This isn’t coming. It’s here. Real professionals in healthcare, law, and e-commerce are already running on AI.
Healthcare: 95% of Cardiology Clinic Work
A nurse (@Firekraker72) uses AI for 95% of her cardiology clinic work. Charting, documentation, patient notes — the administrative mountain that consumes healthcare workers’ days.
That number — 95% — sounds impossible until you consider how much of clinical work is documentation. Nurses spend more time typing than treating. AI handles the typing.
This isn’t replacing clinical judgment. It’s replacing the keyboard.
Law: Paralegals Replaced by Email
@jiyunhyo built Givance — an AI agent for litigation firms. Lawyers send raw client materials to an email address. The AI handles document deduplication, generates audit trails, and outputs court-ready files. Reply arrives via email.
No dashboard. No portal. No new software to learn. Just email.
His insight: “Lawyers won’t learn new software. They’ve used email for 30 years and they’ll use email for 30 more.” So he built the AI around the tool they already use.
The result: work that paralegals and associates bill at hourly rates gets done in minutes. The law firm’s overhead drops. The AI even “vibecodes” — writing new processing tasks on the fly when it encounters unfamiliar document types.
E-Commerce: 20% Output Increase (and Growing)
@CajuaRobinson runs an Amazon seller business. AI agents handle brand checking from trade shows, competitive presentations, and inventory analysis. She’s building an internal app that auto-generates monthly brand reports and offers free audits for agency clients.
Result: 20% output increase — more brands evaluated, more analysis completed, same working hours. And she says she’s “only scratching the surface.”
Her approach: “Always have an agent working while you work.” While she’s on calls or at trade shows, the AI is processing the data from the last session.
The Uncomfortable Truth
These aren’t tech companies. They’re a nurse, a lawyer, and a seller. Industries that most people assume are “too complex” or “too regulated” for AI.
They moved anyway. The question isn’t whether AI will reach your industry. It’s whether you’ll be the one using it or the one competing against someone who does.