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The Ontology Decision Layer

Deterministic AI For Regulated Healthcare

We build ontology-driven decision layers that stay explainable under audit. Powering the next generation of compliance infrastructure for providers and payers.

Infrastructure for Zero Trust
Environments

In regulated sectors, you cannot afford "black box" decisions. Intelligence Factory builds systems where every output is traceable to a specific rule, policy, or clinical guideline.
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Ontology Driven
We map complex regulatory policies into deterministic logic graphs, not probabilistic guesses.
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Grounded Validation
Buffaly validates and constrains model output against an ontology-backed policy graph and verified sources, producing an auditable trace.
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Fully Auditable
Every decision comes with a complete reasoning trace, ready for payer audits or compliance review.
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System Agnostic
Deploys on top of your existing EHR or data lake. Data sovereignty remains with you.
The Commercial Proof
We don't just build theory. Our technology powers FairPath , processing millions in remote care claims with 98% payment success. We proved the stack works so you don't have to guess.
AI in Central Florida
Intelligence Factory is based in Orlando, where the people behind the company have worked across healthcare, aviation, supply chain, telemedicine, and regulated operations. See how we think about AI in Orlando and Central Florida .
Core Technologies

The Intelligence Factory Stack

We expose our internal engineering stack for partners and enterprise teams building next-generation healthcare compliance tools. Our systems use language models as optional components, while Buffaly governs decisions through ontology-backed policy validation, deterministic guardrails, and auditable traces.
FairPath
Flagship Commercial Application
What It Is:
The end-to-end OS for remote care programs. FairPath uses the Intelligence Factory stack to automate billing, eligibility, and clinical necessity checks without human error.

For:
Medical Practices, RPM/RTM Providers.
Go to FairPath.ai →
Buffaly
Ontology Engine
What It Is:
A medical-grade ontology engine that transforms messy notes and alerts into clean, structured compliance data. It handles the logic mapping between ICD-10, CPT, and payer rules.

For:
Developers & Data Architects.
Learn More →
SemDB
Semantic Data Retrieval
What It Is:
A semantic database layer for complex, regulated environments. SemDB combines ontology mapping, hybrid retrieval, and local integration so teams can query legacy data deterministically with auditable results.

For:
Compliance Operations, Data Teams, and System Integrators.
Learn More →
The intelligence factory difference

What makes Intelligence Factory different?

Not all AI is created equal. In an era where everyone claims to be "AI-powered," the technology beneath the surface matters more than ever. We build systems that stay reliable, transparent, and actionable in environments where mistakes are unacceptable, with Buffaly enforcing grounded validation and policy control over LLM-assisted workflows.
Battle-tested acrossindustries for 16 years
Since 2009, we've been solving complex problems with AI in transportation systems, clinical environments, aviation operations, supply chain monitoring, and beyond. This cross-industry experience means our platform has been stress-tested against diverse requirements, from split-second logistics decisions to life-critical healthcare protocols. We've weathered the entire evolution of AI technology and emerged with solutions that actually work in the real world.
Not a prompt wrapper. LLMs used safely under control.
The AI boom made language models widely accessible, and with it came a wave of systems built entirely on prompt engineering. We build systems where language models are optional components, not the control plane.

Our core capability is Buffaly, an ontology-driven decision layer that constrains, validates, and explains every action. LLMs may assist with language understanding, summarization, or proposal generation, but compliance-critical decisions are executed and verified against deterministic policy graphs and structured domain knowledge.

This architecture provides:
Model-agnostic deployment: integrate frontier APIs, private models, or no LLM at all for sensitive paths
Evidence by design: every output is tied to a policy graph and produces an auditable reasoning trace
Deterministic guardrails: actions occur within typed contracts and explicit constraints
Operational accountability: systems remain inspectable, testable, and reviewable over time
Explainable, auditable, deterministic AI
Generic LLMs operate as black boxes that generate plausible-sounding text, sometimes accurate and sometimes fabricated. Our Buffaly grounding and policy validation layer applies ontology-grounded validation and deterministic guardrails so model-assisted outputs remain policy-verified and traceable.
This gives you:
Data sovereignty
Sensitive workflows can run with private models or no LLM path when policy requires it

Security assurance
Model integrations stay behind explicit contracts, validation checks, and rollback-safe controls

Performance optimization
Technology tuned to your specific domain, not trained on generalinternet knowledge

Future-proof architecture
You're not locked into someone else's technology roadmap orpricing model
The practical difference:
Deterministic guardrails
LLM-assisted outputs are validated and constrained by Buffaly's ontology-backed policy layer, producing deterministic traces

Complete transparency
Every output includes the reasoning and sources behind it

Regulatory compliance
Audit trails and documentation that satisfy even the strictestrequirements

Expert control
Your domain specialists define what the AI knows and how itapplies that knowledge
When your teams can trace exactly how the AI reached each conclusion, adoption acceleratesand trust builds naturally.
Case Studies

Deep Tech in Action

How we apply ontology-driven decision making to real-world chaos.
Turning Medical Chaos into Structure
Ontology-driven integration across 30+ EHR systems.
We used Buffaly to normalize inputs from Epic, eClinicalWorks, and legacy databases into a single coherent model for eligibility checks.
Read Case Study →
Multi-Armed Bandits for Care
Allocating clinical time using adaptive algorithms.
Using reinforcement learning to help clinicians prioritize patients based on risk and compliance probability, not just alphabetically.
Read Case Study →
Scalable Eligibility Engines
High-volume coverage checks without the fees.
Our ontology-driven engine delivers high-accuracy checks across insurers and program types, fully auditable and designed for underserved providers.
Read Case Study →

Build with Intelligence Factory

We partner with enterprise healthcare organizations and compliance teams to build explainable, auditable AI infrastructure powered by our Buffaly grounding and policy validation layer.

