"This year, more than 100 million Americans are going to be treated by a doctor using OpenEvidence. So, AI is here and now, especially medical AI," declared Daniel Nadler, founder of OpenEvidence, during a recent interview on CNBC's 'Squawk on the Street'. Nadler, a seasoned entrepreneur whose previous venture, Kensho Technologies, was acquired by S&P Global, joined anchors Sara Eisen, Carl Quintanilla, and Jim Cramer to discuss the rapid deployment and transformative impact of artificial intelligence in the medical field. His insights underscore a critical shift: AI in medicine is no longer a distant promise but a current reality, already paying tangible dividends.
OpenEvidence is an AI copilot designed specifically for medical professionals, aiding them in making high-stakes clinical decisions at the point of care. The platform offers AI-driven search capabilities meticulously sourced, cited, and grounded in peer-reviewed medical literature. This rigorous foundation is paramount in a field where accuracy can literally mean the difference between life and death. The company’s impressive traction is evident in its October figures alone, where it supported 17 million copilot-style AI clinical consultations from logged-in, verified U.S. clinicians.
