This medical startup uses LLMs to run appointments and make diagnoses
Grace Huckins
created: Sept. 22, 2025, 9:10 a.m. | updated: Sept. 24, 2025, 8:20 p.m.
This is the new reality for patients at a small number of clinics in Southern California that are run by the medical startup Akido Labs.
Instead, they see a medical assistant, who can lend a sympathetic ear but has limited clinical training.
A doctor then approves, or corrects, the AI system’s recommendations.
There’s a big gap in expertise between doctors and AI-enhanced medical assistants, says Emma Pierson, a computer scientist at UC Berkeley.
What distinguishes ScopeAI, Goodner says, is its ability to independently complete the cognitive tasks that constitute a medical visit, from eliciting a patient’s medical history to coming up with a list of potential diagnoses to identifying the most likely diagnosis and proposing appropriate next steps.
2 months, 3 weeks ago: MIT Technology Review