AUSTIN – Healthcare technology company Autonomize AI on Thursday announced a new platform that allows hospitals and insurers to build, govern and deploy artificial intelligence (AI) tools within their own systems, aiming to make it easier for organisations to automate operations while maintaining data control.
The company said its new AI Studio and Healthcare Agents Marketplace include more than 100 pre-built AI models designed for administrative and clinical use, such as claims processing, care management and population health.
Autonomize AI said the tools are intended to help healthcare enterprises move beyond pilot projects by giving clinical, operations and IT teams a shared low-code workspace to design and deploy AI workflows.
The AI Studio provides a central environment for teams to co-develop and manage AI workflows with built-in governance, audit trails and role-based access controls. According to the company, these features allow healthcare organisations to create explainable and compliant workflows that can be deployed faster across existing systems.
The marketplace offers a range of configurable agents and workflow templates drawn from real-world deployments with health plans and care providers. These templates include use cases in prior authorisation, utilisation management, claims audits and quality reporting.
Autonomize said the marketplace continues to expand, allowing customers to access new AI models and templates without redesigning their existing architecture.
Autonomize focus on interoperability and compliance
The platform integrates with electronic health record systems, claims platforms, and cloud environments such as Google Cloud and Microsoft Azure. Enterprises can use Autonomize’s agents within their existing AI infrastructure via compatible connectors, the company said.
Autonomize added that its Knowledge Hub captures clinical and operational rules into a structured graph to ensure AI agents follow established protocols. The company said this approach helps automate repetitive administrative work while maintaining compliance and human oversight.
A national health plan used Autonomize’s tools to automate claims audits, cutting review time from weeks to two days, according to the company. Clinical teams at Altais Health Solutions used the system to generate multilingual discharge summaries, while a Medicare Advantage plan developed AI workflows for compliance checks and communications management.
Founder and CEO Ganesh Padmanabhansaid the platform allows healthcare organisations to “govern and scale AI safely” by embedding context and policy controls into each agent.
Healthcare organisations globally are investing in automation tools to reduce administrative costs and address workforce shortages. But many AI pilots have stalled due to challenges with integration, data security and regulatory compliance.
Autonomize AI’s new platform aims to address these barriers by giving enterprises control over how AI is built and deployed internally, rather than relying on external or general-purpose models.
The company said the move is part of its broader plan to help healthcare providers and insurers manage the transition to hybrid operations where AI systems and human staff work alongside each other.

