June 30 marks more than the launch of a new product. It marks the beginning of a different way to think about AI in primary care.
For years, healthcare has chased the next technology breakthrough.
Electronic health records (EHRs) promised to centralize information. Interoperability promised to connect it. Artificial intelligence now promises to automate it.
Each solved a real problem. None solved the one physician's experience every day.
Healthcare still asks clinicians to reconstruct a patient's story every time information moves between systems, workflows, and people. The industry became remarkably good at moving data. It never learned how to preserve clinical context.
That distinction matters because primary care isn't built on data. It's built on continuity.
Primary care is healthcare's front door. It accounts for 50% of physician office visits and helps guide more than 85% of the decisions that shape patient care. It is where relationships begin, chronic disease is managed, prevention happens, and patients turn first when something feels wrong.
Yet the physicians carrying that responsibility often spend more time navigating technology than practicing medicine.
Before a visit begins, they prepare charts from multiple systems. During the encounter, they document while trying to remain present. Afterward, they code, respond to inbox messages, coordinate referrals, review results, and prepare for the next patient.
Every handoff creates another opportunity for context to disappear.
The physician becomes the integration layer, not because physicians should be, but because today's software still can't connect the story.
Most healthcare AI is built to make individual tasks faster.
Write the note. Find a code. Answer an inbox message. Summarize a chart.
Those moments matter. But patients don't experience healthcare one task at a time, and physicians don't think that way either.
Every visit is connected to the one before it and the one that comes next. Every decision builds on context. Every interaction shapes the next conversation.
That's why healthcare doesn't need more AI tools. It needs a connected experience.
When chart preparation flows naturally into documentation, documentation strengthens coding, coding informs follow-up, and every encounter prepares the next, AI becomes more than automation. It becomes clinical intelligence that works alongside the physician, quietly carrying context forward so care feels seamless, for patients, practices, and physicians alike.
Today, we're proud to introduce Matic for Primary Care.
Matic wasn't built in a lab and introduced to physicians later. It was built alongside physicians inside one of the nation's leading independent primary care organizations.
Together with Catalyst Health Group, we studied how care actually flows, where clinical context is lost, administrative work compounds, and disconnected systems create friction for physicians. Every capability was designed, tested, and refined in real clinical environments, alongside the people who use it every day.
Our goal was never to build another AI application. It was to build a clinical intelligence layer for primary care that connects chart preparation, ambient documentation, clinical evidence, medical coding, inbox management, follow-up, and care coordination into one continuous care experience.
Not separate tools. One shared clinical understanding.
As we celebrate 250 years since the Declaration of Independence, we're reminded that freedom isn't simply the absence of burden. It's the ability to focus on what matters most.
Primary care deserves that same freedom. Today Matic and Catalyst declare Ten Fundamental Freedoms for Physicians:
Technology should never compete for a physician's attention. It should quietly strengthen it.
That's why we believe the future isn't more healthcare AI.
It's clinical intelligence for primary care.
Because when software remembers what physicians shouldn't have to, patients receive better care, practices perform better, and physicians regain the freedom to practice medicine the way it was always meant to be practiced.