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The magic of AI
To:Brew Readers
Healthcare Brew // Morning Brew // Update
Hospitals are increasingly using predictive AI in EHRs to forecast patient health trajectories.

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In today’s edition:

Predictions for predictive AI

🫄 Independent abortion clinics struggle

GLP-1 costs impact on employers

—Caroline Catherman, Courtney Vinopal

AI

Robots gather around a glowing, blank, oversized crystal ball, illustrating the concept of predictive artificial intelligence or predictive analytics.

Mathisworks/Getty Images

Wouldn’t it be great if we had a crystal ball?Well, we don’t. (Bummer!) But hospitals are using what they hope is the next best thing: predictive AI. Instead of magic, it uses statistical analysis and machine learning to analyze patterns in order to forecast the future.

In 2024, 71% of surveyed hospitals reported using predictive AI integrated into their electronic health records, up from 66% in 2023, per a September data brief by the Department of Health and Human Services’s Assistant Secretary for Technology Policy (ASTP), analyzing data from the 2023 and 2024 American Hospital Association (AHA) information technology supplement survey.

And the investments are still coming. Healthcare spend on this and other “digital-first” strategies may shift $1 trillion away from other healthcare spending by 2035, according to consulting firm PwC. 

“Predictive AI is definitely here to stay,” Julia Croxen, VP of strategy consulting at digital health strategy group Rock Health Advisory, told Healthcare Brew.

What does this mean for tech expansion in healthcare?—CC

Presented By Wistia

ABORTION

Two female medical staff use an ultrasound machine on a pregnant patient.

Gina Ferazzi/Getty Images

Every year, the majority of abortions are performed by independent abortion clinics. Now, these bedrock providers are struggling to stay open, according to a new report.

About 23 independent clinics have closed in 2025 as of October, nearly double the total 12 clinic closures in 2024 and on par with the 23 closures in 2023, according to the Dec. 9 Communities Need Clinics report from the Abortion Care Network (ACN), a national membership and advocacy organization for independent clinics not affiliated with a larger organization like Planned Parenthood.

The current 396 brick-and-mortar and 244 online-only independent clinics provide 58% of abortions nationwide, not including abortions performed under shield laws in states where abortion care is illegal, the report says. (The list of independent clinics grew YoY, but that reflects more clinics self-reporting, not necessarily a net growth in clinic openings, ACN spokesperson Jay Thibodeau told us.)

“Even with a high level of stress, we are still here. We’re constantly showing up,” Dabbie Phonekeo, clinic director of Affiliated Medical Services in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, said during a Dec. 3 ACN forum.

Here’s what the indie abortion care landscape looks like lately.—CC

GLP-1S

President Trump sits at a desk beside a sign that details prices for GLP-1 drugs.

Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/Getty Images

The White House recently announced a deal with two pharmaceutical manufacturers to lower the price of GLP-1 drugs for weight loss.

Two manufacturers, Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk, agreed to lower the prices of their drugs from upwards of $1,000 a month to around $350 a month when purchased through TrumpRx, the White House said on Nov. 6. In exchange, the Trump administration said it will allow Medicare to cover the drugs for some patients. This government-funded health plan hasn't previously covered GLP-1s for weight loss.

While the agreements won’t directly affect most employer-sponsored health plans, they could have secondary effects for companies that are covering the pricey drugs.

Pricing pressure. Doctors have been prescribing GLP-1s to treat type 2 diabetes for two decades, but the drugs were approved for weight loss in 2014. Clinical studies suggest GLP-1s are effective not only at helping patients lose weight, but also at reducing the risk of other conditions, such as cardiovascular and kidney disease.

Recent surveys show more employers are starting to cover GLP-1s for obesity, even as the drugs are driving up health costs.

Keep reading on HR Brew.—CV

Together With Wistia

VITAL SIGNS

A laptop tracking vital signs is placed on rolling medical equipment.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: $314,302. That’s how much CMS overpaid the median hospital when providing financial relief after the Change cyberattack, per a new study. Some hospitals didn’t get any relief money. (Healthcare Dive)

Quote: “I don’t understand what this does, other than ratchet down the expectation that the FDA will seek high-quality trials for the drugs that are being approved.”—Aaron Kesselheim, a professor of medicine and member of the Center for Bioethics at Harvard Medical School, on the FDA’s decision to lower the number of trials needed for drug approval (Stat)

Read: Earlier diagnoses don’t seem to be reducing deaths for some common types of cancers. Could this point to overdiagnosis or unnecessary treatments? (the New York Times)

Driving impact: Tune in to this on-demand session from Wistia and Nextiny to learn how health tech orgs can navigate a long sales cycle. You’ll learn about real use cases, ready-to-implement tactics, and more. Watch now.*

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