Healthcare AI News 2/28/24
News
Hartford HealthCare creates the Center for AI Innovation in Healthcare and launches Holistic Hospital Optimization, a startup company that will help hospitals optimize patient flow and operations.
A survey that was commissioned by Amazon Web Services finds that US healthcare employees and employers expect AI to deliver a 44% improvement in labor productivity, with potential uses in fraud detection, quality assurance, medical imaging review, and improving communication.
Highmark Health will use Epic’s Payer Platform running on Google Cloud to glean insights that can be used to inform consumers of the next best actions. The company says that more than half of its 7 million members are attributed to an Epic-using provider, allowing it to close care gaps automatically.
The VA says that 40 of the 100 AI use cases that it has identified are being used in the field.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai says that the company has taken its Gemini image generation feature offline for further testing after reports that it created offensive and biased results. Critics noted that the tool seemed exhibit liberal bias, such as creating an image of “a founding father of America” as black and Native American men.
Business
AI-powered clinical documentation tools vendor Abridge raises $150 million in a Series C funding round, valuing the six-year-old company at $850 million.
Research
Vanderbilt University Medical Center uses ChatGPT to analyze the medical literature to find existing drugs that could be repurposed for treating Alzheimer’s disease. The results were then applied to VUMC’s patient data and the All of Us Research Program to identify three drugs that may hold promise – losartan, metformin, and simvastatin.
Other
Scientists warn that while it’s possible to recreate a deceased loved one based on their emails and other writings, that could harm mental health, as it would impede the natural grieving process and create dependence on the technology to the exclusion of forming new relationships.
Another lawyer gets in trouble for using ChatGPT, as a law firm partner bills the court for $113,500 at the ChatGPT-recommended rate of $550 per hour. The judge halved the bill, saying that using ChatGPT to calculate the firm’s fee without submitting supporting detail is “utterly and unusually unpersuasive.”
Contacts
Mr. H, Lorre, Jenn, Dr. Jayne.
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