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Guy Kawasaki's Remarkable People

How AI Can Bring Humanity Back to Healthcare with Lloyd Minor

Guy Kawasaki's Remarkable People

Guy Kawasaki

Education, Society & Culture, Business

4.5679 Ratings

🗓️ 25 February 2026

⏱️ 54 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

What if healthcare stopped reacting to illness and started anticipating it?

In this episode of Remarkable People, Guy Kawasaki sits down with Dr. Lloyd Minor, Dean of the Stanford University School of Medicine, to explore how precision health, artificial intelligence, and whole-person care are reshaping the future of medicine.

This wide-ranging conversation challenges how we define health, how much we should trust technology, and what it will take to prepare physicians—and patients—for a radically different future of care.

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Guy Kawasaki is on a mission to make you remarkable. His Remarkable People podcast features interviews with remarkable people such as Jane Goodall, Marc Benioff, Woz, Kristi Yamaguchi, and Bob Cialdini. Every episode will make you more remarkable.

With his decades of experience in Silicon Valley as a Venture Capitalist and advisor to the top entrepreneurs in the world, Guy’s questions come from a place of curiosity and passion for technology, start-ups, entrepreneurship, and marketing. If you love society and culture, documentaries, and business podcasts, take a second to follow Remarkable People.

Listeners of the Remarkable People podcast will learn from some of the most successful people in the world with practical tips and inspiring stories that will help you be more remarkable.

Episodes of Remarkable People organized by topic: https://bit.ly/rptopology

Listen to Remarkable People here: **https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/guy-kawasakis-remarkable-people/id1483081827**

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hello, everyone. It's Guy Kawasaki. I believe we are in troubling and dangerous times.

0:08.2

One of the things that's happening is that privacy is eroding. And when privacy erodes, so does

0:15.0

democracy. So Maddoz and Nizmer and I, we just finished the book. It's called Everybody Has Something to Hide.

0:24.0

This is a jargon-free book. It is for everybody to learn why and how they should use signal.

0:32.0

They should use signal to ensure their privacy, safety, and well-being.

0:36.2

It comes out on January 28th for five days.

0:40.1

It'll be free. And then it'll go to $4.4. I hope you see what we did there. The forward is from

0:47.9

Congressman Rokana because he believes, like we do, that democracy is extremely important.

0:56.9

And Signal is one of the tools that can help us preserve democracy.

1:01.3

So remember the name.

1:03.1

Everybody has something to hide.

1:05.8

It's by Guy Kawasaki and Madison Nyzmer.

1:10.1

I don't think that AI in any way is going to supplant or

1:14.4

displace the role that physicians have. What I hope it will do and what I think we're seeing

1:19.7

evidence of it doing is restoring some of the human aspects of care delivery and also enabling

1:26.4

a radiologist or pathologist to really focus on

1:30.1

those areas of their specialty where they uniquely can add value. And there are many of those,

1:36.0

such as interacting with other specialists, being able to interact directly with patients, for example,

1:40.9

that in today's environment, there just isn't time to do because the amount of time

1:44.9

that it takes to interpret the images.

1:51.6

Good morning, everybody.

1:53.3

This is Guy Kawasaki.

...

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