Medical AIA way into the work by clinical area. Each topic hub gathers the calculators, the reviewed library answers, and the reference pages for one question space, so the number and the reasoning behind it sit on the same page. Editorial navigation, not medical advice.
Stroke risk, rate versus rhythm, and the anticoagulation decision.
Pretest probability, the PERC gate, and when imaging earns its dose.
Severity scoring and the admit-or-discharge call in community-acquired disease.
Early recognition at the bedside and the limits of screening scores.
Estimating GFR, staging, and co-prescribing around a falling eGFR.
Non-invasive fibrosis staging in metabolic dysfunction-associated liver disease.
Risk stratification and the prevention decisions that follow.
Primary and secondary prevention, from lipids to antithrombotics.
Who to test, who to treat, and how scoring narrows antibiotic use.
Fibrosis assessment and severity in alcohol-associated liver injury.
Screening, the incretin drugs, and what the obesity trials actually show.
Glycemic targets, the incretin drugs, and protecting the kidney and heart.
Browse the calculators and answers here, free. When a real patient raises a question the hub does not cover, the product is what does the looking-up.
Medical AI returns evidence-grounded answers backed by real citations. It is a reference tool, and these terms describe how it should and should not be used.
Medical AI is an information and reference tool intended for educational use only. The answers it returns are not medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified doctor or healthcare professional with any question concerning a medical condition.
Medical AI is designed for use by practicing clinicians. It is not intended for direct patient use and is not a substitute for professional clinical judgment. Apply your own training and current guidelines to every decision an answer informs.
We do not collect, store, or process personally identifiable patient information (PHI or PII). Do not enter names, dates of birth, medical record numbers, or any other patient identifiers into the composer.
Medical knowledge evolves rapidly. Citations carry their publication date, so consult the primary source and the most recent clinical guideline before acting on anything material.