This article is a very good snapshot of where healthcare is heading.
A lot of the conversation around AI focuses on what it can do. Diagnose faster, predict better, personalize care. Real stuff. But what stood out to me is something we see every day… none of it works without the data actually being connected.
Medical records, devices, public health systems… it’s all still very fragmented.
That’s where a lot of the work we’re doing at
@ThisIsRuvos, and alongside partners like
@WellConnector, comes in.
It’s not flashy...it’s a lot of the behind-the-scenes work. Moving data. Connecting systems. Making sure information can actually flow and be used in real time. Making sure the patient (and caregiver) has the golden record of their health profile...
Because without these foundational components, none of the AI stuff really scales.
What’s exciting is you can feel things starting to shift (we are seeing at work daily!). Consumer devices, more portable health data, systems slowly starting to talk to each other.
We’re doing our part from Tallahassee, working on the infrastructure and personal app side of this. The part most people don’t see, but that everything else depends on.
@FAbnousi
@CelinaMYongMD
@statnews
Medicine was built on the medical record.
But most of health and illness happens outside of it.
AI doesn’t create that gap — it exposes it.
The question now is structural: where should this data live — under what rules, and for whose benefit?
With
@CelinaMYongMD in
@statnews: