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2026 guide

AI for Doctors

Reclaim the hours lost to documentation, summaries and admin — keep every minute of clinical judgement.

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No credit card · all four major AI models in one place

Burnout in medicine is rarely about patient care — it's about the documentation around it. AI absorbs the writing: summaries, referral letters, patient education, prior-authorisation appeals, and meeting notes. None of it replaces clinical judgement; all of it gives time back.

This page is for clinicians who want concrete uses they can defend ethically. Verify everything. Never let AI make the diagnosis.

What AI does for doctors and clinicians

Use case 1

Generate a referral letter from your notes

Paste your structured note; get a referral letter in the style your colleague expects.

Try this prompt

Write a referral letter to a [specialist] based on these clinical notes. Include: presenting complaint, relevant history, current medications, examination findings, my working differential, and the specific question I want answered. Tone: concise, peer-to-peer.
Use case 2

Plain-English a diagnosis for the patient

Paste the diagnosis and treatment plan; get a patient-friendly handout.

Try this prompt

Write a 1-page patient information sheet about [condition]. Sections: what it is, why it happens, what the treatment involves, what to expect over the next few weeks, when to call us, two reliable patient resources. 8th-grade reading level.
Use case 3

Draft a prior-authorisation appeal

Describe the case and the denial. Get a structured appeal you'll edit and sign.

Try this prompt

Draft a prior-authorisation appeal letter. Patient: [age, condition, brief history]. Treatment requested: [X]. Reason for denial: [Y]. Counter: cite the relevant clinical guideline, the patient's specific reasons standard therapies are inadequate, and the expected outcome. Professional, evidence-based tone.
Use case 4

Summarise an academic paper in clinical terms

Paste an abstract or paper. Get a one-page summary you can actually use at MDT.

Try this prompt

Summarise this paper for clinical use. Output: 1) the research question, 2) study design and population, 3) main findings in numbers, 4) the one clinically relevant takeaway, 5) the most important limitation. 250 words total. Paper: [paste]
Use case 5

Prepare for a difficult conversation

Rehearse the framing with AI before walking in the room.

Try this prompt

I need to have a difficult conversation with a patient and their family. Diagnosis: [X]. Prognosis: [Y]. Family context: [Z]. Suggest a SPIKES-style structure. Give me 3 opening sentences I could use, 2 likely emotional responses and how to respond, and language to avoid.

The best AI model for doctors and clinicians

Claude (with strict verification)

Claude is the most cautious, hedged and accurate-sounding of the major models. For medicine, that translates to fewer fabricated facts. Still verify every clinical statement — never take an AI answer as primary source. MultipleChat lets you cross-check the same prompt in Claude and ChatGPT to catch drift.

Use it inside MultipleChat

What you might be worried about

Will AI replace clinicians?

No — and no serious AI researcher claims otherwise. AI augments triage, documentation and decision support. Clinical judgement, examination and the patient relationship remain human.

Is it safe with patient data?

Use enterprise-grade tools that don't train on your inputs and are compliant with your jurisdiction (HIPAA in the US, GDPR + national rules in Europe). De-identify before pasting. Specialist clinical AI tools are increasingly the safer route for protected health information.

What about accuracy?

AI hallucinates, especially with citations and drug doses. Treat every AI output as a draft that needs verification. Build a habit: nothing leaves your screen without you checking it.

How to start in the next 10 minutes

1

Open MultipleChat at multiplechat.ai. Use a paid plan for the privacy controls.

2

Start with non-clinical writing: referral templates, patient handouts, appeals.

3

Set the rule: AI drafts language, the clinician owns the medicine.

4

Look at certified clinical-AI tools (DAX Copilot, Suki, Nuance) for direct documentation in the EHR.

FAQ for doctors and clinicians

Can I use AI for differential diagnosis?

As a brainstorming sounding-board, with caution. Never as the final answer. AI is a junior colleague — useful to discuss with, dangerous to defer to.

Best AI for medical research?

Specialist tools (Glass, OpenEvidence, UpToDate AI). General models like Claude are useful for plain-language summaries once you have the source.

Documentation in the room?

Ambient AI scribes are the breakthrough for this. Look at certified vendors integrated with your EHR.

Liability?

Same as any tool: the clinician remains responsible. Your indemnifier may have specific AI guidance — check.

Ready to try AI for your work?

MultipleChat gives doctors and clinicians access to ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and Grok — one login, one bill, side-by-side.

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Also see: Free AI tools · AI glossary · AI for other professions

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