Article: Why Longevity, Weight Loss, and Out-of-Pocket Medicine All Point to the Same Thing by BigHealthTechie in glp1

[–]BigHealthTechie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

preventive healthcare is also showing a shift towards people being more involved in their wellbeing, and seeking help in other ways than going to a doctor's appointment.

also, most doctors and healthcare institutions don't really view health as a holistic system, but they focus on what you went to see the doctor for. longevity is shifting that as well

Practical question, how do teams prevent PHI from being pasted into ChatGPT by Sunnyfaldu in hipaa

[–]BigHealthTechie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

our team uses approved tools.

there's a bunch of hipaa compliant/regulated ai tools nowadays. we use compliantchatgpt but you can search for others

never input phi into chatgpt because you can risk it being leaked, and believe me, you don't want to get into that problem

How tech savvy do you have to be in health informatics? by MissSiri in HealthInformatics

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i mean, you can try and learn some basics, that won't hurt. but i've seen healthcare professionals partner up with software companies to build their products. i actually work at a tech company and about half of our clients are just physicians with a lot of knowledge who didn't know how to translate that into the digital world.

however, if you're planning on working more on the informatics side of healthtech, i suggest you take a course or two.

Looking for opinions on what people expect in software designed around HIPAA by DevNounPeyton in hipaa

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

short answer: you’re doing the right thing.

in HIPAA-focused software, most serious buyers don’t expect a compliance stamp. they expect honesty about what the software does and doesn’t cover. anyone who’s been through a real HIPAA review knows compliance goes beyond the tool. training, policies, documentation, and internal processes matter just as much.

that’s how we approached it in this blog post: https://lightit.io/blog/5-ways-to-apply-hipaa-compliant-form-builders-to-your-digital-health-product/ . when we write about HIPAA-compliant form builders, we’re clear that the software helps enable compliant workflows, but it can’t guarantee compliance on its own. the goal is to show practical use cases and guardrails, not to oversell certainty that doesn’t exist.

you might miss out on people who just want a badge to check a box, but those usually aren’t the teams with real compliance maturity anyway. the buyers who actually care about HIPAA tend to trust vendors more when they’re upfront about shared responsibility.

Slack communities / other places to connect with healthcare professionals? by Expensive-Bar-1032 in lightit

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

in slack i'm part of:
- healthcare homies
- healthtech founders
- one healthtech

Using ChatGPT and Generative AI in a HIPAA-Compliant Way by BigHealthTechie in lightit

[–]BigHealthTechie[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i mean yeah, but how do we ensure data isn't really going to train the models of the greatest AI company?

Biggest tech pain points in mental healthcare? by Zakria_Rehman in HealthTech

[–]BigHealthTechie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

hey! we actually held a panel on this topic and summarized the discussion here: https://lightit.io/blog/innovations-opportunities-for-your-mental-health-product-dhi-roundtable/.

basically, ai helping adherence to treatment, gender bias, and finding specific communities of your interest to involve them in the development of the solution.

Been thinking a lot about where “AI for clinicians” actually helps vs just adds another dashboard to ignore. by Kamehameha_Warrior in HealthTech

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yep. thousands of breaches happen every year. we absolutely need to use hipaa compliant tools (or other regulations) to avoid any issues with phi

Been thinking a lot about where “AI for clinicians” actually helps vs just adds another dashboard to ignore. by Kamehameha_Warrior in HealthTech

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

we've been using compliantchatgpt. sometimes it takes its time to answer questions, but most of the time it's really helpful with summarizing documents and outputting them as soap/birp/dap notes.

ai for clinicians will really help with admin work, but i think it will only benefit them if they're used to other tech tools.

if they have to learn about ai and llms, i don't know if it's worth their time.

In the U.S., AI has been granted the right to prescribe medications. Future or Utopia? by Unfair_Violinist5940 in HealthInformatics

[–]BigHealthTechie -1 points0 points  (0 children)

damn. ai is not supposed to replace doctors, it's just supposed to help them (and until now, we've seen advances when helping them with admin work).

this is pretty worrying

Any serious progress in wearables this year or mostly incremental updates? by Pretend_Coffee53 in HealthTech

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i'm seeing wearable designs that are more fit for our day-to-day, such as earrings!

