logo
#

Latest news with #Erez

We built an AI assistant to give doctors something they rarely have: time
We built an AI assistant to give doctors something they rarely have: time

Business Insider

time18-05-2025

  • Health
  • Business Insider

We built an AI assistant to give doctors something they rarely have: time

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation between Erez Druk, the founder of Freed AI, an AI assistant for clinicians, and his wife, Dr. Gabi Meckler, a family physician. This conversation has been edited and condensed for clarity. Gabi Meckler When I was in residency, I really began to feel the weight of notes. I would stay in the hospital until midnight, writing notes. You'd come home and still have notes to do. They were constant — a fact of life. Some people suffer. Some even quit. One day, my husband, Erez, asked me what would make my life easier. I jokingly said, "Can you just write my notes for me?" Erez took the idea seriously. He started building something. Erez Druk I built a simple proof of concept using GPT, a customizable version of ChatGPT, over the course of a few hours. It was a bare bones version of Freed that allowed for patient instructions, which are what clinicians send to patients post-visit, and subjective notes, which clinicians use to document patients' experience of their condition. I showed it to Gabi. She said "interesting," but told me it still needed a few improvements. It would break at times, it didn't know the names of several medications, and wasn't attuned to different specialities. I knew I needed another data point beyond my wife, so I solicited the opinion of our friend, another clinician. She came over for dinner, I showed her the product, and her response was very different — one of immediate excitement. She texted the next day asking to use it. I knew we were on to something. We moved fast from there. It took some work to make it HIPAA compliant. I wanted to get a beta version out quickly. We got some clinicians to test it. We asked them for feedback constantly. Building Freed isn't just about vision or strategy — it's about listening to users and iterating based on what they need. Meckler When I started working at a clinic, after residency, I began using Freed every day. I could finally finish my notes before leaving the office. One time, I forgot to send a referral for a patient, but Freed reminded me. That moment made me realize how much Freed was helping, not just with time, but with the details that I might have missed otherwise. Other doctors at the clinic noticed, too. They'd come to me and say, "Your husband? He saved me hours of work." That was rewarding. One thing I love is that Erez takes my input seriously. He really understands the nuances that matter to clinicians, and the team is learning too. Druz Gabi holds a weekly office hour with the product managers and designers where they share their work with her. She offers her perspective on what's useful and what isn't. It's surprising — or maybe not — that even after spending a lot of time with clinicians, there's always more to learn. We can never truly be in their shoes, there's a constant depth and nuance to uncover. That's why this setup is so valuable: It helps us get closer to understanding how they think and what's genuinely useful to them. Meckler Freed, as the name suggests, is all about freedom. Our goal wasn't to tell clinicians how to use their time — we simply wanted to give it back to them. That mindset really influences our marketing. We're very intentional about not telling clinicians what they should do — they know better than anyone else. We don't tell clinicians to be heroes or push messages like maintain "eye contact" or "spend more time with patients." You probably already make enough eye contact. And if you want to Netflix and chill, great. We're not here to tell people how to be better doctors. Druz Managing the relationship between husband and wife, founder and consumer, innovator and advisor — isn't always easy. It's definitely annoying sometimes to get feedback that is correct. Meckler I think we do it well, though, I don't know how we do it. I try to be specific about feedback. Like, this is something you absolutely have to change before moving forward, versus this would be nice, or it's a bit iffy. I told Erez that we needed to incorporate patient instructions. They include a summary of the visit and clear instructions based on the action plan created during the appointment. The goal is to make them easy for patients to read, understand, and follow. It's now one of the most loved features of Freed. We're building a document analyzer now at the request of users. It will take any clinical document and give the clinician a summary. Users can also ask questions, and it will provide short responses with references from the document. This whole time, since we launched in January 2023, Erez has been learning about medicine, and I've been learning about startups. So, I know he has to move fast. That's why I focus only on the most important things, and I push really hard when it matters. I've loved being involved as part of our relationship. Work is really my second obsession after Gabi — and I'm obsessed with work. So the fact that we can talk about everything, and she knows the people in the team, and what we're working on, is really fun. We created Freed together. It's a love letter from us, our team, to all the clinicians out there.

