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Health tech predictions
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We spoke with leaders in the space to see what they think is in store this coming year.

Welcome back. We’re only two weeks into the new year, and already UnitedHealth Group is making headlines. A new Senate report found the insurer pushed risk adjustment tactics “to the utmost degree”—i.e., received more money for sicker beneficiaries—through its Medicare Advantage plans. Perhaps 2027 will be better for the insurance giant…

In today’s edition:

Looking forward for health tech

December’s AI news

The doctor will read your data now

—Cassie McGrath, Whizy Kim

TECH

Robot fortune teller with a crystal ball predicting code

Yuichiro Chino/Getty Images

From chatbots and scribes to deeper conversations about the lack of regulations and ethical concerns, it seems you can’t talk to anyone in healthcare without AI at least coming up in passing. Going into 2026, the story is likely to remain the same, health tech leaders told Healthcare Brew.

Experts spoke with us about their predictions and ideal plans for 2026.

Nele Jessel, chief medical officer, Athenahealth

2026 will be the year the electronic health record (EHR) learns to think, shifting the conversation from interoperability to intelligence and driving more proactive care. We’ve made real progress on data access, but instead, we flooded physicians with too much of it. The real breakthrough coming next year is AI that synthesizes, not just searches. The EHR will stop being the enemy of the physician and start acting like a second mind, clearly telling the patient’s story instead of hiding information that really matters behind hundreds of tabs.

Here’s what leaders told us.—CM

PRESENTED BY HealthEdge

STARTUPS

Healthcare Brew monthly series on AI Startups

Francis Scialabba

Welcome back to AI 411, a monthly roundup of AI announcements from across the healthcare industry.

In late December, the Department of Health and Human Services canceled some of the Biden administration’s plans to regulate health IT, including AI. Among the terminated programs was a model card rule, which would have required health techs to share how their AI tools are made and tested.

Also in December, tech companies Athenahealth and Microsoft announced a new partnership, among other news. Here’s your breakdown of AI updates.

Aidoc/WellSpan Health. York, Pennsylvania-based health system WellSpan Health shared on Dec. 10 an expanded partnership with Aidoc, the developer of AI tools that read radiology images and enhance clinical accuracy. The tech will now be used at the health system’s nine hospitals and 250+ care sites.

AngelEye. AngelEye, which uses AI to track potential issues in the NICU and pediatric ICU, announced a $9 million Series C on Dec. 9. The fundraise was led by investor Mountain Group Partners.

See the full list here.—CM

AI

An iPhone showing the ChatGPT logo on screen

Cheng Xin/Getty Images

There’s a new, dedicated Health mode in ChatGPT, formalizing what users were already doing: asking it medical questions. OpenAI promises stronger privacy protections and more tailored health guidance—but the update blurs the line between offering context and dispensing potentially dangerous pseudo-medical advice.

What happened? Over 230 million people turn to OpenAI’s chatbot for medical advice each week (ChatGPT, what exactly is this rash?). With the ChatGPT Health update, OpenAI says users can “securely” share their health information with the chatbot. They can also now connect medical records directly to ChatGPT, link their wearables, and pull data from popular health and fitness apps like Apple Health, MyFitnessPal, Peloton, and even AllTrails.

Per OpenAI, conversations in Health are encrypted, isolated from your main chat history, and not used for model training. The company says physicians helped shape its safety guidelines and that ChatGPT should redirect users to real medical professionals when appropriate—though it’s not yet clear where that line is drawn. OpenAI says the tool isn’t for diagnosis or treatment—like that’s going to stop people.

Keep reading on Tech Brew.—WK

Together With WellReceived

VITAL SIGNS

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

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top healthcare reads.

Stat: 404,000+. That’s the number of new health services workers added in 2025—the highest of any industry, but still a decline from prior years. (WP Intelligence)

Quote: “We’re at risk of taking a sledgehammer to our miracle machine.”—Noubar Afeyan, a biotech investor who helped found Moderna, in a letter about research cuts and vaccine-related decisions made by the Trump administration (Stat News)

Read: Access to IVF has allowed more single moms in their 40s to become parents than ever before. (NPR)

Outsmart, outplan, outperform: Check out The Great Rebalancing: Inside the New Realities Shaping Health Plan Performance for real-world insights from 550 execs. Discover what’s working, what’s not, and how to actually win. Download now.*

*A message from our sponsor.

Two protesters hold a Pride flag and a sign reading 'Abortion is a human right' during a protest outside the U.S. Supreme Court on June 25, 2022, following the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

More than two years after Roe v. Wade fell, the patchwork of abortion access across the US is more complicated than ever. Ten states put reproductive rights directly on the ballot in 2024, with mixed results—and ongoing legal challenges are reshaping care again. For providers, policymakers, and patients alike, the uncertainty has real consequences. Here’s how state laws, federal reviews, and shifting access are redefining reproductive care in 2026.

Read now

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