Digital health startup aims to save medical providers time while bringing down cost of AI tech
February 11, 2025 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
CarePilot is on a mission to bring AI and automation to smaller medical clinics that don’t always have access to cutting-edge technology, shared founder and CEO Joseph Tutera.
The Overland Park-based startup’s ambient AI technology — designed to help those smaller practices operate more efficiently — captures patient-provider interactions in real time, automating administrative tasks and documentation, all while maintaining HIPAA compliance.
“If you were to ask the American Medical Association like, ‘Hey, what’s the No. 1 problem facing healthcare providers in the United States right now?’ one of the bigger reasons is the administrative burden,” Tutera explained, noting, “When a provider in the United States sees 20 patients, they have to create 20 patient charts for each of those visits.”
CarePilot — started in 2023 while Tutera was a student at Texas Christian University — allows providers to spend less time focused on paperwork and more time focused on patients, he continued.
“If a provider is spending half of their day just typing on a keyboard or dictating their narrative summary of a patient, that’s a huge burden. They hate it. The administrators hate it,” Tutera said. “And it’s a huge reason for claims getting denied. It’s a huge reason for position burnout. The concept of creating charts to replace this system is a super obvious use case for AI.”
One provider in Georgia said he went from taking home 10 charts a night to just one and spending four hours a day charting to just 30 minutes, noted Tutera, who was inspired by his experience with health care providers in his family and his proximity to rural hospitals and clinics in college.
Making this time-saving technology affordable is the startup’s focus.

The CarePilot team — Samar Acharya, Tanner Helton, Cody Ptacek, Joseph Tutera, and Audrey Pino — at their Overland Park office; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
“We’ve taken this cutting-edge technology — generative AI of large language models — distilled them down, made them less expensive to operate, and then serve them and sell them at the budget-friendly price that federally-qualified health centers or a rural health center can afford,” he continued.
“I will not pretend I invented the idea of the ambient scribe,” Tutera added. “But we’re trying to serve this very specific market in healthcare, which are these people that otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford it. That’s our uniqueness in the go-to market.”
Another quality that sets CarePilot apart, according to Tutera: the technology’s ability to learn each provider’s style.
“That’s where some of our technical work has been focused,” he said.
Since starting trials in March 2024, CarePilot — with co-founders Adam Blake, Tanner Helton, Samar Acharya, and John O’Hearn — has grown to more than 50 clients in 13 states and raised a little over $1 million in funding from local investors, he shared.
“We’ve got our first big partnership with a clinically integrated network done,” Tutera said, noting additional deals are in the works. “So the company went from thousands of dollars in annual revenue to hundreds of thousands of dollars in annual revenue very, very quickly.”
In 2025, Tutera hopes to grow CarePilot from 60-plus clients to 200 and add more engineers to the team, he said, plus expand the product by adding a coding feature that will help with claims processing.
“Not only is this product capable of writing your notes for you, it’ll be able to suggest what ICD 10 code you should have,” Tutera explained. “You click a button and add it to the note.”
Although he started CarePilot while a student in Texas, the Kansas City native knew when it was time to build the company, he wanted to do it in his hometown.
“There’s so much digital health here,” he said. “Of all the places in the United States to start a digital health company, Kansas City actually happens to be uniquely well suited for that, so that was pretty obvious.”
Featured Business

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Fund Me, KC: Operation Breakthrough hopes to burn into STEM gap with laser cutter
Editor’s note: Startland News is continuing its ‘Fund Me, KC’ feature to highlight area entrepreneurial efforts to accelerate businesses or projects. If you or your startup is running a crowdfunding campaign, let us know by contacting news@startlandnews.com. Today’s featured campaign from Operation Breakthrough spotlights a campaign by the nonprofit childhood development center to boost its…
designWerx makes room for growing makers in North Kansas City
A home garage workspace can be a lonely, stifling place for a maker trying to grow his or her business, said Pam Newton, who is leading the artistic vision for designWerx, a new coworking space and incubator specifically for makers in North Kansas City. “You’re alone constantly. Sometimes it’s hard to get motivated,” she said.…
KCultivator Q&A: Tyler Enders talks his biggest failure, the ‘Made In’ concept and Obama
Seated amid vintage mosaic tile and striking black-and-white portraits by Kansas City photographer Cameron Gee, founder Tyler Enders seems at home within the walls of the Made in KC Cafe. He’s an art lover with a finance degree — not to mention one of the minds behind Made in KC, a retail showcase for local…
Kimberly Gandy: Proof a startup can emerge stronger from its founder’s cancer diagnosis
Cancer needn’t mean can’t, Kimberly Gandy said. When the Play-It Health founder and CEO was diagnosed with an aggressive, mid-stage cancer in May 2016, her startup found itself at a crossroads. Gandy had just joined the Kansas City-based Pipeline fellowship and her company was poised for growth through its web- and mobile-based health regimen tracking…


