AI for Doctors
Practical use cases, clinical safety, and the future of medical practice — clinician-first.
A focused 3-hour roundtable for practicing physicians on how AI is changing clinical documentation, radiology, patient communication, and clinic operations — while preserving clinical judgment, patient privacy, and medico-legal safety. Invite-only pilot in Ahmedabad, planned with senior clinical specialists.
Healthcare AI experience acrossDiagnostics · Radiology · Hospital Ops · Patient Communication
Why this is different
Not a generic AI workshop. A clinician-first conversation.
Doctors are curious about AI but rightly skeptical. The bar for a clinical room is different from a business room — what is useful, what is safe, what is legally and clinically acceptable, and what actually saves time without compromising care.
This session is built to that bar. Every example is clinical or clinic-operational — no generic prompting, no overclaiming, no “AI will replace doctors” theatrics. Clinical responsibility, privacy, and medico-legal boundaries are woven into every section, not bolted on at the end.
The Ahmedabad pilot is invite-only — a 40–60 doctor roundtable with peer dialogue, a senior clinical specialist co-presenting, and a tight three-hour format that respects clinician time.
Four clinical areas
Where AI is actually useful for doctors today
Concrete, immediate, and credible. The places where AI delivers measurable physician time-back without compromising care.
Clinical Documentation
- →Consultation notes and SOAP drafts
- →Discharge summaries and referral letters
- →Patient instructions and post-procedure care
- →Insurance and pre-authorisation documentation
- →Voice notes → structured clinical notes
- →Medical certificate drafting (physician-reviewed)
Radiology & Diagnostics
- →Where AI is genuinely useful in imaging today
- →Triage and worklist prioritisation
- →Second-read support — promise and limits
- →False positives vs false negatives — the honest data
- →Why AI is assistive, not autonomous
- →What radiologists should and should not trust
Patient Communication
- →Simplifying medical explanations for patients
- →Multilingual patient instructions
- →Chronic-care follow-up message drafts
- →WhatsApp / email patient communication templates
- →Lifestyle and adherence guidance drafts
- →Always physician-reviewed before sending
Clinic & Hospital Operations
- →Appointment follow-up and no-show reduction
- →FAQ assistant for common patient queries
- →Billing and documentation support
- →Staff training materials and SOPs
- →Patient feedback analysis at scale
- →Inventory and procurement support
Different specialty? Tell us your area — we'll bring relevant clinical examples →
Sample agenda
Three hours · Clinician-first · Peer dialogue
Specialist co-presenter, real clinical examples, and an honest section on what AI cannot do — not just what it can.
| 0:00–0:15 | Opening: Why AI Matters for Doctors Now |
| 0:15–0:45 | Practical AI for Clinical Documentation and Patient Communication |
| 0:45–1:25 | Specialist Session: AI in Radiology — Promise, Reality, and Limits |
| 1:25–1:40 | Break |
| 1:40–2:15 | AI for Clinic and Hospital Workflows |
| 2:15–2:45 | Safety, Privacy, and Medico-Legal Boundaries |
| 2:45–3:00 | Q&A + Next Steps |
Non-negotiable
Safety, privacy & medico-legal — built in, not bolted on
These principles are how we built the session. They are also the answer to every “but is this safe?” question from your compliance team.
●Never paste identifiable patient data into public AI tools
We cover which tiers and tools are appropriate for what types of clinical data — and what should never leave your environment.
●AI output must be physician-verified
Every clinical or patient-facing output is a draft until a doctor signs off. AI accelerates the first pass; it does not replace clinical judgment.
●AI cannot replace clinical judgment
This session is unambiguous on this point. AI is assistive — diagnostic decisions, treatment plans, and clinical reasoning remain physician-owned.
●Hospital policy and consent matter
Adoption framework includes what to clear with your hospital, your compliance team, and your patients before deploying AI in care workflows.
●Hallucinations and bias are real
We show real failure modes with real examples — and the verification habits that catch them before they reach a patient.
●Medico-legal disclaimer
This is not legal advice. Doctors, clinics, and hospitals should consult their compliance, legal, and indemnity providers before adopting AI in clinical workflows.
Speaker lineup
AI practitioner + senior clinician + local doctor voice
We pair an AI practitioner with credible clinical voices. This is not “tech guy teaching doctors” — it is medical professionals discussing AI with an AI practitioner.
Confirmed
Ritesh Vajariya
Founder, AI Guru
AI landscape, practical workflows, safety framework, implementation reality. Two decades in AI, cloud, and enterprise — Amazon Web Services (AWS), Cerebras Systems, Bloomberg.
Planned · in confirmation
Senior Radiology Specialist
Chief Radiologist · leading Mumbai hospital
Clinical reality of radiology AI — promise, limits, adoption barriers, and where physician judgment must lead. Name to be announced on confirmation.
