OpenAI Offers Free ChatGPT for Doctors

OpenAI launches a free version of ChatGPT specifically for verified U.S. clinicians to aid in documentation and research, aiming to alleviate healthcare system strain.

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Screenshot of ChatGPT interface with medical terminology
OpenAI's ChatGPT for Clinicians offers specialized AI support for healthcare professionals.· OpenAI News

OpenAI is making its artificial intelligence tools more accessible to healthcare professionals with the introduction of ChatGPT for Clinicians. This specialized version is now available at no cost to verified physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and pharmacists across the United States. The move comes as the U.S. healthcare system faces significant strain, with clinicians increasingly turning to AI for support.

A 2026 American Medical Association survey indicates that 72% of physicians now use AI in their practice, a substantial increase from the previous year. Millions of clinicians globally already leverage tools like ChatGPT for tasks ranging from patient care consultations to medical research and documentation. OpenAI's offering aims to streamline these workflows, allowing clinicians more time for direct patient care.

This initiative follows the earlier launch of OpenAI Unveils ChatGPT for Healthcare, a platform designed for organizational deployment with necessary compliance and controls. The free tier for individual clinicians represents a further step in democratizing access to advanced AI in healthcare.

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Built for Clinical Workflows

ChatGPT for Clinicians has been developed in collaboration with hundreds of physician advisors. It features advanced AI models capable of handling complex clinical queries and research. The tool includes specific skills designed for repeatable clinical tasks such as drafting referral letters, managing prior authorizations, and generating patient instructions.

A key feature is its trusted clinical search functionality, which provides real-time, cited answers drawn from millions of peer-reviewed medical sources. This aims to enhance clinician confidence and speed up case analysis. The system also offers deep research capabilities for medical literature reviews, allowing users to specify trusted sources and compile comprehensive reports.

Furthermore, the platform introduces a Continuing Medical Education (CME) component, where eligible evidence reviews can automatically count towards CME credits. While many clinical tasks do not involve Protected Health Information (PHI), optional support for HIPAA compliance is available via a Business Associate Agreement.

Evaluating AI in Healthcare

OpenAI is also launching HealthBench Professional, an open benchmark designed to rigorously evaluate AI performance on real-world clinical chat tasks. This benchmark covers care consults, documentation, and medical research, building upon OpenAI's existing HealthBench evaluations.

The development of ChatGPT for Clinicians involved extensive testing by physician advisors. In pre-release evaluations, physicians rated 99.6% of responses as safe and accurate. In a subset of tests requiring specific citations, the AI model reportedly cited sources more often than human physicians.

OpenAI emphasizes that ChatGPT for Clinicians is intended to support, not replace, clinical judgment. The company continues to focus on improving model safety and accuracy in health scenarios through ongoing evaluation and feedback from its physician advisory board.

The free version is currently limited to the U.S., but OpenAI plans to expand access to additional countries and clinician groups over time, starting with a pilot program outside the United States.

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