Stifel ordered by FINRA to pay $132.5 million damages to US family
Stifel ordered by FINRA to pay $132.5 million damages to US family

Reuters

time13-03-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Stifel ordered by FINRA to pay $132.5 million damages to US family

March 13 (Reuters) - Stifel Financial (SF.N), opens new tab was ordered by a Financial Industry Regulatory Authority arbitration panel to pay a family $132.5 million for misrepresenting the risk of complex structured notes, causing what their lawyer called "staggering" losses. The three-member panel on Wednesday awarded $26.5 million in compensatory damages, $79.5 million in punitive damages and $26.5 million for legal fees to David Jannetti, of Miami Beach, Florida, and his children Sarah, Adam and Leah, from New York. Get a look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets with the Morning Bid U.S. newsletter. Sign up here. Stifel said on Thursday it will appeal, calling the Jannettis "a sophisticated family of experienced and aggressive investors" who understood the risks, helped choose the investments, monitored them closely and complained only after losing money. The Jannettis asked a Miami federal judge to confirm the award, which was imposed against the Stifel, Nicolaus wealth management and investment banking unit. A $132.5 million award equals 19% of the St. Louis-based parent's profit in 2024. In an interview, the Jannettis' lawyer, Jeffrey Erez, said the case concerned so-called auto-callable contingent coupon notes. He said the Stifel broker did not understand the risks of the notes, whose value was linked to the SPDR S&P Biotech ETF (XBI.P), opens new tab and stocks such as DocuSign (DOCU.O), opens new tab, Dynatrace (DT.N), opens new tab, Palantir Technologies (PLTR.O), opens new tab and Twilio (TWLO.N), opens new tab. The Jannettis ended up losing "a staggering amount of money" - about $60 million over three years, the vast majority of what they invested - after Stifel overconcentrated their money in the notes, Erez said. "We're extremely pleased" with the award, Erez said. "This is a strong message to Stifel and other broker-dealers that if you don't enforce industry and compliance rules, there will be accountability." Stifel ended 2024 with 2,229 financial advisers and $501 billion of assets under management.

American and father of youngest hostages among those due for release from Gaza Saturday
American and father of youngest hostages among those due for release from Gaza Saturday

Yahoo

time31-01-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

American and father of youngest hostages among those due for release from Gaza Saturday

Hamas announced on Friday that among the three Israeli hostages to be released from Gaza on Saturday are an American dual national and the father of the youngest hostages taken from Israel on October 7, 2023. It named three men – Keith Siegel, Yarden Bibas and Ofer Kalderon as the captives that would be freed in the latest round. The Israeli Prime Minister's Office said their families had been informed. Siegel, an Israeli-American citizen, was taken from his home in kibbutz Kfar Aza. His wife Aviva, who was kidnapped alongside him, was released in November 2023 as part of the short-lived ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas. Bibas was kidnapped from kibbutz Nir Oz alongside his wife Shiri and two sons Kfir and Ariel. Kfir was just nine months when he was abducted, the youngest hostage taken on October 7. Kalderon was 52 when he was kidnapped from kibbutz Nir Oz together with his son Erez, who was 11 at the time, and his daughter Sahar, who was 16. Erez and Sahar were also released during the November 2023 ceasefire. Eugenia Yosef and Dana Karni contributed to this report. This is a breaking news story and will be updated

American and father of youngest hostages among those due for release from Gaza Saturday
American and father of youngest hostages among those due for release from Gaza Saturday

CNN

time31-01-2025

  • CNN

American and father of youngest hostages among those due for release from Gaza Saturday

Hamas announced on Friday that among the three Israeli hostages to be released from Gaza on Saturday are an American dual national and the father of the youngest hostages taken from Israel on October 7, 2023. It named three men – Keith Siegel, Yarden Bibas and Ofer Kalderon as the captives that would be freed in the latest round. Siegel, an Israeli-American citizen, was taken from his home in kibbutz Kfar Aza. His wife Aviva, who was kidnapped alongside him, was released in November 2023 as part of the short-lived ceasefire deal between Israel and Hamas. Bibas was kidnapped from kibbutz Nir Oz alongside his wife Shiri and two sons Kfir and Ariel. Kfir was just nine months when he was abducted, the youngest hostage taken on October 7. Kalderon was 52 when he was kidnapped from kibbutz Nir Oz together with his son Erez, who was 11 at the time, and his daughter Sahar, who was 16. Erez and Sahar were also released during the November 2023 ceasefire. Eugenia Yosef and Dana Karni contributed to this report. This is a breaking news story and will be updated

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store