• Home 1
  • Privacy Policy
LSD News
  • Home
  • Business
  • Crypto News
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Stock
  • Tech
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Crypto News
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Stock
  • Tech
  • Travel
No Result
View All Result
LSD News
No Result
View All Result
Home Tech

OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to $12 billion

by
January 21, 2026
in Tech
0
OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to  billion
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


A startup widely known as “ChatGPT for doctors” raised a new funding round that values the company at $12 billion.

OpenEvidence, based in Miami, Florida, closed a $250 million financing, led by Thrive Capital and DST, the company told CNBC. The startup first raised outside capital in February, when it reeled in $75 million from Sequoia at a $1 billion valuation, before its value jumped to $6 billion in October.

In less than a year, OpenEvidence has raised $700 million from investors including Google’s venture arm, Nvidia, Kleiner Perkins, David Sacks’ Craft Ventures and Mayo Clinic.

The company was founded in 2022 by Daniel Nadler, who previously built Kensho Technologies, an artificial intelligence company that was acquired by Standard & Poor’s for about $700 million in 2018, and by Zachary Ziegler, a Harvard PhD student in AI. Nadler’s newest venture provides a chatbot for doctors, with its AI models having been trained on data and information from top scientific journals, Nadler said in an interview.

“‘ChatGPT for doctors’ is a useful shorthand, but what we really do is help physicians make high-stakes clinical decisions at the point of care,” Nadler said. “It’s not trained on the open internet or social media, which can introduce low-quality medical information.”

Nadler claimed OpenEvidence is the most widely used AI platform by doctors in the U.S., with more than 40% of physicians utilizing the tool. He pointed to the massive opportunity in health care, which accounts for nearly 20% of U.S. gross domestic product with $5 trillion in annual spending.

“Health care is the largest segment of the real economy,” Nadler said. “People realize there could be a lot of winners in the space.”

Those names could include OpenAI and Anthropic.

OpenAI launched “ChatGPT Health” earlier this month, while Anthropic has “Claude Healthcare.” Both are Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA, compliant extensions of their popular consumer chatbots.

While competition is emerging, Nadler said his company’s moat is its focus on physicians, quality of data and a first-mover advantage.

“We’ve already gathered hundreds of millions of real-world clinical consultations from verified physicians — that feedback loop is incredibly hard to replicate,” Nadler said. “Even if someone copied the playbook today, they’d still be far behind because it’s not just the partnerships, it’s the real-world usage data.”

Relying on advertising

OpenEvidence said it topped $100 million in annualized revenue last year, mostly fueled by organic growth. Nadler said 95% of new users hear about OpenEvidence from another physician.

“Most health care in America isn’t happening at billion-dollar hospitals in New York or San Francisco,” Nadler said. “It’s happening in small practices that don’t have IT departments or budgets for expensive software.”

OpenEvidence was one of the first AI startups to rely on advertising for revenue, which Nadler said allows faster adoption and wider use versus a paid subscription model.

Companies can pay for promotions through banner ads, badges, images and other types of content on the OpenEvidence app.

The artificial intelligence industry has started to warm up to ad-based revenue. Last week, OpenAI said it was testing an ad-supported version of ChatGPT. Nadler said he’s trying to be more disciplined than some companies that are “openly planning to burn billions or tens of billions over the next several years.”

“That’s a big bet, and a very risky bet,” Nadler said, adding that OpenEvidence is trying to balance growth with eventual profitability. “We’re not running this like a private equity portfolio company, but we’re also not planning on burning billions of dollars over the next year.”

AI startups are picking up this year where they left off in 2025.

In the third quarter of last year, there were six AI funding rounds of more than $1 billion, according to CB Insights. Anthropic is in talks to raise an additional $10 billion as of January, while Elon Musk’s xAI announced a $20 billion round this month.

Nadler said that with the big tech companies aggressively pursuing acquisitions in the space, he’s felt the pressure, but has remained set on building OpenEvidence as a stand-alone company.

