Zach welcomes old friend and CTO of Trualta, Shahzad Zafar on the pod today. Shahzad has always been interested in solving hard problems, which is what drew him to computer programming in the first place, and his family’s background in medicine gave him a particular fascination with healthcare. He kicked off his career at Cerner and has been working within …
GenAI in the Enterprise: Chuck Schneider, Founder, CEO, and Chief Automation Officer
On this episode of #GenAI in the Enterprise, Zach sits down (virtually) with Chuck Schneider, founder, CEO, and Chief Automation Officer of Redpoint Summit. They discuss Chuck’s mission to make healthcare more efficient by leveraging technology like #generativeAI to reduce the burden on healthcare providers. Chuck shares insights on addressing clinician burnout, improving documentation processes, and enhancing radiology diagnostics using …
GenAI in the Enterprise: John Travis, Principal at JFT PRG LLC
Attention: This article was published over 2 years ago, and the information provided may be aged or outdated. While some topics are evergreen, technology moves fast, so please keep that in mind as you read the post.On today’s episode of GenAI in the Enterprise, Zach hosts John Travis, principal at JFT PRG LLC. John shares his extensive background in healthcare …
Part 4: Creating an FHIR API – Wrapping Things Up
Welcome to the fourth and final installment of Creating an FHIR API with GCP. So far, weโve covered a lot!
We discussed the differences between Google and Azure, landing on GCP as the best option for FHIR in Part 1. We began our implementation in Part 2, creating both the BigQuery resources and your FHIR repository resources. And finally, in Part 3, we tackled authentication methods and populating data in our FHIR repository.
This time, weโll wrap everything up with a nice little bow. First, weโll finish our implementation, and then, Iโll share the limitation I found – for the sake of transparency. Letโs dive in.
Part 3: Creating an FHIR API – Implementation Part B
This is Part 3 of our series on creating an FHIR API using Google Cloudโs offering. In the last installment, we began implementing an FHIR using GCP. We covered creating both the BigQuery resources and your FHIR repository resources. if you missed Part 1 and Part 2, be sure you go back to read those – theyโre critical to understanding!
This time, weโre continuing the implementation. Iโll explain the authentication methods, and weโll also tackle populating data in our FHIR repository.


