For physicians—particularly those in rural areas—OpenEvidence is a lifeline to high-quality, peer-reviewed medical knowledge. “It does what technology promises but so rarely delivers: real, democratic access to the best information and reliable answers,” says founder Daniel Nadler. The AI-powered search engine aggregates up-to-date guidance and clinical resources typically reserved for the nation’s largest institutions; since launching in 2023, it has signed content agreements with JAMA and The New England Journal of Medicine. By giving all verified U.S. healthcare professionals free access to the tool—the company says nearly 40% of U.S. doctors are now using it—OpenEvidence is making advanced knowledge truly accessible for all.
Correction, Oct. 10
The original version of this story misstated the percentage of doctors OpenEvidence says use its product. It’s 40%, not 30%.
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