The CISO Myth: The Anti-Trust Patterns Inside Hospitals
How compliance-first security erodes trust, care, and capacity.
The Anti-Trust Patterns Inside Hospitals
Coercion, extraction, and impunity in clinical security design
Hospitals do not usually fail because people stop caring.
They fail because systems are built that quietly make caring unsustainable.
By the time outcomes collapse, the damage has already been normalized into workflows, dashboards, and executive narratives about “efficiency,” “compliance,” and “necessary tradeoffs.” Trust does not disappear all at once. It is extracted, coerced, and exhausted over time, until what remains is a brittle shell that still looks operational from the outside.
Healthcare security is not immune to this. In many organizations, it has become one of the most efficient trust-eroding machines in the building.
The Shape of Anti-Trust
Anti-trust is not simply the absence of trust. It is an active pattern.
It emerges when systems are designed in ways that force people to choose between doing their job and obeying the system. It grows when friction is imposed downward and c…


