ObGyn Intelligence: The Evidence of Women’s Health

ObGyn Intelligence: The Evidence of Women’s Health

Special Series : Ob/Gyn Intelligence

10.AI FOR OBGYN: How to Turn a Guideline into Plain-Language Advice

ACOG writes for clinicians. Your patients do not read like clinicians. Here is how to bridge that.

Amos Grünebaum, MD's avatar
Amos Grünebaum, MD
Feb 20, 2026
∙ Paid

Practice bulletins are written for physicians. They are dense, hedged, conditional, and full of Grade A/B/C recommendation language that means something to us and nothing to patients.

The problem is not the guidelines -- they have to be written that way. The problem is what happens when a patient asks you to explain the guideline and you hand them the PDF, or you summarize it in your own words in 90 seconds while writing a note, and neither version actually serves her.

Claude is exceptionally good at this translation task. It reads the guideline, understands the clinical intent, and rewrites it for the person it will actually affect. This is one of the highest-value uses of AI in outpatient ObGyn practice.

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