What makes us different? Our foundation in neurosymbolic AI keeps agents deterministic, traceable, and safe in high trust environments.

Learn more about our Foundations

Looking for the FairPath product? Go here.
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Recent Updates

How Intelligence Factory keeps healthcare AI safe, controlled, and explainable

Healthcare organizations do not need another chatbot with a bigger context window. They need AI that produces better outcomes: safer workflows, cleaner evidence, fewer preventable mistakes, more reliable claims, and decisions that survive review.

That is what we build at Intelligence Factory.

Our positioning is deliberately plain: safe, controlled, and explainable AI. In regulated healthcare, those words have to mean something specific. Safe means deterministic systems whose outputs trace back to rules, policies, clinical guidelines, and source records. Controlled means an ontology-driven decision layer that validates model output instead of trusting it. Explainable means auditability by design — not an after-the-fact reporting project assembled when the auditor calls.

Buffaly is the engine behind that philosophy. It is not a prompt wrapper. It is a neurosymbolic runtime that separates language reasoning from execution. LLMs summarize, draft, retrieve, and propose. Buffaly governs what the system is actually allowed to do.

One sentence captures the operating principle:

The LLM proposes. Buffaly enforces.

Infographic showing the LLM layer proposing actions while the Buffaly decision layer validates ontology, policy, evidence, permissions, and current state before approving, blocking, escalating, or recording an outcome.
Language models propose actions. Buffaly decides what the system is actually allowed to do.

For our healthcare clients, this is not an architecture preference. It is how we keep AI useful without letting it become dangerous. And a recent federal case shows exactly what happens when nobody enforces anything.

What our clients actually need from AI

Most healthcare AI conversations start with models: which one is best, which one is cheapest, which one tops the latest benchmark.

Those questions matter, but they are not the questions that keep a healthcare operator safe. When I sit down with our clients, the questions sound different:

  • Did the system follow the payer policy that was in effect at the time?
  • Was the decision supported by source evidence?
  • Was the patient record interpreted consistently?
  • Were required checks completed before action was taken?
  • Were exceptions routed to the right human?
  • Can we explain what happened six months from now, during an audit?
  • Did sensitive data stay inside controlled systems instead of being pasted into a model's context?
  • Can the workflow block an unsafe action, or does it merely warn?

Notice that none of these are questions about the model. They are questions about the system around it. That is why our work is outcome-centered. We are not trying to help healthcare staff talk to software in a more impressive way. We are trying to help organizations operate with fewer preventable failures, better documentation, more reliable reimbursement, a stronger compliance posture, and automation they can defend.

FairPath is the commercial proof. Intelligence Factory's stack powers FairPath, which processes millions of dollars in remote care claims with a 98% payment success rate. That number holds up because of grounded workflows: evidence is captured as work happens, policy checks run consistently, and claims carry auditable reasoning instead of being reconstructed by hand after a denial.

That is what the approach looks like when it works. It is worth looking closely at what happens when the opposite approach fails.

The cautionary tale: Done Global

On July 7, 2026, the U.S. Department of Justice announced sentencing in the Done Global criminal case. The founder and former CEO received a six-year prison sentence, and the former clinical president received two years, following November 2025 jury convictions involving conspiracies to distribute controlled substances and healthcare fraud.

The DOJ attributed more than 37 million Adderall pills and more than $12 million in insurer fraud to the scheme. Those numbers are staggering. But for anyone building software-mediated healthcare workflows, the deeper lesson is architectural.

Based on DOJ statements and trial evidence, prosecutors described a platform whose workflow pushed toward prescriptions rather than clinical judgment — a combination of software defaults, operating incentives, refill processes, prior authorization claims, and missing controls that made unsafe or unsupported behavior easier to continue than to stop.

Several alleged or established failure modes stand out:

  • Auto-generated refill workflows. Prosecutors alleged the platform used an auto-refill feature that generated monthly refill requests. Prescribers could allegedly sign off quickly, and some patients reportedly went long periods without meaningful clinical contact.
  • Missing hard stops for safety signals. The public record describes concerns around adverse events, psychiatric holds, hospitalization, and even death not reliably stopping refill activity.
  • Misaligned incentives. Prosecutors described short initial encounters and compensation tied to patient load or volume rather than longitudinal care quality.
  • Prior authorization problems. The case included allegations that prior authorizations represented clinical steps or guideline adherence that had not actually occurred — DSM-5 criteria, non-stimulant trials, required drug screens.
  • Pharmacy rejection handling. When pharmacies raised concerns or blocked prescriptions, prosecutors alleged the business sought ways around those blocks rather than treating them as safety signals.
  • Audit and evidence concerns. The record included allegations about deleted documents and disappearing messages after scrutiny began — a reminder of why evidence should be immutable and system-generated.

This article is not legal advice, and public allegations should be read through the primary sources. But the technical lesson is clear enough: in regulated healthcare, software architecture shapes clinical and operational behavior. Defaults matter. Queues matter. Compensation rules matter. Missing hard stops matter. Audit trails matter.

Notice that Done Global did not need an LLM to go wrong. A system can be unsafe on ordinary software alone. Put a probabilistic model in the control plane, and the same weaknesses scale faster — with less visibility into why anything happened.

Why our philosophy is different

A prompt wrapper asks the model to behave. Buffaly makes the runtime enforce. That is the fundamental difference, and it plays out concretely.

