Artificial Intelligence (AI) is on the brink of revolutionizing the healthcare industry, promising to enhance patient care by making it more predictive, preventive, and personalized. Spearheading this transformation is Saeed Hassanpour, PhD, director of the Dartmouth Center for Precision Health and Artificial Intelligence (CPHAI). According to Hassanpour, AI’s integration into healthcare will increase efficiency, accessibility, and diagnostic accuracy, fundamentally reshaping the landscape.

Saeed hassanpour
Saeed Hassanpour, PhD, Director, Dartmouth Center for Precision Health and Artificial Intelligence


Hassanpour emphasizes that AI’s ability to analyze large datasets of biomedical information is crucial to this transformation. AI techniques can recognize patterns that humans might overlook, leading to earlier disease detection and improved outcomes. This proficiency in pattern recognition not only aids early diagnosis but also highlights risk factors, allowing for preventive interventions that contribute to overall population health.

The mission of the CPHAI is to facilitate advancements through novel and interdisciplinary research, while ensuring ethical AI usage. As Hassanpour highlights, Dartmouth aims to lead globally in demonstrating the seamless integration of AI in healthcare, setting a model for other institutions.

Established on the Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center campus in June 2023, the CPHAI has received initial funding of $2 million from Dartmouth’s Geisel School of Medicine and the Dartmouth Cancer Center. Dartmouth Health will also partner with the Center in ongoing collaborative research, clinical trials, and the incorporation of AI solutions in clinical settings.

The diverse team at CPHAI includes clinical associate directors from various departments, supported by a broad advisory board of leaders and stakeholders from Dartmouth Health. This collaboration is essential in developing clinically relevant AI solutions that can be swiftly translated into patient care, providing significant benefits to both local and global communities.

The Center also focuses on equity and ethics, ensuring the technologies developed are devoid of biases. Protecting patient privacy and data security remains a priority, aligned with promoting equitable access to AI advancements. With AI in healthcare projected to burgeon from under $5 billion in 2020 to over $45 billion by 2026, CPHAI is paving the way by cultivating a local workforce skilled in AI. This initiative, including a Dartmouth graduate program with machine learning courses, will enhance the pool of skilled individuals to drive innovation in the healthcare domain.

Hassanpour anticipates a future where AI dramatically transforms healthcare, improving every aspect from diagnosis to treatment and prevention, ultimately leading to superior patient outcomes for all.

More Articles

Getting licensed or staying ahead in your career can be a journey—but it doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Grab your favorite coffee or tea, take a moment to relax, and browse through our articles. Whether you’re just starting out or renewing your expertise, we’ve got tips, insights, and advice to keep you moving forward. Here’s to your success—one sip and one step at a time!

How Post‑Election Power Shifts Are Setting Up a New Real Estate Landscape for 2026

Local elections across major U.S. cities have kicked off a wave of policy changes that could reshape development costs, rental income, and investment strategies heading into 2026. From NYC’s aggressive tenant‑protection agenda to Chicago’s sustainability push, Miami’s political uncertainty, and Boston’s steady zoning overhaul, the post‑election environment is redefining how real estate professionals, investors, and lenders should prepare for the year ahead.

The Surge of AI Insurance Exclusions Reshaping Professional Liability in 2025

Insurance carriers are rapidly rolling out AI-related exclusions that strip coverage from claims involving AI tools, automated decision‑making, or generative platforms like ChatGPT and Midjourney. With firms like Berkley and Hamilton introducing sweeping “absolute” and generative‑AI‑specific exclusions, professionals in real estate, mortgage, insurance, and finance now face new liability gaps. As AI becomes unavoidable in everyday work, understanding these exclusions is essential for protecting your career and staying compliant in a fast‑changing risk environment.

Venn Lands $52M to Rebuild the Renting Experience — A Shift Real Estate Pros Can’t Ignore

Proptech startup Venn has raised a $52 million Series B to unify the entire renting lifecycle into one intelligent platform, replacing over a dozen traditional systems and serving more than half a million tenants. As AI‑powered tools like Venn rapidly reshape property operations, real estate professionals — especially in fast‑moving markets like Florida — will need stronger education and tech‑savvy skills to stay competitive.

Rising Insurance Costs Push Florida’s Middle Class to the Brink

Florida’s Gulf Coast is undergoing a dramatic transformation as soaring insurance premiums, costly construction requirements, and the long shadow of Hurricane Ian force middle‑class families, workers, and longtime residents out of communities they once anchored. With premiums topping $5,700 a year — and many paying far more — Realtors warn of looming foreclosures, renters face steep increases, and entire neighborhoods are being rebuilt for wealthier newcomers. This mounting crisis is reshaping the state’s real estate landscape and leaving professionals scrambling to adapt.

Top Commercial Real Estate Issues to Watch in 2026

Economic uncertainty, rapid tech advances and shifting population patterns are setting the stage for a pivotal year in commercial real estate. New findings from the Counselors of Real Estate, presented at NAR NXT, outline ten major forces reshaping strategy, investment and opportunity in 2026—from policy impacts and portfolio risk to AI adoption, capital flow changes, housing attainability and demographic shifts. This outlook offers clarity and caution for professionals across real estate, mortgage, finance and related fields.

New Reforms, Familiar Risks: Why Florida’s Home Insurance Market Still Isn’t Stabilizing

Florida’s home insurance crisis is back in the spotlight as new reforms appear to be repeating decades‑old mistakes. Despite efforts to depopulate Citizens and attract private insurers, many of the companies taking over policies have ties to past insolvencies. Critics say weak oversight, generous ratings, and political influence are allowing unstable insurers to thrive while homeowners pay more for less protection. Experts warn that without transparent ratings, real accountability, and unified regulation, Florida’s insurance market will remain vulnerable—putting property values, lending, and the broader real estate industry at risk.