Newsline

Newsline , Society

AI Could Revolutionize Healthcare and Save Patients Thousands

Posted on Thursday, August 1, 2024
|
by Andrew Shirley
|
29 Comments
|
Print

Some of the most exciting new applications of artificial intelligence (AI) technology are in the healthcare industry, where innovations could save patients thousands of dollars – and potentially their lives as well.

Just days ago, Microsoft Corp. announced that it is partnering with several medical institutions to expand AI use “in the medical imaging space.” If successful, doctor offices and hospitals will be able to use “generative AI” to speed up medical image generation while simultaneously assisting doctors and technicians in early recognition of diseases like cancer.

According to Microsoft, “health systems spend an estimated $65 billion every year on imaging.” Approximately 80 percent of all hospital visits also include at least one imaging exam. Generating and analyzing a medical image can take hours, if not days, requiring tremendous resources in time and manpower from healthcare providers. With many medical institutions facing physician burnout and staffing shortages, Microsoft’s developments could be just the answer hospitals and patients are looking for.

The partnership is the latest innovation from the adoption of artificial intelligence into the healthcare sector. Over the last three years, AI platforms have exploded onto the national stage. Starting with the launch of ChatGPT on November 30, 2022, for the first time ever, everyday consumers could access and utilize the benefits of AI technologies. Initially, ChatGPT was limited to text conversations. Yet, shortly after its launch, AI platforms were able to generate images and videos, and are one day expected to be capable of producing full length feature films.

In that same period, data scientists began searching for new areas to apply the revolutionary technology. In July, a predictive AI program helped categorize Parkinson’s disease into three distinct types. Historically, the degenerative disease was thought to be one whose progression varied from patient to patient. The AI program, however, was able to break down Parkinson’s disease into three separate types based on how quickly symptoms progressed. In delineating the progression, the program was able to identify variables that led doctors to provide treatments that address the root causes of each subtype. This could make treatments for Parkinson’s much more targeted and effective.

Online retail giant Amazon also recently launched a partnership with GE HealthCare to help physicians improve diagnoses using AI. GE executives said that Amazon’s cloud computing services and generative AI models will help doctors more quickly and accurately diagnose ailments.

Another AI breakthrough from researchers at Emory University and the Cleveland clinic is helping in early detection of age-related macular degeneration, one of the leading causes of blindness in the United States. AI programs are able to read eye scans to detect the beginning stages of inflammation that doctors may miss.

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have also developed AI tools that could more precisely match cancer patients with the most effective drug regimens.

Artificial intelligence has even proved useful on the more mundane side of healthcare. Last month, the company Maverick Medical AI developed a program to manage patient insurance claims more effectively. The company notes, “As healthcare providers face potential staffing shortages and seek to reduce billing errors, eliminate backlogs, and minimize claim denials, the interest and adoption of our advanced real-time solution has surged significantly.” Their program functioned with 93 percent accuracy and could significantly reduce costly layers of bureaucracy that often leave patients frustrated and unable to receive the care they need.

However, medical artificial intelligence is still in its nascent stage and does contain potential drawbacks. For instance, the NIH released a study in which they gave an AI model more than 200 diagnosis questions and asked it to justify each answer. It did the same with a group of physicians. The AI made more correct diagnoses than the doctors, but struggled to explain why each answer was right.

In another vexing example, a doctor and the AI model were given a picture of an arm with two lesions. The physician easily deduced that the same disease caused both lesions, but the AI model didn’t. The study concluded, “Because the lesions were presented at different angles—causing the illusion of different colors and shapes—the AI model failed to recognize that both lesions could be related to the same diagnosis.” The National Library of Medicine (NLM) Acting Director Stephen Sherry stated that AI healthcare integration “holds great promise as a tool to help medical professionals diagnose patients faster…However, as this study shows, AI is not advanced enough yet to replace human experience.”

Nonetheless, AI could provide serious relief to overworked hospitals and medical centers and aid in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases. While the healthcare sector will always need the care and compassion that only other human beings can provide, new technologies offer the potential for genuinely transformative breakthroughs in care in the near future.

