
DrBWelsh
232 posts

DrBWelsh
@bwelsh68
OBGYN | BUMC Faculty | Femtech Advisor | Husband, Christ Follower, Girl Dad x2 | Flat-Coated Retriever Lover | Lift Heavy, Eat Real Food, Go Outside.




Why aren’t any of these at risk hospitals publishing their full accounting so everyone can see where they spend their money ? All but one group of hospitals that I have looked at potentially investing in, spend so much on consultants and fees that it’s no wonder they are at risk Plus, I have NEVER seen an industry that is worse than hospitals when it comes to buying medications and items like implants, screws, other devices. They overpay for everything. And then when you show them how to save money, their “supply chain” employees resist any change. They are so set in their ways, it’s a shock more don’t go out of business. Prove me wrong.

More than 400 hospitals across the U.S. are at high risk of closing or cutting services because of the Medicaid cuts in President Trump’s “big, beautiful bill,” according to an analysis from the progressive watchdog group Public Citizen. nbcnews.com/health/health-…

There is a massive shortage in physicians in the United States. Look at the wait times, the office visit appointment times and how poorly Americans are doing health-wise despite claiming that we have the best healthcare system in the world (we don’t). The better question is: Why aren’t more students in the US seeing a career in medicine and wanting to become a doctor? Here’s my 2 cents: First off how many are smart enough to get into medical school? Not many. Out of them that qualify, how many of them wants to go to school for 14 years AFTER high school. Even fewer. You essentially have to give up all your 20s and most of 30s before you can ‘start’ your career. Meanwhile all of your friends that didn’t choose medicine are 6-10 years into their career and already established. Retirement accounts have a nice lump sum growing, family started, first home purchased and minimal/paid off school debt. On the other hand, medical students will be in $300-500k in debt that they haven’t even begun to pay it down in their mid-30s. Enjoy paying $2-4k a month for then next 10-15 years ‘just’ for education. That’s not for your mortgage, your car, insurance, etc Finally when you graduate from residency and/or fellowship, you get the privilege to be told to see 25-50 patients a day. 5-15 minutes per patient. Enough today hi and then quickly diagnose their issue likely missing plenty of things because the clock is ticking. Don’t forget about the 5-10 minutes per patient that you have to spend on notes. Once you finish your plan and recommendations for the patient, you get to ‘fight’ with the patient’s insurance company to cover said recommendations. Fun. The good news? You get to do it all over again tomorrow! You do this for 50-70 hours a week, barely seeing your family, having the time for exercise and enjoying the fruits of your labor. By the age of 45, still tens of thousands in debt, exhausted and barely being able to stay up to date on all the advancements in medicine you’re burned out. The medical education system is broken and I don’t know if there’s an easy fix. Maybe it’s AI. Hope you enjoy talking to an emotionless computer or robot. In the meantime, appreciate the doctors while they’re still here and willing to help. Before long there won’t be many of us left.

It's 2am in Tokyo. A father of two can't sleep. He's three months into a career change that isn't working, and he hasn't told his wife how scared he is. He picks up his phone and starts talking to Tony Robbins' AI Twin. A genuine conversation. He tells Tony everything. Tony holds him accountable the way only Tony can. He helps him find what he already knows. The man commits. The next day, he opens the app. Tony remembers. Tony asks how the run went. This is happening thousands of times a day. Across 23 languages. With some of the most influential people on the planet. This is Steno. We build hyper-realistic AI Twins for leaders and brands. Your Twin thinks like you. Speaks like you. Sounds like you. Remembers every conversation and deepens its relationship with every user over time. Tony Robbins. Peter Diamandis. Margarita Pasos. Brian Tracy. Dan Lok. Gerard Adams. Oso Trava. Justin Donald. Brands like Sleep Science Academy and Ask Slim. And a growing roster of experts from around the world. The Tony Robbins app alone: 4.8 stars, 2,000+ reviews, peaked at #29 in the Apple App Store. Tens of thousands of daily active users connecting with these Twins every day. Your Twin connects to your entire ecosystem: your CRM, your products, your customer data. It knows what each person has purchased, what they care about, what they haven't explored yet. It guides them through your world with full context. The traditional funnel is dead. This is what replaces it. At the center is Maya, our intelligent Twin-building AI. Maya does the heavy lifting: learning how you think and speak, capturing who you really are. Our team works alongside Maya to make sure every Twin meets the standard a name like yours demands. We've been heads-down for two years. No marketing. No hype. New platform. New brand. New everything. Today we're reintroducing Steno to the world. The internet solved distribution. Social media solved reach. Neither one solved trust. We're building the trust layer. If your knowledge, voice, or brand is too valuable to stay one-way, this is what we built for you. The future is personal. We're just getting started.




First experience with EPIC’s AI Summaries “Generate Summary from Notes” This was early access in my health system in the outpatient setting, where it can generate a summary of what's gone on with the patient since my last visit. I'm overall pleased that Epic is headed in this direction, but so far my first impression was that it falls short in several major ways: 1. The latency essentially makes it unusable for me. It takes 40 seconds plus to generate a summary. 2. Summaries can only “see” notes. They don't see labs, they don't see imaging, and for a subspecialist that's severely limiting. Context is everything and that’s just not enough context. 3. The summary ends up showing me random snippets from my own previous note, and it's unclear how those are prioritized. They’re typically not the most important sentences. In the 40 seconds it took to render, I'm best off just pulling up my last note and reading it myself. Not quite ready for prime time, but a step in the right direction. If you have a clinician-facing AI product, you need to think very carefully about the user intent. And it should be FAST. It cannot slow people down. Has anyone tried this and found it useful?













