How clinics use Pulse for hiring decisions
A clinic does not just hire a clinician. It hires a change to patient throughput, to outcomes, to the rota everyone else works around. Pulse argues all of it before the offer goes out.

Aditi K Agarwal
Co-Founder & COO, Kauzio
A private clinic owner once told me hiring was the only decision that kept her awake. Not because it was hard to find people. Because a single hire reshaped the rota, the throughput, and the patient experience for everyone already there, and she had no way to argue with herself about it before the offer went out.
That is the gap Pulse fills for healthcare.
The decision behind the decision
When a clinic hires a clinician, it is really making three decisions at once. A capacity decision, how many more patients can be seen. A quality decision, whether outcomes hold. And a culture decision, whether the existing team absorbs the change or frays around it.
Pulse pulls these apart. The Consequence engine models the throughput change over the next quarter. The Behavioural engine looks at the clinic's last four hires and flags the pattern, perhaps every winter hire has under-delivered because onboarding collides with peak demand. The Opposition engine writes the strongest case against the hire, in the clinic's own data.
What the verdict looks like
The clinic owner gets a signed verdict with a reversibility score. A senior clinical hire on a permanent contract is costly to undo, so Pulse marks it accordingly and applies a cooling period before the contract is signed.
Ninety days later, Pulse asks the only question that matters. Did patient throughput rise without outcomes slipping? The answer is stored. The next hiring decision starts from real evidence, not a hopeful memory.
That is the loop. It works the same in a two-room practice and a multi-site group.
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