The Future of Healthcare Tech Adoption: From Top-Down to Practitioner-First

The Future of Healthcare Tech Adoption: From Top-Down to Practitioner-First

At Ensemble, we’ve been reflecting on the evolving role of technology in healthcare and the challenges new innovations face in becoming standard practice. We've asked ourselves: Why is it so hard for new tech to scale in an industry that has so much to gain? Does the AI revolution bring us any closer to a tipping point in healthcare tech adoption?

To explore these questions, we reached out to Danny Freed, CEO & Co-Founder of Blueprint. Blueprint has achieved “viral” growth with their AI Assistant for mental health practitioners. Blueprint capitalizes on a particular irony in the HealthTech sector: mental health care, which might seem resistant to tech disruption due to the human-to-human contact central to treatment, turns out to be a highly compelling field for the adoption of new tech because of the field's relative decentralization.?

What can we learn about tech adoption in healthcare through the lens of a model where human (non-computer) interaction is itself the treatment?

We unpack a few items below:

  • The paradox of healthcare tech adoption: Despite immense potential benefits, healthcare remains one of the hardest industries for new technology to penetrate.
  • The healthcare “tech stack”: How do software companies position themselves in an industry that lacks a conventional tech structure?
  • Technology as assistant, not replacement: Danny highlights the view that technology’s real value, particularly in the mental health space, is as an assistant, taking on administrative burdens so practitioners can focus on patient care.
  • “Bring your own software”: Are we reaching a “tipping point” in healthcare tech with the shift from top-down mandates to practitioner-driven adoption?

Healthcare Tech: The Great Paradox

Healthcare holds a paradoxical position in the tech landscape. On one hand, it stands to gain immensely from technological advancement—improved efficiency, better patient outcomes, and the potential for global impact. The economic incentives for increased efficiency and innovation are substantial.

On the other hand, healthcare’s structure is notoriously top-down, with significant barriers to adopting new innovations. Complex regulations, institutional inertia, and the influence of insurance companies all contribute to an industry that remains resistant to change. This reliance on institutionally sanctioned tools means new technologies often face a lengthy and costly approval process, consolidating control in the hands of large, established institutions, with decision-makers often many layers removed from practitioners.

Where Do Doctors Fit in a Tech-Enabled Healthcare World?

A critical question shaping healthcare technology is how much of the care experience should remain human-driven. Many argue that the presence of a human provider is essential to the healing process, suggesting there’s a natural limit to how far technology should go. Others believe we are on the verge of a future where machines should, and will, take over most aspects of care delivery. Danny offers a unique perspective on this debate, particularly in mental health, where “the conversation is the treatment.” He argues that in behavioral health, AI will not replace practitioners: “Our belief is that [AI will not replace therapists]… the alliance between one human and another is in part what drives the outcomes.” For Freed, human connection is irreplaceable, anchoring mental health care in empathy and interaction.

Instead of replacing practitioners, Danny envisions AI as a supportive “assistant,” handling repetitive, time-consuming tasks that burden healthcare providers. Blueprint’s AI is designed to “free up healthcare professionals from the bull**** and allow them to actually just focus on their patients.” Rather than minimizing the role of practitioners, this approach empowers them, allowing AI to manage routine work like documentation and compliance so that providers can focus on delivering human-centered care.

Rethinking Adoption: From Top-Down Mandates to Bottom-Up Engagement

Danny’s approach prioritizes bottom-up adoption, a departure from the traditional top-down mandates that dominate healthcare. New tools in healthcare are typically introduced by large organizations, where adoption often depends on administrators and insurers mandating usage. As Danny notes, “If the employees aren’t actively using that software… eventually, that company will churn from your business.” In healthcare, tools chosen for their compatibility with billing and scheduling, rather than usefulness to practitioners, frequently see low engagement.

Blueprint takes a different path, focusing on making practitioners’ lives easier directly. Danny describes this as a shift toward “bring your own software,” a phenomenon he sees gaining traction in healthcare. Just as the “bring your own device” movement allowed personal devices into the workplace, Blueprint’s AI-powered tools are adopted at the grassroots level by practitioners who find immediate value in them. Danny tells us, “We’ve literally had conversations with practitioners using it on their own… they’re paying out of pocket right now,” underscoring the relevance of these tools to practitioners’ daily work.

READ: Danny's announcement of Blueprint 2.0

Streamlined Workflows for Improved Care and Job Satisfaction

Danny’s insights reveal how AI tools can reshape healthcare workflows by easing administrative burdens that often detract from patient care. Currently, practitioners spend a significant amount of time on tasks like documentation, billing, and insurance compliance—tasks that add little value to patient interaction but consume hours each week. Danny points out that mental health providers, for example, spend roughly 25% of their working hours on documentation, primarily for compliance rather than their own benefit. Blueprint aims to alleviate this burden by automating note-taking and other administrative tasks, allowing practitioners to focus more directly on patient care.

Danny describes Blueprint as “magic pixie dust,” where “three clicks and, all of a sudden, the documentation is gone.” This shift not only saves time but also allows practitioners to be fully present with patients, leading to more engaged and meaningful interactions. Danny shares that many providers “remember why they got into this career in the first place” when they’re able to focus on patient care instead of endless paperwork.

This improved workflow also benefits practitioners’ well-being. By reducing the administrative load, Blueprint’s tools help lower the risk of burnout, creating a more sustainable work-life balance. As Danny explains, “Taking notes on your own is one of the main drivers of burnout… when you get rid of that main driver, of course people are still going to burn out, but the likelihood of burnout goes way down.” By making practitioners’ lives easier, Blueprint fosters an environment where they are more likely to thrive and deliver consistently high-quality care.

Conclusion: Human vs. Computer is Not a Zero-Sum Game

It’s clear that digital tools like AI have the potential to reshape how practitioners work and how patients experience care. But achieving meaningful progress requires more than technical innovation—it requires an understanding of how technology fits within healthcare’s human-centered framework.

Danny’s vision for Blueprint exemplifies how empowering practitioners, rather than replacing them, can lead to a more integrated and effective adoption of technology. He envisions a future where “the system itself gets better with every single patient interaction,” unlocking AI’s potential to continuously learn, adapt, and improve care without losing the essential human touch.

In mental health and beyond, this vision demonstrates that healthcare’s future need not be a battle between human and machine. Instead, it’s an opportunity for technology to support and enhance the strengths of practitioners, driving meaningful change in an industry where the human element is—and should remain—central.



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