A prompt can say, "Do not approve a refill if the patient has not been reassessed." Buffaly represents the refill as a typed object, checks the most recent encounter, compares it against the policy interval, and blocks the transition unless the required state exists.

A prompt can say, "Only submit accurate prior authorizations." Buffaly requires every attested fact to point to source evidence before submission.

A prompt can say, "Respect safety signals." Buffaly turns hospitalizations, adverse events, pharmacy rejections, and death records into hard stops or mandatory escalation states.

A prompt can say, "Keep an audit trail." Buffaly makes the graph itself the audit trail: every object, transition, actor, policy version, evidence link, LLM proposal, and human decision recorded as the workflow executes.

This is why we describe Buffaly as an ontology decision layer. It maps complex rules into deterministic logic graphs. It validates and constrains model output against structured domain knowledge and verified sources. It keeps sensitive data behind runtime handles, so the model can reason over references without raw PHI ever entering the prompt. It binds decisions to native code and typed actions instead of leaving the business process inside a text loop.

The result is not AI that sounds safer. It is software behavior that is inspectable, testable, reviewable, and enforceable.

Infographic contrasting a prompt wrapper that provides guidance and uncertain outcomes with the Buffaly runtime that checks refill request state, clinical encounter presence, policy interval, safety signals, evidence links, and typed state transitions before approving, blocking, or escalating.
A prompt wrapper can ask. A deterministic runtime can enforce hard stops before the next state is allowed.

How Buffaly keeps healthcare clients safe

When we say Buffaly keeps clients safe, we mean specific operational protections — not a vibe.

1. We separate language from authority

LLMs are genuinely useful, and we use them where they belong: summarization, language understanding, retrieval, drafting, comparison, and proposal generation.

But the model is never the authority of record. It does not approve the claim, authorize the refill, submit the prior authorization, or decide that a safety signal can be ignored. Authority lives in typed runtime actions, policy graphs, human review, and auditable state transitions.

2. We make unsafe paths harder or impossible

High-risk workflows need executable constraints, not guidance buried in a prompt.

In a Buffaly workflow, a RefillRequest is blocked if a required ClinicalEncounter is missing. A prior authorization is blocked if its supporting evidence is not source-linked. A claim is routed to review if eligibility, documentation, or medical-necessity checks fail.

The system does not merely warn that something may be wrong. It prevents the next state from occurring until the required condition is satisfied — or an authorized, documented override is recorded.

3. We preserve evidence as work happens

Healthcare organizations usually discover documentation problems too late: after the denial, the audit, the appeal, the subpoena.

Buffaly captures evidence during the workflow. The graph records the objects involved, the source records used, the policy version applied, the model output generated, the human decision made, and the state transition performed.

Payer audits and compliance reviews do not reward plausible summaries. They require evidence. We build the evidence in from the start.

4. We keep workflows deterministic where determinism matters

Not every part of an AI system needs to be deterministic. Drafting a summary does not need the same control surface as approving a claim or transmitting a prescription.

But compliance-critical decisions should never depend on a model's mood, hidden context, or probabilistic phrasing. They should be validated against policy graphs, explicit constraints, and structured domain objects. The LLM helps interpret. Buffaly verifies.

5. We protect sensitive data boundaries

Buffaly keeps sensitive data behind runtime handles. In practice, the safest PHI, secrets, and operational records are the values the model never sees directly.

The system reasons over typed references while raw data remains in controlled runtime memory, existing EHRs, client data lakes, or native systems. Data sovereignty stays with the client.

6. We turn repeated work into safer execution

Most agents stay trapped in a text loop: rereading large blobs of context, reasoning in natural language, trying to remember rules through prompts.

Buffaly works differently. Repeated reasoning becomes typed executable capability. Repeated tool use becomes native execution. The model stops orchestrating loops that software can run directly. That is how AI gets cheaper, more reliable, and safer over time — not through bigger prompts, but through less prompting.

The Done Global failure modes as runtime controls

What makes the Done Global case so instructive is that every alleged failure maps directly to a control that a serious healthcare AI system should already have:

  • Auto-refill risk maps to typed refill states, mandatory clinical review, and reassessment-interval enforcement.
  • Missing safety stops map to hospitalization, death, contraindication, and adverse-event checks in the runtime.
  • Pharmacy blocks map to escalation workflows rather than workaround paths.
  • Prior authorization allegations map to source-linked evidence requirements for every attested fact.
  • Volume-driven incentives map to compensation-plan constraints and operational review.
  • Deleted or missing records map to immutable audit events and execution graphs.

To be clear: architecture does not replace clinical governance, legal compliance, or ethical leadership. Nothing does.

What architecture can do is make good governance executable. It can make unsafe paths visible, harder, or impossible. It can force review. It can preserve evidence. It can make behavior auditable. That is what healthcare clients actually need from AI — and it is exactly what a prompt cannot deliver on its own.

An example: the refill workflow done differently

Walk through an AI-assisted refill workflow built with Buffaly.

A patient requests a refill. Buffaly creates a typed RefillRequest. The runtime verifies identity, retrieves the relevant prescription and diagnosis, checks supporting evidence, evaluates the reassessment interval, checks for recent encounters, and scans for hospitalization, death, contraindication, adverse-event, and pharmacy-rejection signals.

Only then does the LLM summarize the case for a clinician.

That summary can be genuinely valuable — recent history, current medication, prior decisions, open risks, relevant guidelines. But it is still a proposal.

The clinician reviews the source-linked evidence and makes a typed decision: approve, modify, deny, or escalate. Buffaly records the identity, timestamp, findings, policy version, evidence links, and final state transition.