Per city
Local Clinician Voice
Ahmedabad pilot · regional practice perspective
A locally respected practicing physician to ground the session in regional clinic and patient reality. Identified per pilot city.
Curated audience
Who this session is for
Peer-heavy room. We deliberately keep the pilot mostly practicing physicians so the dialogue stays clinical, not academic.
Senior resident, specialty society lead, or hospital admin? Request an invitation →
Format options
How this is delivered
Pilot · Free
Invite-only roundtable
40–60 doctors · Ahmedabad
- ✓3-hour clinical session
- ✓Senior specialist co-presenter
- ✓Peer dialogue and Q&A
- ✓Free for invited physicians
Public · Paid
Doctor workshop
₹2,999–₹4,999 · upcoming cities
- ✓Same 3-hour format
- ✓Limited seats, curated audience
- ✓Includes safety framework kit
- ✓Launches post-pilot
Hospital / Society
Sponsor-hosted
Custom · members usually free
- ✓Co-branded clinical session
- ✓Specialty-specific agenda
- ✓Sponsor handles invitations
- ✓Optional accreditation support
Host this session
For hospitals, diagnostic centres & medical societies
If you lead a hospital network, diagnostic centre, specialty society, IMA chapter, or medical-college CME channel — we'd like to talk. A typical partnership: you bring the physicians and the venue; we bring the speakers, content, demos, and safety framework.
Member sessions are typically free for invited physicians under a partnership. The agenda adapts to your members' specialties — radiology-heavy, surgery-focused, primary care, dental, or mixed. Accreditation arrangements through your channels welcome.
Particularly relevant for
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this accredited CME?+
No. This is a clinical AI awareness session and roundtable discussion — not accredited Continuing Medical Education. We deliberately avoid the CME label because CME has formal accreditation implications. If your hospital or association arranges accreditation through their channels, we are happy to support that process.
Who is the speaker?+
Ritesh Vajariya (Founder, AI Guru) leads the AI landscape, practical workflows, and safety framework. The pilot also features a planned session from a senior clinical specialist in radiology — speaker confirmation is in progress. For each city, we aim to include at least one credible local clinician to ground the session in regional practice reality.
Will AI replace doctors?+
No — and we are explicit about this in the session. AI is assistive, not autonomous. The current generation of AI is highly useful for documentation, triage, communication, and clinic operations. Diagnosis, treatment, and clinical judgment remain physician-owned. We show real failure modes alongside real wins.
What about patient data privacy?+
Covered directly. The session opens with which AI tiers and tools are appropriate for what types of clinical and patient data — and what should never leave your environment. We cover tool selection (consumer vs enterprise tiers), de-identification practices, and how to set basic AI usage policies for clinic and hospital teams.
What is the format and duration?+
3 hours. The pilot in Ahmedabad is an invite-only roundtable for 40–60 doctors — clinician-first tone, peer-heavy room, real Q&A. Future public versions and city expansions will be announced based on pilot response.
Is there a fee?+
The Ahmedabad pilot is free for invited doctors. Subsequent public or partner-hosted versions may be paid (₹2,999–₹4,999 per physician) or sponsored by a hospital / medical association — depends on the host.
Will this be run in other cities?+
Ahmedabad is the pilot. Based on response and partner interest, we plan to extend to Mumbai, Pune, Hyderabad, and other cities with strong specialty-society and hospital-network interest. If you'd like to host in your city or hospital, get in touch.
Can my hospital or association host this?+
Yes. A typical partnership: you bring the doctors and the venue; we bring the speaker(s), content, demos, and safety framework. We can also customise the agenda for specific specialties — radiology-heavy, surgery-focused, primary care, dental, or mixed.
Led by
Ritesh Vajariya, Founder of AI Guru
Ritesh has spent nearly two decades in AI, cloud, and enterprise technology — including leadership roles at Amazon Web Services (AWS), Cerebras Systems, and Bloomberg. Through AI Guru he has shipped 20 AI products into production across 9 industries (including healthcare) and trained 100,000+ professionals across 4 continents.
Originally from Gujarat and now based out of Princeton, NJ, USA, Ritesh works closely with hospitals, diagnostic centres, and specialty societies on responsible AI adoption — focused on clinical safety, physician judgment, and measurable workflow impact, not hype.
Western India is AI Guru's home delivery base — operations are run from Ahmedabad and institutional ties are deepest across Gujarat, MP, and Maharashtra. Global HQ is in Princeton, NJ.
Medico-legal disclaimer. This session is not accredited Continuing Medical Education (CME), and its content is not legal, medical, or compliance advice. AI tools discussed are assistive and require physician verification. Doctors, clinics, and hospitals should consult their compliance, legal, and indemnity providers before adopting AI in clinical workflows. Hospital and institutional policies apply.
Part of
AI Guru's India Workshop Series · 2026
We also run dedicated tracks for software engineers, working professionals, and business owners.