CLIRNET launches specialised AI agents for safer medical care
The platform aims to provide instant, evidence-based clinical support for doctors across India, the Middle East, and Africa.
CLIRNET, India’s largest network of doctors, has launched a suite of specialised AI agents designed exclusively for healthcare professionals.
The platform aims to provide instant, evidence-based clinical support for doctors across India, the Middle East, and Africa.
The launch includes four specialised AI agents addressing critical areas in medical practice. The DDI (Drug-to-Drug Interaction Agent) verifies medication safety and flags adverse interactions. The DDx (Differential Diagnosis Agent) generates ranked differential diagnoses based on reported symptoms. The MedSearch (Medical Research Agent) retrieves and summarises peer-reviewed studies and guidelines, while the MedInfo (Medical Information Agent) provides overviews on diseases and preventive care.
These agents leverage Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) to ground responses in CLIRNET’s repository of clinical guidelines, drug monographs, and research articles, aiming to enhance factual accuracy and reduce errors. CLIRNET’s use of GEPA (Genetic-Pareto Prompt Evolution) further refines the AI through expert feedback.
Focus on safer clinical decisions
“Doctors today are inundated with information, yet they need clear, evidence-based insights at the point of care. With our AI agents, every medical query is routed to the most capable and safe system. This is not just AI—it’s AI engineered for doctors,” said Saurav Kasera, co-founder of CLIRNET and Doctube.
The company stated that these agents, rolled out simultaneously across all its operating geographies, are intended to support decision-making, reduce medical errors, and strengthen frontline healthcare delivery.
CLIRNET added that this launch is an initial step, with plans to work closely with doctors to identify real-world needs and develop more agents to address emerging challenges.
With a network of over 650,000 doctors across India, the Middle East, and Africa, CLIRNET said it continues to expand tools that support physicians. Its ecosystem already includes MedWiki, a repository of over one million physician-contributed medical cases, DocTube with over 20,000 vernacular health education videos, and more than 10,000 annual sessions with international key opinion leaders.
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