Remote collaboration is no longer a convenience in medicine. It is part of how care is delivered, how clinicians learn, and how decisions are made. Yet many of the tools healthcare teams rely on today were never designed for environments where precision matters and mistakes can carry serious consequences.

That gap is what Like Minded Labs aims to address with the launch of Coresee, a new virtual collaboration platform built for high-stakes professional use. While the technology was originally developed to meet the demands of media production and other visually intensive industries, its implications for healthcare are becoming increasingly clear.

Telehealth visits, multidisciplinary case reviews, remote consultations, virtual grand rounds, and off-site training have all become common practice. At the same time, clinicians are often forced to rely on generic video conferencing platforms that compress image quality, lack continuity between sessions, and treat sensitive data as an afterthought rather than a priority. In medicine, those compromises can matter.

"In healthcare, remote collaboration goes beyond simple face time; patient safety and lives can be on the line," said Joe Kiani, co-founder and CEO of Like Minded Labs. "It's about accuracy, accountability, security, and trust. Whether it's patient clinician appointments, multidisciplinary reviews, grand rounds, or remote training, healthcare teams need tools that respect the seriousness of their work and the sensitivity of their data. Coresee delivers that level of fidelity and security without adding friction."

At its foundation, Coresee is designed around the idea that virtual collaboration should function more like a shared clinical workspace than a temporary video call. Instead of creating disposable meetings that disappear when the session ends, the platform offers persistent rooms where teams can return to the same environment with their materials, discussions, and context intact. For healthcare professionals managing complex cases over time, that continuity can be critical.

Image quality is another defining feature. Coresee supports high-resolution streaming up to 4K at 60 frames per second, allowing clinicians to review detailed imaging, procedure recordings, or diagnostic visuals without the loss of clarity that often accompanies traditional video platforms. In fields where subtle visual cues can influence diagnosis or treatment planning, reliability is not a luxury.

Security and compliance are also central to the platform's design. Coresee is built with enterprise-grade protections and HIPAA-compliant architecture, addressing a long-standing concern among healthcare organizations about how patient data is handled during remote collaboration. As virtual care expands, so does scrutiny around privacy, access control, and accountability. Tools that cannot meet those standards are increasingly difficult to justify.

Beyond one-on-one or small group collaboration, Coresee includes features designed for larger-scale medical education and institutional communication. Its events functionality allows organizations to host branded virtual sessions for hundreds or thousands of participants, making it suitable for continuing medical education programs, research presentations, or internal briefings. Interactive elements are built in, supporting engagement rather than passive viewing.

What sets Coresee apart is less about any single feature and more about its underlying philosophy. The platform was developed over years of work in environments where precision, timing, and trust are non-negotiable. That mindset translates naturally to healthcare, where the cost of miscommunication or degraded information can be high.

For clinicians, the promise is straightforward. Remote collaboration should not feel like a compromise. Reviewing a case with a specialist across the country should offer the same clarity and confidence as sitting in the same room. Teaching residents or fellows remotely should not mean sacrificing visual detail or interactive discussion. Virtual tools should support clinical judgment, not get in its way.

As healthcare systems continue to balance in-person care with distributed teams and digital workflows, the expectations for collaboration technology are changing. Platforms designed primarily for casual meetings or corporate check-ins may no longer be sufficient. Tools like Coresee reflect a broader shift toward purpose-built solutions that recognize the realities of modern medical practice.

Coresee is now available, with early access offered to select professional teams. For healthcare organizations evaluating how to support remote collaboration without compromising quality or security, its launch adds a new option to a crowded but evolving landscape.

The question facing medical professionals is no longer whether remote collaboration belongs in healthcare. It already does. The question is whether the tools in use are worthy of the responsibility they carry.