Industry Watcher’s Digest
Buzzworthy developments of the past few days.
- Building a new hospital with emerging technologies throughout? Remember this. Some of today’s leading edges are tomorrow’s fading gadgets—and some are only just taking shape. Jeremy Meller, CIO of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta, makes the observation one month after the opening of the Arthur M. Blank Pediatric Hospital. That’s the 2 million-square-foot facility that has a fleet of 90 robots reporting for duty each day and all sorts of other high-tech niceties. “The technology landscape changes quickly,” Meller tells Health System CIO. Some of the things hospital leadership readied for in the earliest planning phases “haven’t really quite come to fruition yet,” he says, “but there’s other things—like AI, video and video combined with AI—that have progressed faster than we had anticipated a few years ago.”
- Many if not most of today’s software developers use AI coding tools every day. Yet nearly 40% have little to no trust in AI-generated code. This shouldn’t be surprising, since coders work under productivity pressures and on deadlines. Putting quantity over quality has to be a major temptation. In any case, the findings are from Google’s latest “State of DevOps” report, which also shows more than 75% of surveyed developers use AI to perform daily tasks. The low trust level “indicates to us that there is a need to manage AI integration more thoughtfully,” the report’s authors remark. “Teams must carefully evaluate AI’s role in their development workflow to mitigate the downsides.” IT Pro puts the findings in context with those from other studies.
- Creations from healthcare AI players Abridge, Google DeepMind and Laguna Insight have made Time magazine’s list of the 200 best inventions of 2024. A bunch of other healthcare innovators are in there too, although not necessarily because they use AI. In fact, the editors break off medical care and home health as categories unto themselves. Browse the list.
- Two years after OpenAI introduced its Whisper transcription system, healthcare people are whispering about it behind its back. The chatter took off after the Associated Press ran a story Oct. 26 under the headline “Researchers say an AI-powered transcription tool used in hospitals invents things no one ever said.” Interestingly, Whisper defenders have been stepping up on the software’s behalf. At Tom’s Hardware, for example, one reader calls the AP headline “misleading clickbait” while another points out: “As with all things voice recognition, you still need to always review what initially comes out, even with a fine-tuned model.”
- The role of chief AI officer may be new, but it’s already evolving too. That’s as true in healthcare as in any other sector. A knowledgeable mover and shaker behind the title’s rise discusses the dynamics in an interview with HIMSS Media’s Healthcare IT News. “I think it’s an evolving role in how it’s defined, how organizations are thinking about it,” says Dennis Chornenky, chief AI adviser at UC Davis Health and CEO of Domelabs AI. “But I think it is a very multidimensional role, and it’s very important for organizations to keep that in mind.” Read the rest.
- Precision medicine AI company Tempus is working with Northwestern Medicine to propel AI applications from research settings to care sites. They’re starting with cardiovascular care at Northwestern’s Bluhm Cardiovascular Institute. The initiating project will have Bluhm clinicians using Tempus technology to identify patients at risk of developing atrial fibrillation or structural heart disease. Announcement.
- The second generation of Seno Medical’s AI-equipped optoacoustic breast-imaging system has passed muster. Reporting the results in Academic Radiology, researchers state they found the Gen 2 Imagio to be at least as good as its Gen 1 forerunner. In both versions, the innovative device combines ultrasound scans with laser optics and AI aids to visualize tumor morphology as well as structure—a dual approach that “can increase specificity without decreasing sensitivity in a real-world setting,” the study authors write. Announcement.
- Recent research in the news:
- Wayne State University: AI computer models may make development of new drugs easier and more cost-effective
- Virginia Tech: Researcher finds AI could help improve city planning
- Penn State: Personal info and privacy control may be key to better visits with AI doctors
- University of Michigan: Accounting for bias in medical data helps prevent AI from amplifying racial disparity
- Washington University: Complexity of tumors revealed in 3D
- Wayne State University: AI computer models may make development of new drugs easier and more cost-effective
- Funding news of note:
- From AIin.Healthcare’s news partners:
- Cardiovascular Business: AI-enabled plaque assessments help cardiologists ID high-risk CAD patients
- Radiology Business: Real-world use of AI algorithm for collapsed lung cuts radiologist reporting times by 46%
- Health Imaging: Wearable ultrasound device monitors muscle activity with great precision
- Radiology Business: Elon Musk urges users to submit X-ray, PET and MR images to xAI chatbot Grok
- Health Imaging: AI tumor volume estimations could improve prostate cancer treatment strategies
- Cardiovascular Business: AI-enabled plaque assessments help cardiologists ID high-risk CAD patients