crisis.

1:52.8

What do you actually mean by that?

1:55.1

And why does it matter so much now?

2:12.1

So by diagnosis crisis, I mean that there are millions of Americans who are living either without a diagnosis or they have experienced some kind of diagnostic error.

...

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