Healthcare AI

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Who Owns the Patient Relationship Now?

Who Owns the Patient Relationship Now?

The physician was the gatekeeper. The hospital was the hub. AI changed both. Now Amazon, Google, and OpenAI are racing to own what comes next. The patient relationship is the prize, and the bidding has started.

The Parallel Health System

The Parallel Health System

Patients aren't waiting for the healthcare system to catch up. They have wearables, direct-access labs, referral-free MRIs, and AI interpreting all of it. The parallel system is already running."

Patients Are Not Waiting for Permission

Patients Are Not Waiting for Permission

She arrives with a plan her AI already helped her build. The physician now has two choices: become a trusted continuum who adds what AI cannot, or become a friction point blocking a plan she already made. Only one of those sustains the relationship.

The Catch-22 of Business AI

The Catch-22 of Business AI

Enterprise AI has a structural catch-22: context lives where you cannot run agents, and compute lives where context does not exist. Move the data and you lose the meaning. That gap is why most deployments produce outputs that are technically impressive and operationally thin.

Four Problems. One Root Cause.

Four Problems. One Root Cause.

New peer-reviewed research named 4 critical challenges blocking healthcare AI deployment. The research got the problems right. But three of those four share one root cause nobody is building toward. One doesn't. Here's the response from the real world.

The Context Is the Product

The Context Is the Product

In healthcare, AI can already predict. The hard problem is reasoning, and reasoning depends entirely on context. The physician who takes a complete history, examines carefully, and aggregates everything from the EHR to the nursing home fax is not being thorough. They are building the product.

Listen to the patient.

Listen to the patient.

We evaluated AI health tools by removing the very mechanism that makes diagnosis work, measured what happened, and called it a safety problem. It is not just a safety problem. It is a design problem. Medicine knew this in 1975

Not a Revolution. A Diagnosis

Not a Revolution. A Diagnosis

Two studies this week, one from Google and one from Microsoft, are being celebrated as evidence that healthcare AI has arrived. Read them together and they reveal something more uncomfortable: AI is filling a gap that healthcare created long before any of us started building AI for health.