The following is a guest article by Tony Thakur, Chief Technology Officer at Great Plains Communications
A radiologist waiting on an AI-assisted scan. A physician conducting a virtual follow-up with a remote patient. A healthcare system securely moving massive volumes of patient data between facilities and the Cloud.
In each of these moments, outcomes don’t just depend on technology; they depend on the network driving that technology.
Healthcare is undergoing one of the most consequential digital transformations in its history. Artificial intelligence is accelerating diagnostics and clinical decision-making. Telemedicine is expanding access to care beyond traditional walls. Big data is reshaping everything from patient outcomes to operational efficiency. Behind every application is an often-overlooked reality: innovation only performs as well as the connectivity supporting it.
Tony Thakur, Chief Technology Officer at Great Plains Communications, has spent decades designing, engineering, and operating high-capacity fiber networks that support mission-critical industries, including healthcare. From connecting hospitals and clinics to regional data centers, to delivering low-latency, redundant routes that support real-time applications, he’s seen firsthand how network performance directly impacts care delivery, security, and trust. Tony says, “In healthcare, innovation doesn’t necessarily fail because of technology. It fails when the network and automation aren’t able to keep up.”
Fiber infrastructure has quietly become the backbone of modern healthcare, not as a faster internet option, but as foundational infrastructure that enables advanced care to operate reliably, securely, and at scale.
This article explores why a high-capacity, reliable fiber network is no longer a nice-to-have for healthcare organizations, but a strategic requirement for delivering advanced patient care today and for what comes in the future.
AI in Healthcare Demands Speed, Symmetry, and Stability
AI applications in healthcare rely on the ability to move large volumes of data quickly and securely. Imaging files, real-time monitoring data, and machine-learning models require networks that can handle heavy upstream and downstream traffic without delay or degradation. Tony explains, “AI in healthcare only works when data can move without delay. If your network introduces latency or bottlenecks, it limits how effective point-of-care tools will be.”
In practice, this becomes clear when healthcare organizations connect imaging systems, analytics platforms, and AI workloads to regional or Cloud-based data centers. Large diagnostic files must move upstream just as efficiently as they move downstream, and insights must return in near real time to support clinical decision-making. Fiber’s symmetrical speeds and ultra-low latency eliminate bottlenecks that can slow diagnoses or limit the effectiveness of AI-assisted tools.
Telemedicine Only Works When the Network Does
Telemedicine has evolved far beyond basic video visits. Today’s virtual care includes high-definition video, remote diagnostics, real-time device monitoring, and seamless access to electronic health records, often happening simultaneously.
Reliable telemedicine depends on consistency, not just bandwidth. Fiber-based networks deliver predictable performance during peak usage, eliminating buffering, lag, and dropped connections that can compromise clinical accuracy and patient trust. “Telemedicine depends on trust, and trust disappears the moment a connection freezes, drops, or lags during a clinical interaction,” stated Thakur.
In more remote areas and for patients located far from their trusted specialist, surgeon, or provider, fiber-powered connectivity plays an even larger role. It enables equitable access to specialists, ongoing treatment, and post-care monitoring, bringing high-quality healthcare into patients’ homes regardless of geography. In these settings, network reliability directly influences access, outcomes, and continuity of care.
Big Data Requires Big Infrastructure
Healthcare organizations generate and consume massive volumes of data every day, from patient records and imaging to compliance reporting and research analytics. As systems move toward centralized platforms and Cloud-based applications, the ability to transport data securely and efficiently becomes essential.
Fiber networks provide the scalability and redundancy required to support these data-intensive environments. They allow healthcare systems to move information securely between facilities, connect to regional or national data centers, and expand capacity as demands grow without the need to re-engineer the network every few years.
Reliability and Security Aren’t Optional
In healthcare, downtime isn’t just inconvenient; it can be life-threatening. Fiber offers higher reliability than legacy copper or wireless alternatives, with fewer points of failure and greater resilience during peak demand or adverse conditions.
Equally important, fiber supports advanced security architectures that help protect sensitive patient data and meet strict regulatory requirements. Purpose-built fiber networks enable segmentation, redundancy, and secure routing strategies that form the foundation of a comprehensive cybersecurity approach. Thakur explains it this way. “Fiber isn’t about speed for speed’s sake. It’s about building a foundation that healthcare systems can rely on as data, applications, and patient expectations continue to grow.”
As threats increase and compliance requirements evolve, network design becomes a critical component of operational risk management.
The Future of Healthcare is Built on Fiber
AI, telemedicine, and big data are no longer emerging trends; they are core components of modern healthcare delivery. As these technologies continue to evolve, the networks that support them must be ready to scale, adapt, and perform without compromise.
Fiber is more than faster connectivity. It is the infrastructure that enables smarter diagnostics, broader access to care and data-driven decision-making, laying the groundwork for a more resilient, equitable and connected healthcare system.
As healthcare organizations continue planning for the future, the question is no longer whether fiber is necessary, but how quickly can they build the foundation required to support the next generation of care.
About Tony Thakur
Tony Thakur is the Chief Technology Officer of GPC, where he guides the company’s technology vision and works to enhance its robust fiber network. He also implements new product technologies, identifies national geographic network expansion opportunities, and introduces automation efficiencies.
Thakur has held C-level and senior executive positions during his two decades in the telecommunications sector. In this time, he has launched numerous programs and services related to technology infrastructure development, networking, and cloud connectivity.
Thakur graduated with a Master of Science in Engineering Management from the Florida Institute of Technology and has a Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering from the University of Texas in Arlington.