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New AI-powered doctor’s office allows patients to draw blood, take vitals

Now coming to a mall, gym or office building near you: A self-contained doctor’s office, powered by artificial intelligence, where you — the patient — draw your own blood and take your own vitals.

Why it matters: The traditional annual checkup is being disrupted in various tech-heavy ways, from telehealth to concierge medicine to the CarePod, above, a DIY health clinic-in-a-box.

Driving the news: A company called Forward is installing CarePods around the country, with the hope that people will visit them regularly for preventative care and specific concerns.

Of note: The first three CarePods are in Sacramento, California; Chandler, Arizona; and Chicago’s Willis Tower, with plans to roll out many more in 2024.

How it works: First, the machine takes baseline readings of your metabolic functions so it can assess how you’re doing over time.

When asked how patients would draw their own blood inside a CarePod, Aoun whipped out a small vacuum chamber that suctioned to his upper arm and siphoned out a small sample.

Skin scans and mental health screenings are also on the CarePod menu, and more tests will be added over time.

Backstory: Forward began by opening more traditional doctor’s clinics in about 20 cities. CarePods are “our Gen 2 product,” Aoun said.

Zoom out: Amazon is getting into this space as well with Amazon Clinic, offering video visits and messaging with clinicians for common maladies.

What they’re saying: “If Elon has the self-driving car, well, this is the autonomous doctor’s office,” said Aoun, a heavyweight technologist who previously ran artificial intelligence at Google and special projects for Larry Page, a former Google CEO.

Yes, but: Forward doesn’t take insurance, and $99 a month is a big ask for an untested concept. (Aoun says he’s aiming to get the price way down.)

By the numbers: Nearly 30% of patients don’t see a primary care doctor these days, according to an analysis by FAIR Health.

What’s next: As it rolls out CarePods nationally, Forward is looking to add services such as flu shots, which it hopes to do if skin patch vaccines are approved.

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