In a world racing to build AI for everything, why has medicine, perhaps the most human of professions, been an afterthought?

Hami changes that. It’s not just another AI tool. It is in fact the world’s first AI-powered physician assistant designed for end-to-end patient care. Built by Boston Health AI, and now officially launched, Hami was conceived with an aim to support physicians, and in doing so, deliver more consistent, accessible, and compassionate healthcare at scale.

Led by Dr. Adil Haider, an award-winning trauma surgeon and one of the world’s foremost voices on health equity, Boston Health AI is part of a new wave of mission-led AI ventures that put people before product. “Healthcare should not depend on geography or income,” says Dr. Haider. “With Hami, we’re using the power of AI to break barriers and support physicians in delivering expert-level care to every patient, whether they’re in Boston or Badin.”

Unlike chatbots or symptom checkers, Hami is a multilingual, HIPAA- and GDPR-compliant AI assistant trained on the realities of real-world medicine. It listens to patient histories without time pressure. It generates structured SOAP notes. It analyzes lab reports and summarizes diagnostics. It even creates after-visit summaries for patients, a small feature that has a huge impact, especially in low-literacy or high-volume settings.

But here’s what makes it rare: Hami was built from the ground up by physicians, not just engineers. It understands the real-world implications of practicing medicine. And it’s already being used in hospitals across Pakistan, where the need is great and the system, overstretched.

The urgency is real. The World Health Organization estimates that by 2030, the global healthcare sector will be short 11 million professionals, most severely in low- and middle-income countries. In Pakistan alone, over 87 million people currently lack access to essential care.

Boston Health AI was created in direct response to this gap. Its solution? A physician-first AI platform that’s deeply human, fiercely practical, and globally scalable.

To build it, Dr. Haider partnered with C10 Labs, a US-based venture studio focused on responsible AI, and Systems Limited, one of Pakistan’s leading tech companies. C10 Labs selected Hami from hundreds of proposals. A meeting between Dr. Haider and Asif Peer, Group CEO and Managing Director of Systems Limited, brought it all together.

“Our teams worked closely with Boston Health AI to build a secure, adaptable, and scalable platform for Hami. By combining clinical insight with robust engineering, we’ve developed a solution that can improve how care is delivered, while also creating space for meaningful innovation in other sectors.” said Peer.

There’s a lot of noise in the AI world right now. But Hami’s story is refreshingly different. It’s not about replacing jobs or boosting quarterly productivity. It’s about bringing listening, trust and clarity back to healthtech.

It’s about giving physicians their time back. Giving patients something they rarely get: time, understanding, and continuity of care.

And perhaps most importantly, it’s about proving that AI doesn’t have to be cold or clinical. When designed with cultural context, ethical grounding and actual human insight, AI can become what it should have been all along; a bridge, not a barrier. A force for inclusion.

Boston Health AI’s vision is ambitious: to impact 1 billion lives globally. And with Hami, they’ve already begun changing the story.

By admin