Andrew Shirley is a veteran speechwriter and AMAC Newsline columnist. His commentary can be found on X at @AA_Shirley.

We hope you've enjoyed this article. While you're here, we have a small favor to ask...

The AMAC Action Logo

Support AMAC Action. Our 501 (C)(4) advances initiatives on Capitol Hill, in the state legislatures, and at the local level to protect American values, free speech, the exercise of religion, equality of opportunity, sanctity of life, and the rule of law.

Donate Now
Share this article:
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
29 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
3 months ago

AI + Uses:
Produce bionic limbs
find disease cures
Produce nanobots
Produce new RX
Aid in surgery
Share med info worldwide

Rob citizenship
Rob citizenship
3 months ago

Very important article Andrew, this information about Artificial Intelligence technology should be approached with caution. Questions that should be asked should pertain to. Who is at the controls of this technology. What the National Library of Medicine Director Stephen Sherry said about AI not being advanced enough yet to replace human experience — that is encouraging. I do believe that the National Library of Medicine sets a good standard for the information it provides on medicine ,as does the Cleveland clinic that you also mentioned in connection with the topic of a major vision threat — macular degeneration. That sounded encouraging . So, AI needs to have some peoples names attached to it — it did not just appear out of nowhere, there were people developing this technology and anything that involves medicine, health care , any plans , programs that have to do with these matters needs to trustworthy . The ethical standards regarding artificial intelligence as applied to medicine should be explained thoroughly . And. that should be getting done now , with each and every new development. Healing is something that is part mind, body, spirit ,part knowledge of biology, chemistry, anatomy, physiology, and part Faith in God. It is all about Truth , trust and facts . So again the Cleveland clinic, Emory University work.one of the causes of blindness is something positive and optimistic — still the AI technology, those people connected with it need to present the ethical standards of the technology to the people of the United States of America and that should be good for all ,for everyone involved with it

Dan W.
Dan W.
3 months ago

AI is a good doctor’s assistant for identifying all of the potential options but then a doctor’s intervention is needed to present the most appropriate options to the patient.

NeilRK
NeilRK
3 months ago

Can AI Medical take the Hippocratic Oath? No, only a human doctor can. A doctor must always be between AI and the patient.

Max
Max
3 months ago

DON’T BE FOOLED !!! AI has its good uses, but the adversary will use for overall population control now and in the future. BEWARE !!!!

Sydney
Sydney
3 months ago

I come from a physician/ medical family. Do not trust AI. Do not want it in ‘ my’ healthcare situation.

Kyle Buy you some guns,and learn how to shoot
Kyle Buy you some guns,and learn how to shoot
3 months ago

A I will be the death of civilization. Kyle L.

tim
tim
3 months ago

yeah! once you’re out on the table your next stop is on the floor.

susan baker
susan baker
3 months ago

My husband was diagnosed of Parkinsons disease 2 years ago, when he was 49. He had a stooped posture, tremors, right arm does not move and also a pulsating feeling in his body. He was placed on Senemet for 8 months and then Siferol was introduced and replaced the Senemet, during this time span he was also diagnosed with dementia. He started having hallucinations, lost touch with reality. Suspecting it was the medication I took him off the Siferol (with the doctor’s knowledge) and started him on PD natural herbal formula we ordered from AKANNI HERBAL CENTRE, his symptoms totally declined over a 3 weeks use of the AKANNI HERBAL Parkinsons disease natural herbal formula. He is now almost 51 and doing very well, the disease is totally reversed! (Visit w w w.aknniherbscentre .com)

Tay
Tay
3 months ago

This is fascinating.