If required evidence is missing, the workflow does not proceed. If a hard stop is active, the refill is blocked or escalated. If an override is permitted, it is explicit, permissioned, reasoned, and auditable.

That is the difference between an LLM-assisted workflow and an LLM-controlled one. In the first, the model makes clinicians faster. In the second, the model quietly becomes the decision-maker — and nobody notices until the audit.

What this means for providers and payers

For providers, AI can reduce administrative burden without turning compliance into a black box. Staff get better summaries, cleaner routing, more consistent checks, and fewer manual reconstruction projects after something goes wrong.

For payers, evidence attaches to the work itself. The system can show why a claim, authorization, or review moved forward, which policy applied, and what source records supported it.

For digital health companies, AI can support scale without hiding risk in prompts and chat transcripts. The control plane stays inspectable.

For patients, automation is less likely to outrun the safety checks that exist to protect them.

These are the outcomes we care about: safer workflows, stronger evidence, more predictable reimbursement, fewer avoidable compliance failures, and AI systems that can be explained under pressure.

The Intelligence Factory position

Our view is simple: the future of healthcare AI is not bigger prompt wrappers. It is controlled intelligence connected to real execution.

Intelligence Factory builds systems where:

  • language models are assistants, not the control plane;
  • every important output is tied to a rule, policy, guideline, or source record;
  • decisions produce auditable reasoning traces;
  • workflows run through typed contracts and explicit constraints;
  • sensitive data stays under client control;
  • repeated reasoning becomes deterministic capability;
  • compliance-critical actions are verified against ontology-backed policy graphs.

That is what we mean by safe, controlled, and explainable AI.

If you are evaluating AI for healthcare operations, the most important question is not which model has the best demo. It is what happens when the model is wrong, incomplete, overconfident, or asked to do something unsafe.

Does the system merely ask the model to behave? Or does the runtime enforce the rules?

That is the difference between a prompt wrapper and Buffaly. It is the difference between AI that sounds helpful and AI that can be trusted with healthcare operations.

If that is the standard you want your AI held to, we should talk. You can see how Buffaly's deterministic runtime, ontology decision layer, and audit-by-design architecture work — and what FairPath's results look like in production — at IntelligenceFactory.ai.

Sources and note

This analysis is based on public records and statements regarding the Done Global case, including DOJ and DEA press releases, the unsealed indictment, IRS Criminal Investigation materials, OIG telemedicine fraud alerts, and related public policy materials.

This article is a technical and architectural analysis, not legal or clinical advice. Facts regarding the Done Global case are drawn from public sources and should be read as established, alleged, charged, or inferred according to the underlying source. Software architecture can enforce policy, preserve evidence, and reduce operational risk, but it does not guarantee legal compliance. Legal and clinical conclusions should be drawn only with qualified professionals.

There are three documents the AI industry uses to talk about cost: benchmarks, launch posts, and pricing pages. Not one of them will tell you what your agents actually cost to run. Build your cost model on vendor paper and you inherit the gap between their story and your reality. That gap never shows up as a line item. It shows up as a bill that grows faster than your business does.

At Intelligence Factory, we refuse to run blind. Every workflow we deploy is instrumented end to end. Every message, every tool call, and every token is logged on our own infrastructure and measured against the work it produced. When we recently turned that telemetry loose on a set of production agent tasks, it surfaced three results no pricing page would have predicted:

  • We evicted 40.2% of eligible tool context, a substantial volume, without changing a single business outcome.
  • We rerouted heavy workloads to a local model during a quota crunch and cut costs on those tasks by roughly 47%, with zero user-facing disruption.
  • We benchmarked a newly released “more efficient” flagship model against our real workloads, found it burned 10% more tokens than its predecessor, and declined the upgrade.

None of these wins came from a clever prompt. Each was earned by a structural decision made long before we measured anything. So before the receipts, the architecture that made them possible.

The Three Pillars

We don't treat AI pipelines as black boxes, and we won't build our business at the mercy of any single lab's infrastructure. Three rules govern everything we deploy.

1. Absolute provider agility. No workflow is married to a vendor. Every pipeline can switch models and providers at a moment's notice, driven by real-time economics, latency, or quota pressure, never by a migration project.

2. Complete data sovereignty. We never surrender state to the labs. Every message, tool call, and scrap of conversational history lives on our own servers. Because we own the state, we can open a conversation on OpenAI, hand it to Ollama mid-stream, and close it out on Gemini without losing a single data point.

3. Materialized token streams. Once an agent has learned a process, paying a model to re-reason through it on every run is pure waste. Our Buffaly technology converts those repetitive token streams into deterministic code that skips model inference entirely, typically cutting token costs by 80% on suitable workflows. (You can watch the mechanism at work in our FairPath learning-session demonstration.)

The pillars protect our margins over the long term. The telemetry shows what they earn week to week, in live production. Here are three receipts.

Win 1: Stop Paying Rent on Dead Context

Long-running agent workflows accumulate weight. A database call returns a sprawling JSON payload. A research agent pulls in pages of source material. The agent genuinely needs that raw data for a turn or two. Then it just lingers: ballast that most systems dutifully resend to the model on every subsequent turn. You aren't billed for that data once. You pay rent on it for the rest of the conversation.

Because we own our conversation state (Pillar 2), we could build the direct fix: incremental tool-context eviction. Raw tool results stay intact while the agent is actively reasoning over them. The moment the necessary facts have been extracted, the bulky payloads are progressively evicted from the context window, leaving behind only the summaries needed to finish the job.

Measured across 2,579 production rows:

A substantial volume of estimated tokens evicted: 40.2% of all eligible tool context, with identical business outcomes.