“I’ve done the acquisition route before,” he said. “It can be great. But this time, I want to build something that compounds over many years.”

As for an initial public offering, he said SpaceX, OpenAI and Anthropic, which have all been rumored to be potential 2026 candidates, need to go public first.

“There’s an order to nature,” Nadler said. “Foundation model companies go public first. Then the application layer follows. That’s how the internet played out, and that’s how this cycle will play out, too.”

WATCH: OpenAI investor letter

OpenAI Investor Letter: Weekly and daily active user figures 'continue to produce all-time highs'
Tags: Alphabet Class AbillionBreaking newsBreaking News: EconomyBreaking News: MarketsBreaking News: Technologybusiness newsChatGPTdoctorsdoubleseconomyElon MuskHealth care industryInternetMarketsNVIDIA CorpOpenEvidenceSoftwareStart-upStock marketsTechnologyvaluationVenture capital
Previous Post

Bitcoin Under Pressure After $90,600 Drop, But This Retest Will Decide The Trend

Next Post

Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

Next Post
Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

Sebi's rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

Stay Connected test

  • 139 Followers
  • 205k Subscribers
  • 23.9k Followers
  • 99 Subscribers
ADVERTISEMENT
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Georgia realtor receives invitation to play the Masters by mistake | CNN

Georgia realtor receives invitation to play the Masters by mistake | CNN

July 18, 2023
As Binance works toward redemption, CEO says Trump has been ‘fantastic’ for crypto

As Binance works toward redemption, CEO says Trump has been ‘fantastic’ for crypto

March 23, 2025
Why startups and tech giants are racing to build a practical quantum computer

Why startups and tech giants are racing to build a practical quantum computer

March 23, 2025
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says tariff impact won’t be meaningful in the near term

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says tariff impact won’t be meaningful in the near term

March 23, 2025
Tech layoffs in Southeast Asia mount as unprofitable startups seek to extend their runways

Tech layoffs in Southeast Asia mount as unprofitable startups seek to extend their runways

5
Contact lens maker faces lawsuit after woman said the product resulted in her losing an eye

Contact lens maker faces lawsuit after woman said the product resulted in her losing an eye

5
Why Cristiano Ronaldo’s move to Saudi Arabia means so much for the Gulf monarchy’s sporting ambitions | CNN

Why Cristiano Ronaldo’s move to Saudi Arabia means so much for the Gulf monarchy’s sporting ambitions | CNN

5
Georgia realtor receives invitation to play the Masters by mistake | CNN

Georgia realtor receives invitation to play the Masters by mistake | CNN

1
Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

January 21, 2026
OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to  billion

OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to $12 billion

January 21, 2026
Bitcoin Under Pressure After ,600 Drop, But This Retest Will Decide The Trend

Bitcoin Under Pressure After $90,600 Drop, But This Retest Will Decide The Trend

January 21, 2026
Jerome Powell could stay at the Fed even after being removed as chair. Here’s what that means

Jerome Powell could stay at the Fed even after being removed as chair. Here’s what that means

January 21, 2026

Recent News

Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

January 21, 2026
OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to  billion

OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to $12 billion

January 21, 2026
Bitcoin Under Pressure After ,600 Drop, But This Retest Will Decide The Trend

Bitcoin Under Pressure After $90,600 Drop, But This Retest Will Decide The Trend

January 21, 2026
Jerome Powell could stay at the Fed even after being removed as chair. Here’s what that means

Jerome Powell could stay at the Fed even after being removed as chair. Here’s what that means

January 21, 2026

We bring the latest news from all over the world and get all time updated you

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • Business
  • Crypto News
  • Finance
  • Health
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Stock
  • Tech
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized

Recent News

Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

Sebi’s rap on the knuckles: Investment adviser pulled up for routing client money through employee account

January 21, 2026
OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to  billion

OpenEvidence, the ‘ChatGPT for doctors,’ doubles valuation to $12 billion

January 21, 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • Home 1
  • Privacy Policy

© 2024 LSD News title="Jegtheme">Jegtheme.