Galveston National Laboratory

Curious how AI can make healthcare feel more human instead of less? We sit down with medical writer and AI adoption strategist Dr. Núria Negrão, who went from bench science to building practical ways for clinicians, researchers, and communicators to use generative tools without losing accuracy or empathy. From HIV educations roots to today’s most promising AI workflows, we trace what’s working now and where the next breakthroughs may land.
We unpack the real bottlenecks: clinicians stuck typing and scientists drowning in papers. Dr. Negrão shows how ambient scribe tools can free clinicians up for face-to-face time with patients, while research copilots can scan literature, connect ideas, and surface the studies that matter. We talk medical education use cases—virtual patients for difficult conversations, culturally sensitive practice, and adaptive learning that meets people where they are. Along the way, we tackle the hard parts: AI hallucinations, bias reinforcement, privacy risks, and the myth that AI is either flawless or useless. The answer is supervision, sourcing, and clear guardrails.
Regulation-by-principle anchors our approach: no emotion surveillance, no automated life-and-death allocation, strong data protections, and human override in care. Then we look at the upside for patients. Imagine leaving an appointment with a plain-language summary of what the doctor said, clear next steps, and links to trusted support groups—plus a secure assistant to answer follow-ups when anxiety spikes at midnight. That’s not replacing clinicians; that’s better navigation of the health system. If you want a grounded, hopeful take on AI in healthcare, science communication, and medical writing—one that boosts health literacy and speeds discovery—this conversation is for you.
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