Infographic showing incremental tool-context eviction removing dead payloads from future turns while retaining useful summaries, with 40.2 percent of eligible tool context evicted.
Incremental tool-context eviction removes dead payloads from future turns while retaining the useful facts needed to continue the work.

And the arithmetic is even better than it looks. Every evicted token would otherwise have been re-billed on every remaining turn of its conversation. Eviction doesn't save a token once; it strikes that token from every future turn's bill.

Win 2: The Quota Crunch That Lowered Our Bill

Provider agility is usually sold as insurance: something you carry and hope never to use. In our shop, it's a lever we pull for profit.

During a multi-day window in early July, our telemetry flagged rapid consumption and mounting quota pressure on our primary Codex accounts. We didn't wait for a status-page update, and we didn't let a rate-limit error make the decision for us. We shifted the load immediately, routing specific heavy workloads away from premium endpoints to a smaller, highly capable local model: GLM 5.2, running on Ollama.

Over that window, 43.8% of our total token volume ran off-network, and the rerouted tasks came in roughly 47% cheaper than they would have on the premium endpoint. Users never noticed; their workflows ran without interruption. The only thing that changed was the cost profile, instantly and in our favor.

Infographic showing dynamic provider rerouting during quota pressure, shifting 43.8 percent of token volume locally and lowering cost on rerouted tasks by 47 percent.
Dynamic rerouting turned quota pressure into a cost advantage by shifting 43.8% of token volume locally and lowering cost on rerouted tasks by 47%.

The maneuver works only when the first two pillars hold together. Agility lets you switch providers. Sovereignty means the conversation survives the switch.

Win 3: The Efficiency Upgrade That Wasn't

When OpenAI released GPT 5.6 SOL medium, the launch narrative promised a 15% improvement in token efficiency. The reflexive move, the one most teams made, was to upgrade immediately on the assumption that newer means cheaper.

We took a different path: run both models against our own messy, production-grade agentic workloads and let the data decide. On substantial agent turns, the marketing didn't survive contact with reality:

Infographic comparing production token use, showing GPT 5.5 as baseline, GPT 5.6 SOL using more tokens, and GLM 5.2 in a comparable range.
Relative median token use observed across substantial production agent tasks. Values are presented relative to the GPT 5.5 baseline.

The “more efficient” model consumed roughly 10% more tokens per substantial turn than the one it replaced. Average and median moved in lockstep, so this wasn't a handful of outliers skewing the mean. It was the model's actual behavior on our actual work.

We held the upgrade back from most of our workflows, dodging a cost increase that would never have appeared on any invoice as such. It would simply have shown up as a bill that crept upward for no visible reason.

Why You Can't Trust the Sticker Price

That phrase, a bill that creeps upward for no visible reason, names a frustration heard across the industry: sudden, unexplained token drains that providers routinely deny. Our telemetry suggests those complaints are well founded.

Take provider-native caching, which the market treats as a stable, predictable cost-saver. Within a single observed workload, our measured daily cache hit rates swung from 46.5% to 71.3%. Same workload, same provider, same week, yet the effective price of a token moved by a substantial margin, silently, from one day to the next.

A meter that swings that much isn't a meter. When pricing is this opaque and this non-linear, the only reading you can trust is the one you take yourself.

Build on a Foundation That Measures

Bet your company's AI future on a single provider's API and you inherit their quota caps, their volatile cache rates, and their shifting prices without the instrumentation to see any of it happening.

Partner with Intelligence Factory and you inherit our three pillars instead. Your data stays under your control. Your workflows move freely between labs. Your most repetitive token streams get materialized into deterministic, cost-free code.

Most importantly, you inherit the discipline behind all of it: measure real work, own your state, and stop paying for context the moment it stops helping. Your AI margins should be set by your own meter, not by someone else's marketing.

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The Enrollment Spike Trap: Why Fast RPM Growth Is a 2026 Audit Risk

12/19/25

If you run an independent practice, rapid RPM growth probably still feels like a win....

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The RPM 16-Day Rule: Two "Clever" Ways to Circumvent It (And Why They Will Get You Audited)

12/16/25

If you manage a Remote Physiological Monitoring (RPM) program, CPT code 99454 is likely your biggest source of revenue and, also likely, your biggest headache. This code, which reimburses for the supply of the device and data transmission, has long carried a notorious "all-or-no…...

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Is UnitedHealthcare’s RPM Crackdown Really “Evidence-Based”?

12/5/25

Beginning January 1, 2026, UnitedHealthcare (UHC) will dramatically narrow coverage for Remote Physiologic Monitoring (RPM) across its commercial, Medicare Advantage, and exchange plans....

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ROGUE-Zip: Recursive Ontology-Guided Sparse Zipping Protocol

12/4/25

Artificial Intelligence is currently fractured between two powerful but incompatible paradigms....

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Red Alert: UnitedHealthcare Restricting RPM Coverage to Heart Failure & Pregnancy (Effective Jan 1, 2026)

12/3/25

If you are billing RPM for Diabetes, Hypertension, or COPD under UHC, your claims will likely be denied starting January 1st....

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What CMS Is Actually Doing With RPM And APCM

12/1/25

Originally published at: https://fairpath.ai/resources/cms-rpm-apcm-2025-26 ‍...

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The Hidden Pressure No One Talks About in RPM: What Happens at 18 Minutes

11/25/25

Most independent practices didn’t launch remote care programs so they could track timers, chase scattered documentation, or argue with spreadsheets at the end of every month. They adopted RPM and CCM because they believed these programs would keep patients out of the hospital, c…...

