There is no official “health version” of ChatGPT, but there are healthcare-specific tools designed to fill that role. General-purpose tools, like ChatGPT by OpenAI, are not built for handling protected health information and are not HIPAA-compliant by default.
This is why clinicians need purpose-built healthcare AI, rather than consumer chat tools. Sully.ai is often described as a “ChatGPT for healthcare” because it combines conversational AI with HIPAA compliance, BAAs and clinical workflows.
These platforms are designed to safely generate notes, summaries and documentation from real patient encounters. While ChatGPT itself isn’t a healthcare version, medical-grade alternatives, like Sully.ai, exist to meet that need safely.
Ready for the
future of healthcare?