У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно This AI Agent Replaced My VA: OpenClaw for Doctors (With a Secure Setup) или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Before we get into the cool demo, we need to talk about security. In this video, I walk through how I’m using an AI agent platform now called OpenClaw (formerly Clawdbot, then Moltbot) and why security has to come first for any doctor thinking about tools like this. I explain how I lock my setup down with VPS hosting, SSH key authentication, localhost‑only gateways, Tailscale VPN, strict firewall rules, regular security audits, and frequent API key rotation so you understand how seriously I take data protection in a medical context. From there, the focus is not the specific tool, but the concept: an AI agent with “hands” that actually does things for you instead of just giving you answers. I show you how my OpenClaw agent, which I named Yukio, runs 24/7 to manage my calendar, read and summarize my emails, remind me of tasks, send messages on my behalf, and even act as a “second brain” that captures ideas, notes, quotes, and opportunities into Notion automatically so nothing gets lost. You’ll see a live demo where I talk to Yukio through Telegram using only voice notes, and she: Reads my calendar and tells me what’s on today. Creates, moves, and deletes events in Google Calendar without me touching the screen. Adds and surfaces tasks from Google Tasks and nudges me when things are due. Sends me proactive “daily brief” updates every morning and heartbeat reminders during the day, just like a real assistant would. I also show how I’m building a second brain with categories like ideas, content, notes, learning, people, and quotes, and how I can say things like “save this as a content idea” or “add this to my quotes” and have everything stored, tagged, and searchable for later. For doctors, that means every clinical insight, business idea, and content idea is captured instead of disappearing between patients. We then break down the realistic cost and who this is for. My setup runs about 30–40 dollars per month (VPS hosting plus usage‑based AI API costs) and took me about three days to configure. This is not plug‑and‑play; it’s for early adopters who are willing to follow technical tutorials and tinker. But compared to paying a virtual assistant 10–15 dollars per hour, an AI assistant that works 24/7 for a fraction of that can make sense very quickly for the right kind of physician‑owner. Finally, I rapid‑fire use cases for physicians: patient follow‑up, research assistant, staff communication, personal task delegation, content capture, meeting prep, and email triage. I’m honest about the limitations—it’s not perfect and still requires human‑in‑the‑loop—but I also challenge you to start small and see where AI agents fit into your own workflow, because this is the direction private practice is heading. If you want help implementing a custom AI assistant for your practice—whether for practice management, patient communication, voice AI, or personal productivity—you can use the link in the description or reach out in the comments to explore what makes sense for your situation. ------------------------------------ Want help setting up AI tools in your practice? Schedule A Call With Dr. TJ Ahn https://theprofitalchemy.com/schedule... ------------------------------------ In this video you’ll learn The security risks that were discovered with early Clawdbot/Moltbot deployments and how I hardened my own OpenClaw setup. What an AI agent with “hands” actually is and how it’s different from just using a regular chatbot. How I use my agent “Yukio” for calendar management, tasks, daily briefs, heartbeats, and second‑brain capture. The real costs, learning curve, and whether this kind of setup is right for you as a private practice owner. Practical use cases for doctors that can offload 80% of what you used to pay a VA to do. 0:00 Security warning: Clawdbot → “Moltbot” → OpenClaw 1:10 Focus on the AI agent concept, not the tool name 2:29 How I replaced 80% of my VA for about $10/month 3:10 What OpenClaw actually is vs a normal chatbot 5:13 Meet “Yukio” and quick subscribe CTA 5:48 Live demo: Telegram + voice‑only control 6:25 Asking “What’s on my calendar today?” 7:01 Scheduling, moving, and deleting events hands‑free 8:12 Creating and reviewing Google Tasks with your voice 9:07 Daily briefs at 7 a.m. and heartbeat reminders 10:35 The “second brain” concept for overloaded doctors 11:12 Building a second brain with Yukio + Notion 12:05 Saving content ideas and quotes in seconds 13:01 Desktop access, other messaging apps, and security setup 13:58 Human‑in‑the‑loop: where assistants still matter 14:19 Setup time, learning curve, and realistic monthly cost 15:19 Who this is not for (yet) 15:56 Rapid‑fire AI use cases for physicians 17:00 How I can help you implement a custom AI assistant 17:36 Recap: AI agents are real, imperfect, and worth exploring 18:17 Like, comment, and subscribe CTA