
The Health Service examines the fragile balance between care, responsibility, and systemic strain. A solitary hospital bed sits at the centre of the composition, empty, silent, while a medical worker stands beside a life-support machine, adjusting its controls. Above them, a fragmented healthcare symbol floats, suggesting reassurance fractured by pressure. Rather than depicting crisis or heroism, Mr Phantom focuses on absence. The missing patient becomes the focal point, drawing attention to the emotional weight carried by those maintaining systems under relentless demand. The exposed wires resemble nerves, implying a structure operating on endurance rather than resilience. The restrained palette echoes institutional environments, while the stark composition removes sentimentality. This is not an attack on care itself, but a quiet reflection on dependency, exhaustion, and the unseen cost of sustaining public trust.