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Google clinical guru on generative AI | Healthcare AI newsmakers

Wednesday, September 27, 2023
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Google’s chief clinical officer: Healthcare AI ‘should happen with clinicians, not to them’

Generative AI of the “large language” kind has been an attention hog over the past 10 or 11 months. The buzz has been so loud and constant that it’s all but asking to be dismissed as hype. That would be a mistake—especially in healthcare.

Consider the pace of the technology’s growth in medical expertise going by just one player not named ChatGPT. In the space of only six months, Google’s Med-PaLM went from correctly answering 67.2% of medical-licensing questions to nailing some 86.5%.

Equally if not more impressive, physician judges frequently ranked Med-PaLM 2’s responses higher than those offered by human doctors in a head-to-head match that used more than 1,000 consumer medical questions. The judges’ preferences held across eight of nine metrics related to clinical utility.

Fast-forward to the present month. Google’s chief clinical officer, Michael Howell, MD, MPH, took questions from JAMA’s editor-in-chief, Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, MD, PhD. They talked about how large-language AI has evolved so quickly and where its trajectory may lead it next. Among Howell’s key points were these four, lightly edited here for clarity and conciseness:

1. Healthcare AI is going to change a lot of things, and all of them should happen with clinicians, not to clinicians.

“I’ve sometimes thought what it must have been like to be in practice when penicillin showed up. Doctors of the time must have said something like, ‘Mark this moment.’”

2. Watch for advances aimed at assisting clinicians in tasks that take them away from the bedside—and away from the cognitive, procedural and/or emotional work of being a clinician.

“We’re likely to see tools that help clinicians avoid things like diagnostic anchoring bias and diagnostic delay. I’ve been saved by a nurse tapping me on the shoulder and saying, ‘Hey doc, do you really want to do that?’ Watch for AI to fill that role at some point in the future.”

3. Accounting software has been around for years, but we don’t have fewer accountants. We still need professional bean counters to make sure our numbers follow the right track.

“We’ll probably see the same type of thing in healthcare. AI will assist clinicians, but it won’t replace us. It’s going to be interesting just figuring out how best to use it.”

4. All large language models really do is predict next words. Given this, the concept of reinforcement learning with human feedback—or refining AI’s outputs based on people’s preferences—is only going to become more important.

“At the same time, if you get reinforcement learning with human feedback wrong, your models can degrade over time. And then, when you update anything in your model, sometimes you’ll make it better in one area but worse in another. This is similar to the principle that, as a physician, the longer you work in the ICU, the better you get at intensive care—but the worse you get at providing primary care.”

View the interview and read the full (unedited) transcript here.

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artificial intelligence to fight wildfires

Industry Watcher’s Digest

Buzzworthy developments of the past few days.

  • More than half of nonprofit enterprises expect AI to make downsizing inevitable over the next three years. Does that include the roughly 60% of U.S. hospitals that consider themselves citizens of the not-for-profit world? The Chronicle of Philanthropy doesn’t answer that question, but it does take up seven others. Some might be of interest to healthcare fundraisers and hospital development pros. Three samples: What tools can help me get started? Will I fall behind if I don’t use AI? Will AI take my job? Whole article here.
     
  • If wildfires represent a threat to public health, then fire-busting AI could be considered a form of AI in healthcare. Maybe that’s a stretch. Or maybe not. Fighting fires is, after all, a potentially lifesaving use of the technology. As the Associated Press reports, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection has been testing a system that feeds an algorithm image data from more than 1,000 cameras. Staff members still have to confirm sightings that the AI suspects as dangerous smoke. But the system helps reduce human fatigue, which itself can contribute to slow response times. Read the rest.
     
  • A pair of high-school students has launched a healthcare AI startup to help assess brain health. Their first product uses a smartphone with a gaze-tracking app. It needs just 30 seconds to acquire data that physicians could use to pre-screen for dementia, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s and other cognitive illnesses. The two are calling their company Vytal. “Our primary value proposition is the accessibility that we’re adding to the usage of AI,” co-founder Sai Mattapalli, the company’s COO and CFO, tells PYMNTS.com. “Because of the skepticism that currently exists with AI, the best way to convince people to actually use it is by giving them value through it.” Vytal website here.
     
  • Aficionados of augmented, mixed and virtual realities in healthcare have a new peer-reviewed journal to call their own. It’s the Journal of Medical Extended Reality. Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc. as the official journal of the American Medical Extended Reality Association, it’s happily open-access. Inaugural editor-in-chief Brennan Spiegel, MD, of Cedars-Sinai and team are already seeking submissions. Details here.
     
  • Regulating AI, embedding it into existing systems and keeping up with its accelerating pace of change: 3 of the year’s “top 10 enterprise AI trends—so far.” Technology journalist Maria Korolov justifies these choices and outlines the rest of her selections in an opinion piece published by CIO.
     
  • The FDA has cleared software from AIRAmed (Tuebingen, Germany) that uses deep learning to measure brain volumes on MRI. The company says the offering is designed to help physicians detect, differentiate and monitor Alzheimer’s disease and other forms of dementia. Announcement.
     
  • Orion Health (Auckland, New Zealand) and Pieces Technologies (Dallas) are partnering to combine the former’s health intelligence platform with the latter’s AI capabilities. The companies say one pitch point to come of the collaboration will be a way to let clinicians know “what’s happened to their patients since they last saw them through easily accessible clinical prose.”
     
  • From AIin.Healthcare’s news partners:
     

 

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