Miguel Afonso Caetano on Nostr: #USA #AI #GenerativeAI #Healthcare #Medicine #Hospitals: "As higher computing power ...
#USA #AI #GenerativeAI #Healthcare #Medicine #Hospitals: "As higher computing power has turbocharged AI, algorithms have moved from spotting trends to predicting whether a specific patient will suffer from an ailment. The rise of generative AI has created tools that more closely mimic patient care.
Vijay Pande, a general partner at venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, said health care is at a turning point. “There’s a lot of excitement about AI right now,” he said. “The technology has … gone from being cute and interesting to where actually [people] can see it being deployed.”
In March, the University of Kansas health system started using medical chatbots to automate clinical notes and medical conversations. The Mayo Clinic in Minnesota is using a Google chatbot trained on medical licensing exam questions, called Med-Palm 2, to generate responses to health care questions, summarize clinical documents and organize data, according to a July report in the Wall Street Journal.
Some of these products have already raised eyebrows among elected officials. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.) on Tuesday urged caution in the rollout of Med-Palm 2, citing repeated inaccuracies in a letter to Google."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2023/08/10/ai-chatbots-hospital-technology/Published at
2023-08-15 11:36:47Event JSON
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"content": "#USA #AI #GenerativeAI #Healthcare #Medicine #Hospitals: \"As higher computing power has turbocharged AI, algorithms have moved from spotting trends to predicting whether a specific patient will suffer from an ailment. The rise of generative AI has created tools that more closely mimic patient care.\n\nVijay Pande, a general partner at venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz, said health care is at a turning point. “There’s a lot of excitement about AI right now,” he said. “The technology has … gone from being cute and interesting to where actually [people] can see it being deployed.”\n\nIn March, the University of Kansas health system started using medical chatbots to automate clinical notes and medical conversations. The Mayo Clinic in Minnesota is using a Google chatbot trained on medical licensing exam questions, called Med-Palm 2, to generate responses to health care questions, summarize clinical documents and organize data, according to a July report in the Wall Street Journal.\n\nSome of these products have already raised eyebrows among elected officials. Sen. Mark R. Warner (D-Va.) on Tuesday urged caution in the rollout of Med-Palm 2, citing repeated inaccuracies in a letter to Google.\"\n\nhttps://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2023/08/10/ai-chatbots-hospital-technology/",
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