Founder Taylor Algren's experience as a heart failure patient directly inspired his AI startup, EasyMedicine. This deep personal understanding allows him to build a more human-centric solution for chronic disease patients by authentically anticipating their struggles with the healthcare system.
The friction of navigating insurance and pharmacies is so high that chronic disease patients often give up, skipping tests or medications and directly worsening their health. AI can automate these tedious tasks, removing the barriers that lead to non-compliance and poor health outcomes.
Chronic disease patients face a cascade of interconnected problems: pre-authorizations, pharmacy stockouts, and incomprehensible insurance rules. AI's potential lies in acting as an intelligent agent to navigate this complex, fragmented system on behalf of the patient, reducing waste and improving outcomes.
The barrier to building AI products has collapsed. Aspiring builders should create a one-hour prototype to focus on the truly hard part: validating that they're solving a problem people actually want fixed. The bottleneck has shifted from technical execution to user validation.
An AI agent can track due dates for medication prior authorizations and pre-populate submissions. This transforms a manual, time-consuming letter-writing process into a simple, two-click approval, freeing up significant clinician time to focus on patient care instead of administrative burdens.
Instead of requiring user sign-ups for a complex AI assistant, EasyMedicine launched a simple, anonymous tool to find medication savings. This approach provides immediate value, attracting target users for conversations and validation without the friction of account creation, ensuring they build what patients actually need.