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Inside the Remote Care Collapse — and the Path to Recovery

11/4/25

Over the past several years, I’ve heard it all. Remote patient care is a scam. It doesn’t work. RPM is designed to fail. I’ve listened to the frustrations from doctors, managers, and administrators who swear that remote care is nothing but another profit scheme wrapped in good i…...

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The 8% Problem: Why State-of-the-Art LLMs Are Useless for High-Stakes Precision Tasks

10/30/25

In the race to solve complex problems with AI, the default strategy has become brute force: bigger models, more data, larger context windows. We put that assumption to the ultimate test on a critical healthcare task, and the results didn’t just challenge the “bigger is better” m…...

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CMS’s 2026 Updates Signal a New Era for In-House Remote Care Coordination

10/21/25

Healthcare is on the brink of a fundamental shift. The forthcoming 2026 CMS Physician Fee Schedule updates are far more significant than mere billing adjustments, they signal a new era in remote care coordination. Practices that adapt early will not only enhance patient care but…...

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CMS Brings Behavioral Health into the APCM Model: What It Means for Primary Care

10/9/25

‍ CMS is quietly reshaping how primary care teams can be paid for mental and emotional health support. Starting in 2026 (if finalized), practices using the new Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM) codes will be able to add small, monthly payments for behavioral health integra…...

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Stop Choosing Between APCM and Your RPM/RTM Revenue

10/7/25

If your practice adopted APCM by shutting down RPM and RTM programs, you left money on the table. If you're running all three programs separately, you're burning cash on duplicate documentation and exposing yourself to compliance risk....

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APCM vs. CCM Explained: Medicare’s 2025 Coding Shift Every Primary Care Leader Must Understand

10/1/25

On January 1, CMS introduced a brand-new benefit called Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM), a monthly payment designed to roll up the core elements of care coordination under a single code. For primary care leaders, this changes the landscape in profound ways. APCM overlaps…...

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Neurosymbolic Ontologies with Buffaly

9/24/25

This blog outlines a groundbreaking proof of concept for reimagining medical ontologies and artificial intelligence. Buffaly demonstrates how large language models (LLMs) can unexpectedly enable symbolic methods to reach unprecedented levels of effectiveness. This fusion deliver…...

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APCM and the “Coordination of Care Transitions” Requirement: How To Get It Right

9/23/25

Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM) represents one of the more meaningful changes in the CMS Physician Fee Schedule. As of January 1, 2025, practices that adopt this model will be reimbursed through monthly, risk-stratified codes rather than only episodic, time-based billing…...

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APCM, Explained: What It Is, Why It Matters, What Patients Gain

9/18/25

Primary care is carrying more risk, more responsibility, and more expectation than ever. The opportunity is that we finally have a model that pays for the work most teams already do between visits. The risk is jumping into tooling and tactics before we agree on the basics. Advan…...

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Noncompete Clauses In Healthcare: The FTC Warning, APCM Staffing, And Platform Partnerships

9/16/25

The Federal Trade Commission’s Sept. 12 warning to healthcare employers is a simple message with real operational consequences. Overbroad noncompetes, no‑poach language, and “de facto” restraints chill worker mobility and can limit patients’ ability to choose their clinicians. F…...

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The APCM Quick Start Guide: Converting Medicare's Complex Care Program Into Practice Growth

9/9/25

Advanced Primary Care Management represents Medicare's most ambitious attempt to transform primary care economics. Unlike previous programs that nibbled at the margins, APCM fundamentally restructures how practices organize, deliver, and bill for comprehensive care....

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13 Things You Need To Implement Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM)

9/5/25

Advanced Primary Care Management (APCM) is Medicare’s newest program, introduced in 2025 with three billing codes: G0556, G0557, and G0558. This represents a pivotal shift toward value-based primary care by offering monthly reimbursements for delivering continuous, patient-focus…...

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When Women's Health Can't Wait: How Remote Care Creates Presence in Life's Most Critical Moments

8/26/25

At 2 AM, a new mother in rural Alabama feels her heart racing. She's two weeks postpartum, alone with a newborn while her husband works the night shift. Her blood pressure reading on the home monitor shows 158/95. Within minutes, her care team receives an alert. By 6 AM, a nurse…...

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Medical Remote Care: How Vendor Models Shift Margin and When to Bring RPM In-House

8/18/25

Many health systems pay $40–$80 per patient per month (PMPM) for full-service remote patient monitoring while Medicare's 2025 national averages reimburse approximately $91–$129 monthly depending on engagement time. When clinical teams can deliver the same services internally, th…...

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Why 73% of Practices Still Fear Remote Care and How the Winning 27% Think Differently

8/11/25

A few months ago, a physician at a 12-doctor practice in rural California called me frustrated. His practice was hemorrhaging money on readmissions, his nurses were burning out from phone tag with chronic disease patients, and his administrator was getting pressure from their he…...

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Reclaiming Revenue: How Smart Medical Executives Are Transforming Remote Care into Sustainable Profit Centers

8/6/25

Medical executives today face an uncomfortable reality: while navigating shrinking margins and mounting operational pressures, many are unknowingly surrendering millions in Medicare reimbursements to third-party vendors. The culprit? Poorly structured Remote Patient Monitoring (…...

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RPM’s $16.9B Gold Rush: Why 88% of Claims Skip CMS Review (And How Industry Leaders Are Responding)

7/23/25

Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) has rapidly evolved from emerging healthcare innovation into a strategic necessity. Driven aggressively by CMS reimbursement policies, RPM adoption has accelerated at unprecedented rates, reshaping market dynamics and creating compelling strategic…...

