The A.I. Will See You Now…

Peter Weinstock apple vision pro Boston Children's hospital
Boston Children’s Hospital was also one of the earlier adopters of (controversial) ambient listening tools, which use A.I. to auto-transcribe patient-doctor visits, and has partnered with OpenAI to advance their work on the diagnosis of rare diseases. Photo: David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe/Getty Images
Ian Krietzberg
July 15, 2025

Long before ChatGPT infiltrated classrooms and became an obsession at cocktail parties, Boston Children’s Hospital embarked on what Dr. John Brownstein, its chief innovation officer, described as an “A.I. journey.” For years, Brownstein told me, the hospital had been using machine learning in data-rich environments—like radiology, pathology, or the intensive care unit—to generate “predictions” about patient outcomes. Then came the generative A.I. explosion. Now, Brownstein said, his team is anticipating that A.I. is “going to be part of the fabric of almost all the technologies we use in the hospital.” For many people in the A.I. field, the integration with medicine represents a potential holy grail.