Sponsored by: myQMS.ai
We bring the power, you bring the purpose.
The myQMS.ai platform fuses the power of AI with your team's unique expertise to supercharge compliance. See how myQMS.ai can quickly integrate with your existing quality management system, so you can focus on what’s next. 👉 See It In Action.
Hey all —
⏳ Last call: our Black Friday Offer ends tomorrow.
For a limited time, you can still get 50% off Healthcare AI Guy PRO —> your full toolkit to stay ahead in healthcare + AI. Explore emerging companies and investors, join an active community, access leading research, and track market shifts all in one place.
Now, here’s what we have:
Jensen Huang and the radiology paradox
China leaning into AI in healthcare
ChatGPT turns 3 years old
14 new tools/partnerships, 7 funding updates, new AI jobs & link-worthy content
Read time: 5 minutes
Our Picks ✨
Highlights if you’ve only got 2 minutes…
1/
Jensen Huang and the radiology paradox
Jensen Huang recently pointed to radiology as the clearest proof that AI is boosting the workforce rather than shrinking it. AI has made image review so efficient that radiologists can cover more modalities, see more patients, and improve diagnostic accuracy. Instead of reducing demand, it has expanded the field.
An earlier piece on the topic inspired me to revisit the data. In 2016, Geoffrey Hinton (the “Godfather of AI”) warned that we should “stop training radiologists.” Yet by 2025, radiology jobs are at record highs, residency slots are at an all-time peak, and average pay has climbed 48% since 2015. Hospitals are performing more scans, not fewer, and real-world care still relies heavily on human judgment, communication, and accountability. The bigger lesson: in high-stakes fields, AI tends to multiply demand for skilled people. The better the tools get, the busier the humans become.

2/
China leaning into AI in healthcare
China is betting big on AI and telemedicine to solve one of its toughest problems: a health system where top hospitals are world-class, but primary care is undertrained, understaffed, and overwhelmed. With an aging population and chronic disease rising fast, the country is leaning on chatbots, remote consults, and AI-assisted diagnosis to deliver reliable care at scale long before it can train enough doctors.
Telemedicine surged during the pandemic, with apps like JD Health now doing over 500,000 online consults a day. The next wave is AI triage and diagnosis. China’s government wants full adoption of AI tools in grassroots clinics by 2030, hoping they can help local doctors treat more patients and ease pressure on big-city hospitals.
Challenges remain, from poor data quality to public trust, but China’s history of skipping straight to new technology suggests the shift could happen faster there than anywhere else. (link)

3/
ChatGPT turns 3 years old
ChatGPT just turned three years old, and it’s hard to overstate how fast things have moved. In that short time, it’s gone from zero to 800M weekly users, making it the fastest-growing consumer product in history. It has reshaped how people search, learn, write, and make decisions, becoming a default starting point for everything from homework to business strategy.
Healthcare may be where the shift is most dramatic. Patients now routinely use AI to decode labs, prep for appointments, and understand symptoms. Clinicians use it to summarize records, draft notes, and surface clinical questions. Health systems are deploying AI for triage, scheduling, and ambient documentation, while startups build new diagnostic tools, preventive platforms, and voice agents.
Three years in, AI has proliferated across healthcare and is becoming a growing part of the operating fabric. And we’re still early.

