Reader’s Guide

A host kit for the Sewing Circle

Reader’s & Facilitator’s Guide

One guide, two roles. Read Doctor AI on your own — or gather your people around a table and lead the conversation that authors the change.

How to use this guide

This guide works whether you’re reading alone or hosting a circle. Each of the book’s five parts has a short framing, a set of open discussion questions, and one “bring it home” action. Readers can keep a journal against the questions; facilitators can run one session per part — five gatherings — or combine parts for a shorter series. There are no wrong answers, only honest ones.

What is a Sewing Circle?  Throughout history, women gathered in sewing circles to do practical work and, in the same breath, to talk honestly about their lives and shape their communities. A Doctor AI circle borrows that form: a small group, a shared text, and the understanding that health is cultural before it is clinical — and that the future of health will be authored by someone, so it may as well be us.

Before you begin — for facilitators

Setting the table

Keep it small

Six to ten people is ideal — small enough that everyone speaks, large enough for real disagreement.

Set the ground rules

Speak from experience, not authority. No fixing each other. What’s said at the table stays at the table. Don’t share anyone’s personal medical details.

Read ahead, lightly

Ask everyone to read the part for that session. It’s fine if they don’t finish — the questions carry the room.

End with action

Close each session with the “bring it home” prompt, so conversation turns into authorship.

A note on safety: a circle is a conversation, not care. It is not a place to diagnose, treat, or give medical or financial advice. For medical concerns, members should see their own clinician; in an emergency, call 911. See the disclosure.

Five sessions, by the book’s five parts
Session 1 · Part I

Health 4.0: The Future of Health

Chapters 1–3 · Chaos Is the Default · We Are Not Sheep · Evolution to Health 4.0
  • Where have you personally felt the “chaos” of American health care — the moments the system seemed to have no plan for you?
  • What does it mean to refuse to be “sheep” about your own health? Where is the line between trusting expertise and reclaiming authority?
  • The book frames health as a lifelong trajectory rather than a series of visits. How would your own choices change if you could see your trajectory?
Bring it home: Write one sentence describing the health system you wish existed for the people you love.

Session 2 · Part II

The Problem with American Health Care

Chapters 4–6 · Covered? Not Covered? · We Were Never Gods · Beyond Do No Harm: Autonomy and Tradeoffs
  • Tell a story about coverage — a time “covered” turned out to mean something very different than you expected.
  • If clinicians “were never gods,” what should we reasonably expect of them — and what have we wrongly outsourced to them?
  • “Do no harm” is the floor, not the ceiling. What would it mean to design care around autonomy — the patient as author — and what tradeoffs would that require?
Bring it home: Name one decision about your health you’d want to make differently if you held the authority and the information.

Session 3 · Part III

The Health Care Transformation

Chapters 7–10 · Doctor AI Can See You Now · The Showdown: Innovation, Autonomy, and Trust · The Art of Navigating Uncertainty · Your Culture Is Your Health
  • The book insists AI can never be the moral agent of care — that authority stays with the person, supported by a human ally. Where do you want a human in the loop, and where would you welcome an always-on intelligence?
  • What would have to be true for you to trust a health AI with your data and your story?
  • “Your culture is your health.” Which region of health do you feel you belong to — and how has your culture shaped the way you seek (or avoid) care?
Bring it home: Take the Find Your Region prompt and compare answers around the table.

Session 4 · Part IV

A New American Health Care System — The H4 Alliance Blueprint

Chapters 11–15 · The Right to Health Care · Architecting Future Health · The Passport · The Trust · The Transition
  • Is health care a right? Make the strongest case you can for the side you don’t hold, then discuss what changed.
  • The blueprint separates the builder (a public benefit corporation) from the guardian (an independent trust that “can say no”). Why might that firewall matter — and where else do we wish power were split that way?
  • Imagine one monthly fee covering both everyday and emergency care. What hopes and what suspicions does that raise for you?
Bring it home: Read the 28th Amendment aloud together. What would you keep, cut, or add?

Session 5 · Part V

The Crucible of Change

Chapters 16–17 · Alchemy · The Final Chapter
  • Change on this scale needs an “alchemy” of many people moving at once. What is the smallest thing this group could actually do together?
  • Who in your life needs to be in this conversation who isn’t yet? How would you invite them?
  • If the future of health will be authored by someone — what sentence do you want to have written?
Bring it home: Decide as a group on one shared next step — start another circle, write to a representative, or host a public reading.

Pick up the thread.

Start a circle, take part, and help author a health system worthy of the people it serves.