Mark
Mark
3 months ago

Since Bill Gates and MS are involved in AI, I don’t believe or trust them any more than I trust our corrupt, lying, socialist ‘leaders’ in government. Consider this, Bill Gates and his dad Bill Gates Sr. have ALWAYS wanted to drastically reduce world populations, including doing so with permanent birth control, disguised as vaccines affecting the black populations abroad and even here in America. Some countries in Africa and India have banned Bill Gates from bringing vaccines into their countries ever again. So many of their women and young girls have become sterile. Shocking? Absolutely!!
Both Gates Sr, along with the founder of Planned Parenthood, Margaret Higgins Sanger who hated blacks and referred to them as the “inferior race” said “We don’t want the word to go out that we want to exterminate the Negro population…” — Letter to Dr. Clarence J. Gamble, December 10, 1939, p. 2. And another, “But for my view, I believe that there should be no more babies.” — Interview with John Parsons, 1947. Further, to make this a reality, Back when Planned Parenthood began most abortion/murdering centers were heavily prevalent in black neighborhoods, and this still mostly holds true today. Margret Sanger would be proud to know that her dream of ‘black genocide’, along with tens of millions of other babies, was still progressing forward. (Don’t believe me? Do some research and you will be sickened and shocked).
And now Gates wants AI to be part of our healthcare, and soon would be in charge of our health records. This should terrify everyone. AI can be dangerously UNCONTROLLABLE and has shown in various demonstrations to be extremely flawed with lies, deception and total inaccuracies just to name a few serious problems. With AI, what better way to be able to see and locate the elderly, the seriously ill, the vulnerable and the defenseless innocent so they can be cleverly eliminated from society, thus helping Bill Gates and others with the same evil and ruthless way of reaching their goal – reducing America’s and the world’s population. Further NONE of your medical records will ever be secure or private again. And this is only the tip of the iceberg. It’s only a matter of time AI gets into the rest of our lives IE foods and other items we buy and consume, our bank accounts, savings, stocks, investments, credit purchases, etc. basically every imaginable parts of our lives. AI will be in the hands of the people running and controlling it. NO THANK YOU!!!
For every potentially good thing that ‘could’ come from AI (but with ZERO GUARANTEES), there are 1,000+ things that could be life-threatening, dangerous and simply evil. DO NOT TRUST AI, Bill Gates, or anyone else pushing hard to quickly forward the AI agenda.
Elon Musk and so many others ‘in the know’ regarding AI say to GO SLOWLY with developing AI because it leaves too many UNKNOWNS for potential disasters that cannot and should not be ignored.

bill
bill
3 months ago

They can call it what they want but if it’s artificial, it is not intelligence.
Intelligence requires self awareness. We better hope it never comes to that. If it does we will find ourselves in a Terminator / Matrix situation. God help us all then.

Bob L.
Bob L.
3 months ago

AI could save billions in healthcare costs by becoming the administrator of life spans, tagging everyone at birth for termination upon reaching 30 years of age, Anyone seen “Logan’s Run”?

Kaiju
Kaiju
3 months ago

I’ve been in healthcare as a direct provider/clinician for 40 years. If anyone thinks that non-human involvement, AI or otherwise, will save the consumer even a penny, I have a bridge to nowhere that I have for sale. Corporate entities will take their profit and pass the costs to the consumer. AI can be programmed to diagnose according the how it is programmed, thus preserving profits and underserving the “customer” (patient) as the current system does. Big Pharma and Government will continue to drive healthcare, both diagnoses and treatment, for the masses.

Myrna
Myrna
3 months ago

I am already seeing automation taking over. At least at the beginning, artificial help is extremely limited and can seem stupid.

Dave
Dave
3 months ago

My lifespan will improve when I can get medical assessments from AI instead of a doctor with a medical degree from India decades ago.

Latest Articles

politics, american flag and democrat and republican logos
gun control, the US constitution
midterm elections of 2026 shown under magnifying glass
Little Rock, AR/USA - circa February 2016: Replica of White House s Oval Office in Bill Clinton Presidential Center and Library. Little Rock, AR/USA - circa February 2016: Replica of White House s Oval Office in William J. Clinton Presidential Center and Library in Little Rock, Arkansas

Stay informed! Subscribe to our Daily Newsletter.

"*" indicates required fields

29
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x

Subscribe to AMAC Daily News and Games