Tools & Partnerships 🔧
Latest on business, consumer, and clinical healthcare AI tools and partnerships…
TOOLS
U.S. launches Genesis Mission for AI-driven scientific discovery: A new executive order directs the DOE to build a unified AI platform using data from 17 federal labs to accelerate breakthroughs in biotech, chemistry, and energy, with goals of shrinking research timelines from years to days. (link)
Anthropic releases Opus 4.5 with major safety upgrades: Anthropic’s Opus 4.5 launch features stronger prompt-injection resistance, improved alignment, and SWE-bench performance comparable to Sonnet 4.5 while using 76% fewer tokens, offering safer and cheaper options for healthcare workloads. (link)
Harvard AI pinpoints disease-causing DNA mutations: Harvard Medical School released popEVE, an AI model that outperforms AlphaMissense by reducing false positives and identifying disease-causing variants across the full genome. In a study of 31,000 children, it solved one-third of previously undiagnosed cases. (link)
Study finds ambient scribes need more patient context: Navina research shows that adding patient history to ambient documentation doubled note-completion scores for chronic care visits and improved overall documentation quality by 18%. (link)
Trilliant releases 5B-rate hospital price dataset: Trilliant Health published a machine-readable dataset covering more than 5B negotiated hospital rates from over 5,000 hospitals and introduced the Oria chatbot to help users explore the transparency data. (link)
Millie launches MAIA agent for women’s health: Women’s health startup Millie introduced MAIA, an AI agent built to guide patients through pregnancy, postpartum, and ongoing care as the company shifts toward more AI-forward clinical support. (link)
Advocate Health highlights AI tools that restore clinician joy: Advocate Health shared how its AI tools reduce administrative burden and help clinicians focus on patient care, improving workflow satisfaction across its network. (link)
Microsoft expands Dragon Copilot into radiology: Microsoft added radiology capabilities to Dragon Copilot, bringing ambient documentation, task support, and image-informed insights directly into radiologist workflows. (link)
Survey shows AI is now a recruitment factor: A WellSky survey of 1,200 healthcare workers found 80% of nurses prioritize easy-to-learn software when applying for jobs, with 58% also weighing AI tools despite job-loss concerns. (link)
PARTNERSHIPS
Inbox Health + AdvancedCare: Inbox Health partnered with AdvancedCare to improve billing across the company’s 350-practice network. The integration brings Inbox’s omnichannel billing tools into AdvancedCare’s AI clinical and RCM platform for behavioral health and psychiatry practices. (link)
Sword Health + Government of Greece: The Greek government will integrate Sword Health’s triage and care coordination technology into its National Health Information Line. (link)
Tampa General Hospital + Hyro: Tampa General is adopting Hyro’s voice AI to automate call center workflows and support scheduling through Epic integration. (link)
Northwell Health + K Health: Northwell is using K Health’s AI intake technology within its Primary Care Now service to collect patient information and route patients to virtual or in-person care. (link)
Sentara Health + Andor Health: Sentara is rolling out Andor Health’s ThinkAndor virtual nursing platform in 1,742 rooms across 12 hospitals to support hybrid inpatient care. (link)
Deal Desk 💰
Spotlight on latest capital raises, M&A, and investments…
FUNDING
Profluent Bio, an Emeryville, Calif.-based AI-powered protein design company, raised $106M in funding. Altimeter Capital and Vezos Expeditions led the round and were joined by Spark Capital, Insight Partners, and Air Street Capital. (link)
AI Proteins, a Boston-based miniprotein drug developer, raised $41.5M in Series A funding. Mission BioCapital and Santé Ventures led, joined by Lightchain Capital and Cobro Ventures. (link)
Red Queen Bio, a startup developing AI-powered defenses against bad actors creating biological weapons, raised a $15M seed investment led by OpenAI. (link)
onepot AI, a San Francisco-based developer of an AI chemistry platform designed to accelerate the synthesis of small molecules for drug discovery, raised $13M in seed funding. Khosla Ventures, Fifty Years, and Speedinvest led the round and were joined by others. (link)
Cassidy Bio, a Tel Aviv, Israel-based company developing an AI-powered genomic foundation model designed to develop better gene-editing therapies, raised $8M in seed funding. Ahren Innovation Capital led. (link)
Cellbyte, a drug launch acceleration platform, raised $2.75M in seed funding. Frontline Ventures led, joined by YC. (link)
GRANTS
Amazon to boost healthcare research with $50B AI investment: Amazon plans to invest up to $50 billion to ramp up AI and supercomputing capabilities for federal agencies, boosting healthcare research and pharmaceutical breakthroughs. (link)

as of 11/30/25
Other Relevant News 🔍
News, podcasts, blogs, tweets, resources, etc…
AI Job Opportunities 💼
Explore our AI Job Board or contact us to feature roles in our newsletter…
Visuals of the Week 📸
Funny memes, cool pics, and interesting data from around the web…



That’s it for this week friends! Back to reading — I’ll see you next week.
Stay classy,
PS. I write this newsletter for you. So if you have any suggestions or questions, feel free to reply to this email and let me know
How was this week's newsletter? Tap your choice below👇