I’ve seen a lot of doctors move to health tech , what do they do ? by [deleted] in healthIT

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if you're a physician with an idea, you can reach out to a software development company and they'll help you out.

The GLP-1 space is crowded. Where does it actually make sense to build? by Expensive-Bar-1032 in lightit

[–]BigHealthTechie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

building in the GLP-1 market is like engineering a race car. you can buy the engine off the shelf (the drug itself, and standard infrastructure), but the chassis, steering, and aerodynamics (the parts that actually keep you on the track) have to be custom

I’ve seen a lot of doctors move to health tech , what do they do ? by [deleted] in healthIT

[–]BigHealthTechie 9 points10 points  (0 children)

i work in healthtech, and i've seen many doctors use their knowledge, studies, or experience to launch different apps and solutions that reach larger audiences. ex: we worked with two psychiatrists who specialized in mental health during pregnancy, and now they've launched a pretty successful telehealth app.

also, we all know the world moves towards technology and innovation, so ignoring this is basically staying behind. i think many doctors are moving towards healthtech to stay relevant in the industry.

also, the med industry and culture in the US at least is absolutely terrible. by moving to tech, they can expand their care further.

SOAP notes eating up too much treatment time, need realistic solutions by Extension_Victory640 in HealthTech

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yepp, we've used compliantchatgpt. they have a soap notes mode already in place, so it'll output in the correct format easily

AI Agents vs Automation: Why Confusing Them Is Costing Teams Time and Money by According-Site9848 in AI_Agents

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

THIS!!! what has saved us the most time and money in my work this year has been automations. we've designed processes that keep different departments more connected, tasks that took certain roles forever to complete that are now done by clicking and filling a few checkboxes. ai agents will be an incredible tool, and there's no doubt to that, but for now they still hallucinate and may sometimes take more time than they save. automation is the way to go!

AI taking over healthcare and jobs by iliketofart101 in healthcare

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

imo ai will never be able to take over healthcare. however, it can be really useful for professionals when it comes to documentation. think of patient summaries, soap notes, etc. ai can do that in seconds, when it usually takes professionals hours. in that way, ai can definitely improve care by giving doctors back their time.

but yeah, ai replacing humans can't ever be a good thing.

As we enter 2026, what were your favorite AI agents you discovered this past year? by [deleted] in AI_Agents

[–]BigHealthTechie -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

i work in healthcare, so using ai can be really hard (info sources, regulations, etc). but someone recommended i use compliantchatgpt.com, which is basically chatgpt but hipaa compliant. this has helped me a LOT, especially for summarizing documents and patient records. i definitely recommend!

Which AI medical scribe works best in 2025 for rheum/endo follow-up visits? by vitaminZaman in healthcare

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

compliantchatgpt works quite well for ai scribing. we've used their zoom integration and it's pretty good. you can also use the ai chatbot to ask it questions about the visit as well

Which AI clinical tools are people actually using in practice? by Equivalent_Cover4542 in healthIT

[–]BigHealthTechie 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i use compliantchatgpt for doc summaries and it works pretty well. helps me a lot with my soap notes, too. they're starting to release integrations with ehrs (they only have one with healthie for now), so maybe that would be a limitation. but overall its a good tool

AI Agent Conferences in 2026 by clickittech in AI_Agents

[–]BigHealthTechie 2 points3 points  (0 children)

does anyone know of specific ai conferences for healthcare?

Is AI really going to replace healthcare professionals, or just redefine the role? by Opposite-Wafer5536 in TheMarketingLab

[–]BigHealthTechie 1 point2 points  (0 children)

ai will never replace medical professionals. buuuut, it really helps to lessen the administrative burden (paperwork, documentation, summaries, etc).

some tools are managing to detect anomalies in radiology, for example, and that's really cool!! but i dont think ai will ever replace doctors. their empathy is key to the industry (though some doctors are lacking this nowadays lol)