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Medicare's $4.5 Billion Wake-Up Call: What the VBID Sunset Reveals About Risk, Equity, and the Next Era of Value

7/17/25

In a single December blog post, CMS just rewrote the playbook for $400 billion in annual Medicare Advantage spending. The termination of the Medicare Advantage Value-Based Insurance Design (VBID) Model (after it generated $4.5 billion in excess costs over two years) isn't just a…...

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Why the AMA’s 2026 RPM Changes Are Exactly What Your Practice Needs

7/8/25

If you've spent any time managing a remote patient monitoring (RPM) program, you already know the drill: juggling the 16-day rule, keeping track of clinical minutes, chasing compliance, and often wondering if this is really what patient-centered care was meant to feel like....

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Healthcare Needs a Group Chat, And Digital Twins Are the Invite

7/1/25

Let’s be honest. Managing your health today feels like trying to coordinate a group project where nobody checks their messages. Your cardiologist, endocrinologist, and PCP are all working on the same assignment, but nobody’s sharing notes. The result? Confusion, overlap, and som…...

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The Great Code Shift: Turning the ICD-11 Mandate into a Competitive Advantage

6/25/25

The healthcare industry still has scars from the ICD-9 to ICD-10 transition. The stories are legendary in Health IT circles: coder productivity plummeting, claim denials surging, and revenue cycles seizing up for months. It was a painful lesson in underestimation....

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Beyond the Box: Finding the Signal in RPM's Next Chapter

6/19/25

In my work with healthcare organizations across the country, I see two distinct patient profiles coming into focus. They represent the past and future of remote care, and every successful practice must now build a bridge between them. The first is the patient for whom technology…...

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The Living Echo: How Digital Twins Are Reshaping Personalized Healthcare and Operational Excellence

6/11/25

The healthcare landscape is continuously evolving, and among the most profound shifts emerging is the concept of the Digital Twin for Patients. This technology isn't merely an abstract idea; it represents a fundamental change in how we approach individual health and broader heal…...

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Why the MIPS MVP Model is the Future—and How Your Practice Can Win

6/2/25

Change is inevitable in healthcare. Often, it feels overwhelming—but occasionally, a new shift arrives that genuinely makes things simpler. The upcoming CMS shift toward the MIPS Value Pathways (MVPs) represents precisely that kind of beneficial change....

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Does RPM Miss What Patients Really Need?

5/27/25

It starts with a data spike… a sudden drop in movement, a rise in reported pain. The alert pings the provider dashboard, hinting at deterioration. But what if that signal isn’t telling the whole truth?...

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Transforming Chronic Pain: The Power of RPM, RTM, and CCM

5/19/25

Chronic pain isn’t just a condition, it’s a thief. It steals time, joy, and freedom from over 51 million Americans, according to the CDC, costing the economy $560 billion a year. As someone passionate about healthcare innovation, I’ve seen how this silent struggle affects patien…...

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Introduction: Demystifying Ontology—Returning to the Roots

5/16/25

In the tech industry today, we frequently toss around sophisticated terms like "ontology" , often treating them like magic words that instantly confer depth and meaning. Product managers, software engineers, data scientists—everyone seems eager to invoke "ontology" to sound info…...

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APCM Codes: The Quiet Revolution in Primary Care

5/13/25

Picture Mary, 62, balancing a job and early diabetes. Her doctor, Dr. Patel, is her anchor—reviewing labs, coordinating with a nutritionist, tweaking her care plan. But until 2025, Dr. Patel wasn’t paid for this invisible work. It was just “what doctors do.” If you’re in healthc…...

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It Always Starts Small: Lessons from the Front Lines of Healthcare Audits

4/28/25

In healthcare, most of the time, trouble doesn't announce itself with sirens and red flags. It starts quietly. A free dinner here. A paid talk there. An event that feels more like networking than education....

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Unveiling RPM Fraud Risks—A Technical Dive into OIG Findings and FairPath’s AI Fix

4/24/25

The Office of Inspector General’s (OIG) 2024 report, Additional Oversight of Remote Patient Monitoring in Medicare Is Needed (OEI-02-23-00260) , isn't just an alert—it's a detailed playbook exposing critical vulnerabilities in Medicare’s Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) system. R…...

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The Cost of Shortcuts: Lessons From a $4.9 Million Mistake

4/21/25

When the Department of Justice announces settlements, many of us glance at the headlines and move on. Yet, behind those headlines are real stories about real decisions, choices that felt minor at the time but led to serious consequences. Like the recent settlement involving Live…...

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One Biller, One Gap: How a Missing Piece Reshapes Everything

4/14/25

There’s a quiet agreement most of us make in business. It’s not in a contract. It’s not written on a whiteboard. But it runs everything: trust. ‍ We trust that what worked yesterday will still work tomorrow. We trust that people we’ve known for years will keep showing up the way…...

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The System Is Rigged: How AI Helps Independent Docs Fight Back

4/10/25

Feeling like you’re drowning in regulations designed by giants, for giants? If you're running a small practice in today's healthcare hellscape, it damn sure feels that way. And maybe "feeling" isn't the right word – maybe it's just reality....

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Trust Is the Real Technology: A Lesson in Healthcare Partnerships

4/7/25

When people ask me what Intelligence Factory does, they often expect to hear about AI, automation, or billing systems. And while we do all those things—we do them well—I’ve come to believe something deeper: we’re in the business of trust. And in healthcare, that’s the most valua…...

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Million Dollar Surprise

4/3/25

“They’re going to put me out of business. They want over a million dollars. I don’t have a million dollars”, his voice cracked over the phone....

