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When an experimental antiviral trial hits unexpected complications in its second week, lead nurse Asha Navarro must manage a sudden surge of critically ill patients while two visiting researchers press to expedite endpoint analysis. The hospital’s understaffed ICU is already strained: ventilators are in short supply, junior doctors are exhausted, and family members flood the corridors demanding answers. Asha organizes triage under makeshift conditions, improvising protocols to stretch resources while trying to keep morale from collapsing.

Tensions spike when a whistleblower text exposes that the trial’s pharmaceutical sponsor quietly withheld adverse-event data from a prior cohort. Asha confronts Dr. Malik, the pragmatic but politically entangled principal investigator, who denies wrongdoing and urges calm to avoid destabilizing the study. Meanwhile, a bureaucratic compliance officer arrives with a court order to seize trial records — but the order is curiously narrow, leaving out raw patient data. Suspicion mounts that someone is selectively shielding evidence.

Amid the chaos, Asha treats an intubated child whose condition deteriorates after receiving an unlisted compound. The team faces an ethical crossroads: pause the trial and risk halting a potentially lifesaving drug, or continue and possibly cause more harm. With minutes to decide, Asha hacks together a rapid adverse-reaction protocol using bedside labs and an old pharmacology text. Her quick thinking buys time but exposes the sponsor’s deeper manipulation: server logs hint that trial monitoring software was altered to underreport complications.

In the final scene, Asha secretly copies incriminating files to a flash drive and slips it to the whistleblower, while Dr. Malik watches from the doorway — expression unreadable. The episode ends on a cliffhanger: an encrypted message on Asha’s phone reads only “They know.”