Whether the question is "what's wrong with this ear?", "what's inside this pipe?", or "what does this claim look like?" — the person qualified to answer is rarely standing next to the person asking. ScopeRemote closes that gap.
Dr. Sokoya is a practicing head and neck surgeon who built ScopeRemote to solve a problem he encounters daily: the inability to perform a real physical examination during a telemedicine visit.
In 2020, the pandemic forced healthcare into video overnight. Generic platforms covered the conversation but not the examination. The first version of ScopeRemote was a telehealth tool. But once the architecture existed — capture from any scope, transport over the internet, real-time collaboration between an operator and a remote expert — the same pattern kept showing up in industries that had nothing to do with medicine.
The pattern was the platform. The verticals were configurations.