Evan Vale

Books

Practical AI for regulated industries.

ChatGPT and AI workflow guides for nurses, dentists, therapists, and other professionals working under HIPAA, state-board, and compliance constraints. Source-cited. Operationally tested. Not a clinician — every reference checked against the published guidance from the relevant professional bodies.

Available now

ChatGPT-for-clinicians #1

ChatGPT for Nurses

115 HIPAA-safe prompts for SOAP notes, SBAR handoffs, discharge teaching, care plans, and 15 high-stakes scenarios.

First Edition · 2026 · 90 paperback pages

Free prompt library →

ChatGPT-for-clinicians #2

AI for Dentists

116 prompts for the front desk, patient communications, marketing, and high-stakes documentation. Built for practice owners.

First Edition · 2026 · 94 paperback pages

Free prompt library →

Coming through 2026

Coming June

AI for Therapists

For LCSWs, LMFTs, and licensed counselors. Progress notes, treatment plans, insurance authorization, supervisory documentation.

Coming June

AI for Physical & Occupational Therapists

SOAP notes, plan of care, FOTO outcome measures, denied-claim appeals, home exercise programs.

Coming July

AI for Veterinarians

Patient comms, SOAP narratives, treatment estimates, post-op instructions, owner education.

Coming July

AI for Pharmacists

Counseling notes, MTM documentation, prior-auth letters, refill workflows, drug-interaction risk communication.

About the series

Every book in the ChatGPT-for-clinicians series is built on the same principle: a prompt is only as good as the verification step that follows it. The free prompt libraries are the practical core; the books add the framework, the failure cases, and the specialty workflows.

I write under the pen name Evan Vale for the regulated-industries AI series. I'm a business operations consultant — not a clinician — and every clinical and regulatory reference is cross-checked against the published guidance from the relevant professional bodies (ANA, OCR, ADA, CMS, AABB, state boards). Clinical judgment always belongs to the practitioner.

Questions, source corrections, or co-author proposals: hello@evanvale.com.