in

AI Revolutionizes Medicine: How One Billionaire’s App is Saving Lives


Daniel Nadler built OpenEvidence because doctors are drowning in too many medical studies. His AI app helps doctors find answers fast using trusted research. Now he’s a billionaire thanks to its huge success.

OpenEvidence gives doctors instant answers from top medical journals like JAMA. It’s like ChatGPT but just for medicine, trained on real science. Doctors trust it because it cuts through the clutter.

Medical knowledge doubles every 73 days, making it impossible for doctors to keep up alone. Nadler saw this as a human problem, not just tech. His solution puts life-saving research at doctors’ fingertips during patient visits.

Adoption exploded faster than any tech since the iPhone. Over 40% of U.S. doctors now use OpenEvidence daily. Last week, it handled as many consultations in one day as it did in a month last July.

One in three Americans this year received care from a doctor using OpenEvidence. It tackles rare cases doctors might see once in a career, preventing mistakes. This tool is already saving lives across the country.

Nadler, a Harvard PhD and TIME100 health leader, assembled a top team from MIT and Mayo Clinic. They focused on real-world doctor needs, not flashy tech. That practical approach won physician trust quickly.

Investors like Google Ventures and Sequoia poured $210 million into OpenEvidence, valuing it at $3.5 billion. This American success story proves free-market innovation beats government-run healthcare hands down.

OpenEvidence shows how entrepreneurs, not bureaucrats, solve critical problems. It’s a win for doctors, patients, and American ingenuity—no red tape needed. This is capitalism saving lives, plain and simple.

Written by Keith Jacobs

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Netanyahu Unleashes Airstrikes: A Bold Defense Against Terror in Syria

Israel’s Strikes in Syria: A Stand Against Terrorism and Chaos