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Unlocking AI: A Practical Guide for IT Companies Ready to Make the Leap

12/22/24

Artificial intelligence isn’t just a buzzword anymore—it’s a transformative force reshaping industries worldwide. Yet for many IT companies, the question isn’t whether to adopt AI but how . If you're scratching your head wondering where to start, you're not alone. For businesses…...

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Agentic RAG: Separating Hype from Reality

12/18/24

Agentic AI is rapidly gaining traction as a transformative technology with the potential to revolutionize how we interact with and utilize artificial intelligence. Unlike traditional AI systems that passively respond to commands, agentic AI systems operate autonomously, making d…...

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From Black Boxes to Clarity: Buffaly's Transparent AI Framework

11/27/24

Large Language Models (LLMs) have ushered in a new era of artificial intelligence, enabling systems to generate human-like text and engage in complex conversations. However, their extraordinary capabilities come with significant limitations, particularly when it comes to predict…...

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Bridging the Gap Between Language and Action: How Buffaly is Revolutionizing AI

11/26/24

The rapid advancement of Large Language Models (LLMs) has brought remarkable progress in natural language processing, empowering AI systems to understand and generate text with unprecedented fluency. Yet, these systems face a critical limitation: while they excel at processing l…...

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When Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) Fails

11/25/24

Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) sounds like a dream come true for anyone working with AI language models. The idea is simple: enhance models like ChatGPT with external data so they can provide answers based on information beyond their original training. Need your AI to answ…...

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SemDB: Solving the Challenges of Graph RAG

11/21/24

In the beginning there was keyword search . Eventually word embeddings came along and we got Vector Databases and Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) . They were good for writing blog posts about topics that sounded smart, but didn’t actually work well in the real world. Fast f…...

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Metagraphs and Hypergraphs with ProtoScript and Buffaly

11/20/24

In Volodymyr Pavlyshyn's article , the concepts of Metagraphs and Hypergraphs are explored as a transformative framework for developing relational models in AI agents’ memory systems. The article highlights how these metagraphs can act as a semantic backbone, enabling AI to reta…...

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Chunking Strategies for Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG): A Deep Dive into SemDB’s Approach

11/19/24

In the ever-evolving landscape of AI and natural language processing, Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) has emerged as a cornerstone technology. RAG systems allow large language models (LLMs) to access vast knowledge bases by retrieving relevant snippets of information, or "c…...

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Is Your AI a Toy or a Tool? Here’s How to Tell (And Why It Matters)

11/7/24

As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes a powerful part of our daily lives, it’s amazing to see how many directions the technology is taking. From creative tools to customer service automation, AI can be both a powerhouse and, at times, a bit of a playground. At Intelligence Fac…...

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Stop Going Solo: Why Tech Founders Need a Business-Savvy Co-Founder (And How to Find Yours)

10/24/24

Hey everyone, Justin Brochetti here, Co-founder of Intelligence Factory. We're all about building cutting-edge AI solutions, but I'm not here to talk about that today. Instead, I want to share some hard-earned wisdom about a challenge that I see many tech founders facing: findin…...

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Why Buffaly is the Future of AI-Driven Data Retrieval

9/26/24

When it comes to data retrieval, most organizations today are exploring AI-driven solutions like Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) paired with Large Language Models (LLM) . These systems have certainly made strides in helping businesses pull information from large datasets an…...

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The AI Mirage: How Broken Systems Are Undermining the Future of Business Innovation

9/18/24

You’ve heard the pitch: AI will revolutionize your operations, cut costs, and deliver results you didn’t even know you needed. But after the vendor leaves, and the system is plugged in, reality hits hard. Companies are discovering that AI solutions too often fail to live up to t…...

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A Sales Manager’s Perspective on AI: Boosting Efficiency and Saving Time

8/14/24

AI-driven call routing can analyze incoming calls in real time and direct them to the most appropriate agent based on skill set, availability, and past interactions. This ensures customers are connected with the right person quickly, improving satisfaction and reducing wait time…...

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Prioritizing Patients for Clinical Monitoring Through Exploration

7/1/24

RPM (Remote Patient Monitoring) CPT codes are a way for healthcare providers to get reimbursed for monitoring patients' health remotely using digital devices. Think of it like having a virtual nurse keeping an eye on you between doctor visits. These codes cover the time spent se…...

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10X Your Outbound Sales Productivity with Intelligence Factory's AI for Twilio: A VP of Sales Perspective

6/28/24

As VP of Sales, I'm constantly on the lookout for ways to empower my team and maximize their productivity. In today's competitive B2B landscape, every interaction counts. That's why I'm here to share a game-changer: integrating Intelligence Factory's AI package with our existing…...

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Practical Application of AI in Business

6/24/24

In the rapidly evolving tech landscape, the excitement around AI is palpable. But beyond the hype, practical application is where true value lies. As someone who relishes in crafting customized solutions for clients and building internal tools, I've found immense value in creati…...

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AI: What the Heck is Going On?

6/19/24

We all grew up with movies of AI and it always seemed to be decades off. Then ChatGPT was announced and suddenly it's everywhere....

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SQL for JSON

4/22/24

Everything old is new again. A few years back, the world was on fire with key-value storage systems. I think it was Google's introduction of MapReduce that set the fire. It's funny because I remember reading in the '90s that the debate had been settled and that relational databa…...

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Telemedicine App Ends Gender Preference Issues with AWS Powered AI

4/19/24

Mount Dora, Florida, 2019: AWS machine learning enhances MEDEK telemedicine solution to ease gender bias for sensitive online doctor visits. Visiting a doctor is personal, and now Medek Health Health Systems (MEDEK) along with Amazon Web Services (AWS) is using AI to make it a b…...

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