Time is your most scarce resource. As a patient advocate, you need to spend it on people, not paperwork. Artificial Intelligence (AI) isn’t here to replace your empathy; it is here to act as your unpaid intern, handling the drudgery so you can focus on the strategy. Here is how to get started safely using free tools available right now.

Never put patient data into a public AI tool. Treat tools like ChatGPT like a public bulletin board. Use them for general medical concepts, templates, and research. Never enter names, dates of birth, or specific medical record numbers.
The Toolbox: What to UseYou don’t need expensive software. These three free tools cover 90% of your needs:
The Strategy: Context is KingTo get the best results, you must “prime” the AI. Don’t just ask a question; tell the AI who it is (a specific persona) and exactly what you need.
Below are four “Copy-Paste” prompts you can use today.
The Goal: Quickly translate complex pathology reports or clinical notes so you can explain them to a client without spending hours on Google.
Copy-Paste Prompt:
Act as a Board Certified Patient Advocate with a background in medical education. I am pasting a section of a medical report below. Please rewrite this explanation in plain English (8th-grade reading level) for a client who is anxious and has no medical background. Break down the three most important points and define any complex terminology in simple terms.
[PASTE MEDICAL TEXT HERE]
The Goal: Verify treatment guidelines or find studies to support an insurance appeal. Note: Standard AI “hallucinates” facts. You must use an AI connected to the web for this to ensure accuracy.
Act as a medical researcher. Find the most recent clinical guidelines (published within the last 3 years) regarding the treatment of [INSERT CONDITION]. Summarize the top three recommended interventions or standard of care. Critically Important: You must provide working links to the primary sources (PDFs, medical journals, or association guidelines) for every claim you make.
The Goal: You need to write a firm email to a dismissive provider or a slow-moving insurance adjuster, but you are too angry to write it clearly.
I need to draft an email to [INSERT RECIPIENT, e.g., a Neurologist’s office manager].
The Situation: [Briefly describe, e.g., They promised a referral letter 5 days ago and haven’t sent it. My client’s appointment is in 2 days.] The Goal: [e.g., Get the referral faxed by end of day today.] The Tone: Firm, professional, and urgent, but polite. Do not sound aggressive, but make it clear we will not be ignored. Please provide 3 variations: one soft, one medium, and one stern.
The Goal: You need to market your business, but you hate writing social media posts.
I am a patient advocate. Here is a link/text of an article relevant to my audience: [PASTE LINK OR TEXT].
Please generate the following content based on this article:
A Critical Warning: The “Recording” TrapYou may be tempted to use free AI scribes (like Otter.ai, Fathom, or Zoom AI Companion) to record client meetings or doctor visits. Proceed with extreme caution.
AI is a powerful assistant, but it cannot replace your judgement or your heart. Before you send or speak any AI-generated content:
Don’t let the tools distract you from the mission. The goal isn’t to master the software but to free up your time so you can concentrate on the human side of patient advocacy.
Take a gentle step to unlock the efficiencies of AI by checking out my BCPA Continuing Education courses on the *Advocate’s AI Atlas*. These courses are designed with AI tools baked into the curriculum. We don’t just mention tech; we use it to streamline and dive deeper into each topic so you can get the most value from your time spent on continuing education.